36 Ind. App. 164 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1904
Appellee was plaintiff below, and his complaint was held good on a demurrer for want of sufficient facts, and the only question presented by the assignment of error is the sufficiency of the complaint.
The substantial averments of the complaint are that appellant had advertised for competitive bids for the erection of an addition to.one of its school buildings; that the notice published for such bids contained the following clause: “Each proposal must be accompanied by a certified check for the sum of $300 as a guaranty that the bidder will enter into a contract and file a satisfactory bond with the board of school commissioners of the city of Indianapolis, within the time specified. A failure on the part of the contractor to enter the contract will forfeit said amount or amounts deposited.” It was further averred that all bids and proposals should be at the office of appellant on or be
The complaint further avers that appellee relied upon and believed the architect’s statement aforesaid, that said bids must be in at or before 4 o’clock p. m. of said day; that in making his said bid and proposal he intended to include therein his estimates for all material and work, including that which was optional, as well as that which was obligatory, and that he made and placed in his “estimate book” all such estimates accordingly; that the placing of his bid and estimate was delayed without any fault or negligence on his part, but solely through the delay of two of his sub-bidders, until the hour of 3:30 o’clock p. m. of said day, and that in order to get his bid and proposal filed at 4 o’clock p. m., as he understood was requisite, there was not sufficient opportunity for verification of his bids; that he erroneously submitted his bid, as aforesaid, for the obligatory and peremptory part of said work; that his bid and proposal, in order to cover and include all of said work and material, should have embraced, and was intended to embrace, his estimate for. the obligatory and peremptory material and work, as aforesaid, the sum of
The complaint then sets out a summary of the eight hids made for the construction of the addition, and such bids on obligatory and material work vary from $11,337 —appellee’s bid — to $22,409; and on bids bn optional material and work they vary from $3,349 — appellee’s bid— to $835; that the great discrepancies between appellee’s bid and proposal.and those of others, and especially the ■discrepancies between his bid and those of all others as to the optional material and work, were sufficient and reasonable notice to appellant at the time of opening and con
The prayer of the complaint is that appellee’s bid and proposal and appellant’s acceptance thereof be rescinded, and that appellee’s check, or the proceeds thereof, be returned or paid to appellee.
The remaining question is: Do the facts pleaded entitle appellee to relief hy reason of his own mistake ? The facts show a material and ruinous mistake in appellee’s hid, as submitted to appellant, and the 'facts constituting the mistake are specifically stated, and by them it appears that appellee’s bid was $4,413 less than that made by the aggregate of his estimates. The mistake from which he asks relief is that by his hurry in submitting his bid, and which he understood had to be submitted by a definite and fixed time, he omitted to include in his aggregate, estimates upon certain parts of the.work, which he had made and placed upon different pages of his “estimate book.” As the demurrer admits the facts well pleaded, it is clear that appellee’s bid was not what he intended it to be. In other words,'he did not intend to submit a bid hy which he agreed to do the work for the amount designated.
A case illustrative of the principles here involved is that of Harran v. Foley (1885), 62 Wis. 584, 22 N. W. 837. In that case the plaintiff claimed to have purchased of defendant some cattle for $161.50. The ' defendant claimed to have intended to state the price at $261.50, and accepted $20 on the purchase price. When he was informed that the plaintiff understood the price to be $161.50, he tendered back the $20 paid. In the decision of the case, the court said: “It is evident, therefore, that the minds of the parties never met upon the question of the price to be paid for the cattle, and therefore there was, in fact, no sale. 1 Wharton, Contracts, §1. The pretended purchase having been repudiated by the' defendant before the cattle were in fact delivered to the plaintiff, and the earnest money tendered back to him by the defendant, the plaintiff acquired no title to the cattle, and judgment was properly rendered against him.” /
The demurrer to the complaint was properly overruled. Judgment affirmed.