111 Ga. 789 | Ga. | 1900
The mayor and general council of the City of Atlanta adopted the following ordinance: “An ordinance requiring the union label of the Allied Printing Trades Council on all city printing. Section 1. Be it ordained by the mayor and general council, that all printing, of whatever •character, used for or by the City of Atlanta, shall bear the Allied Printing Trades Council union label of Atlanta, Georgia, as registered with the secretary of State. Section 2. Each and every city official, when advertising for bids for printed matter, shall specifically state in said advertisement and shall notify bidders that all bids shall be made in accord
We can not agree with the able and distinguished counsel for the city that “The ordinance attacked and enjoined below amounted only to a direction by the mayor and general council to the ministerial officers of the city to place the orders for public printing with printers using a union label.” This ordinance is something more than a mere “direction.” It has the form, and was intended to have the effect, of law; and, if valid, would, until repealed, bind the members of council as much as it would the subordinate officials of the city. These members could not, with propriety, disregard it so long as they permitted it to stand upon the municipal statute book, and the mere power to repeal it certainly did not prevent its operation on all con'cerned. If, in the absence of such an ordinance, the contract in question had been let to the Pease Company, it could not properly be said that the making of it was an abuse of discretion, on the sole ground that the price of the work was too high. It would require an extreme case to justify the courts in setting .aside a municipal contract on such a ground, when made under a charter like that of Atlanta. With respect to agreeing on prices, securing good work, prompt service, etc., etc., the municipal discretion must and should be allowed a wide scope; and, when exercised, the courts should be exceedingly slow and reluctant to interfere. Certainly, they should never undertake .to substitute their judgment, in matters of judgment, for that of the city’s governing authorities. This court, in Semmes v. Columbus, 19 Ga. 471, held, that “A body corporate is not an.swerable for an erroneous exercise of a discretion, though the consequences be injurious,” and that “Inadequacy of price, unless so great as, of itself, to be evidence of fraud, is not a sufficient ground for impeaching” a contract for the sale of property belonging to a city. In Wells v. Atlanta, 43 Ga. 67, it was decided that where a municipal corporation is acting within the scope of its powers, a court will not “interfere to restrain or control its action on the ground that the same is unwise or extravagant,” and that “To sustain such interference, it must appear either that the act is ultra vires or fraudulent or corrupt.” Again, in Danielly v. Cabaniss, 52 Ga. 212, it was ruled that
In 1 Spelling, Extraord. Relief, §718, it is said: “Where no conditions or restrictions are imposed upon municipal officers in the matter of letting contracts, they are not obliged to let the work to the lowest bidder, and can not be enjoined for
In Holden v. Alton, 179 Ill. 318, which was a case of identically the same kind as ours, except that there the city charter required the contracts to be let to the lowest bidders, it wasdecided that an ordinance like the one now under review was “illegal, as tending to create a monopoly and impose an additional burden on taxpayers.” • While, of course, the provision as to letting contracts to the lowest bidders was a matter of consequence, an examination of the opinion which was delivered by
Judgment affirmed.