Thеse are appeals from the denial of a motion to confirm, and the granting of a motion to vacate, an arbitration award handed down in favor of Francis G. Falzarano, a contractor doing business as Falzarano Construction Company, and certain subcontractors.
The case arises out of a contract for a major renovation of the Bessie M. Burke Memorial Hospital, a municipal hospital operated by the city of Lawrence (city). The judge of the Superior Court who ruled on the motions found the following facts. The contract was entered into by Falzarano and the city on November 23, 1971. On the next day the city learned that a new law had been passed, St. 1971, c. 1080, which had become effective on November 15, 1971, and which required that a determination of need be made by the Massachusetts Department of Public Health (DPH) before any major renovation work сould be commenced on a health care facility. The city informed Falzarano of this state of affairs, and substantially no work was performed under the contract, although on November 30,1971, Falzarano signed contracts with various subcontractors to perform work on the proposed renovation of the hospital, and certain equipment was moved to the hospital site. Subsequently the city attempted to obtain a certificate of need from the DPH but was not successful.
4
In March and April, 1972, Falzarano wrote to the mayor of the city concerning the delay. On May 26, 1972, the contract between Falzarano and the city was terminated by agreement of both par
On June 11, 1975, in accordance with a provision in the contract for the arbitration of disputes thereunder, 5 Falzarano filеd a demand for arbitration with the American Arbitration Association, claiming damages for breach of contract. Hearings were commenced before a panel of arbitrators on January 29, 1976, at which time the city moved to dismiss the proceedings on the ground that the contract, including its arbitration clause, was illegal and unenforceable. The arbitrators denied this motion, and proceeded to hear evidence. On March 19, 1976, they made an award in favor of Falzarano and his several subcontractors in the amount of $74,225.00, of which some $58,500.00 was to go to Falzarano himself. 6
The city then filed an application in the Superior Court seeking to vacate the award on the grounds that there was no valid contract and therefore no valid agreement to arbitrate, and that the arbitrators exceeded their authority in making the award. G. L. c. 251, § 12 (a) (3) and (a) (5). Falzarano filed a separate apрlication in the same court to confirm the award. G. L. c. 251, § 11. The two applications were consolidated and heard together on statements of counsel and certain documentary evidence.
After the hearing the judge allowed the application to vacate and denied the application to confirm the award. In
From the judgments in these two actions Falzarano appealed to the Appeals Court, which upheld the decision of the judge, although on different grounds.
Lawrence
v.
Falzarano,
The issues raised are as follows: 1) was the contract, and thе agreement to arbitrate contained in it, valid despite the fact that St. 1971, c. 1080, prohibited performance under the contract absent a certificate of need? 7 2) was the contract valid despite the fact that it did not contain a certification by the city auditor that sufficient money had been appropriated for it, as required by G. L. c. 44, § 31C? 3) if the contract was valid, does the illegality of performing under the contract nonetheless require vacating the arbitration award? 4) were the arbitrators within their authority in granting an award which included damages both for delay and for lost profits?
We answer the first, second, and fourth issues in the affirmative, and the third in the negative, and therefore hold that the award was properly made and should have been confirmed.
1. Validity of the Contract in Light of St. 1971, c. 1080.
Statute 1971, c. 1080,
8
requires that no substantial construction or renovation of a public health facility be com
Further, the statute prohibits the “сommenc[ing of] construction.” In the present case no illegal construction was commenced, and no recovery is sought for the value of goods or services illegally provided. In this respect it can be distinguished from cases cited by the city in which recovery for such performance was denied.
Hawes Elec. Co.
v.
Angell,
General Laws c. 44, § 31C (St. 1964, c. 693, § 1), 9 requires that the certification of the city auditor or other official, stating that an appropriation covering the amount of a municipal building contract is available therefor, must appear on the contract before it “shall be deemed to have been made.” No such certification appears on the face of the contract. However, there was in evidence before the judge a certified copy of an order adopted by the Lawrence city council duly appropriating $1,500,000 for the renovation of the hospital, an amount well over Falzarano’s total contract price of $969,610.
We have stated generally that “[pjersons dealing with a municipality must take notice of limitations . . . upon the contracting power of the municipality and are bound by them and cannot recover upon contracts attempted to be made in violation of them.”
Marlborough
v.
Cybulski, Ohnemus & Assocs.,
We believe, as did the Appeals Court, that c. 44, § 31C, entitled “An Act providing that payment for certain public
This case is not controlled by
Ryan
v.
Somerville,
3. Effect of Illegality of Performance.
We next consider whether the performance called for under the contract was illegal, and if so, whether this illegality is itself a sufficient ground to void the contract and the included arbitration agreement. The judge held that while the contract was legal, performance was illegal, which illegality was “fundamental to the contract and makes performance impossible.” 11 This impossibility, it seems, was the basis for his holding that at the time arbitration was demanded no valid contract existed between the parties.
We find this reasoning somewhat circular. The parties were bound by a valid contract, which included a provision that all disputes arising under it would be settled by arbitration. This agreement to arbitrate is governed by G. L. c. 251, regulating the arbitration of commercial disputes. Section 1 thereof states in part that “a provision in a written contract to submit to arbitration any controversy thereafter arising between the parties shall be valid, enforceable and irrevocable, save upon such grounds as exist at law or in equity for the revocation оf any contract.”
Section 2 of c. 251 provides for proceedings to compel or to stay arbitration, and states in subsection
(b)
that “[u]pon application, the superior court may stay an arbitration proceeding commenced or threatened if it finds that there is no agreement to arbitrate.” Section 12 permits the court to vacate an arbitration award upon certain specified grounds,
Since the contract was valid, the agreement to arbitrate contained in it was binding and enforceable unless revoked. G. L. c. 251, § 1. The question whether the termination of the contract on May 26, 1972, served to revoke the theretofore valid arbitration agreement
12
was not briefed or argued in the trial court or on appeal, and thus has been waived. The defense to liability on the contract based on the illegality of performance was a dispute which was included within the broad agreement оf the parties to arbitrate, and was properly within the province of the arbitrators to decide. See
Quirk
v.
Data Terminal Syss., Inc.,
4. Awarding of Damages hy Arbitrators.
The final issue is whether the arbitrators exceeded their authority in awarding damages for delay and for lost profits
In this case a sufficient appropriation was properly made to cover the cost of the contract to the city. Compare
Marlborough
v.
Cybulski, Ohnemus & Assocs., supra.
As part of the contract the city agreed to submit disputes arising under it to arbitration. Fulfilment of a contract for the renovation of a public hospital is a purpose for which municipalities generally may expend public funds. G. L. c. 40, § 5 (19), (20). Compare
Boston Teachers Local 66 v. School Comm. of Boston,
The purpose of G. L. c. 251 governing arbitration is to provide further speedy resolution of disputes by a method which is “not subject to delay and obstruction in the courts.”
Quirk
v.
Data Terminal Syss., Inc., supra
at 767. As noted above, judicial review of arbitration awards is confined to certain narrow grounds. Arbitration, it is clear, may not “award relief of a nature which offends public policy or which directs or requires a result contrary to express statutory provision,” S.E. Eager, The Arbitration Contract and Proceedings § 121.6 (1971), or otherwise transcends the limits of the contract of which the agreement to arbitrate is but a part.
Marlborough
v.
Cybulski, Ohnemus & Assocs., supra.
However, within these bounds and within the limits of the agreement to submit to arbitration, arbitrators have broad authority to establish a balance between the parties. See
M.S. Kelliher Co.
v.
Wakefield,
Falzarano demanded arbitration as to his claims of damages for delay and loss of anticipated profits on the contract. Clearly these matters fell within the broad language of the arbitration clause in the contract. We presume that in making their award the arbitrators rendered decision as to both these matters and on no others.
Fazio
v.
Employers Liab. Assurance Corp.,
For these reasons, we hold that no grounds exist for vacating the present arbitration award under G. L. c. 251, § 12. We therefore reverse the judgments and remand the сases to the Superior Court where orders and judgments are to be entered allowing Falzarano’s application to confirm and denying the city’s application to vacate the arbitration award.
So ordered.
Notes
Ultimately the DPH was required by a special act of the Legislature (St. 1973, c. 923) to issue the certificate of need for the renovation. See
Commissioner of Pub. Health
v.
Bessie M. Burke Memorial Hosp.,
The “Agreement” between the parties as it appears in the record before us refers to various provisions which supplement it but do not appear on its face. In argument below and in his brief Falzarano stated that the arbitration clause of the contract provided as follows: “All claims, disputes and other matters in question arising out of, or relating to, this Contract or the breach thereof . . . shall be decided by arbitration in accordance with the Construction Industry Arbitration Rules of the American Arbitration Association then obtaining. . . . This agreement to arbitrate shall be specifically enforceable under the prevailing arbitration law . . ..” The city does not contest this assertion.
Between the time of the hearings and the rendering of the arbitrators’ decision the city attempted to stay the proceedings through an action filed in the Probate Court for Essex County. The parties agrеe that this was an improper forum for such an action. G. L. c. 251, § 2 (b). This action has no bearing on the issues before us.
The legislative requirement of a DPH determination of need before allowing expenditures for certain health care facilities which first appeared in St. 1971, c. 1080, was later enacted on a permanent basis as G. L. c. 111, §§ 25B-26G, by St. 1972, c. 776, effective June 1,1972. See Commissioner of Pub. Health v. Bessie M. Burke Memorial Hosp., supra at 737.
Statute 1971, c. 1080, provides in part as follows: “Section 1. Notwithstanding any contrary provision of law, no person shall (a) commence сonstruction of a new health care facility at a specific location or commence construction altering, adding to, making major repairs to, re
u
“Section 5. The superior court shall have jurisdiction in equity, upon the petition of the department of public health or of'any ten taxpayers in the commonwealth, to enjoin any violation or imminently threatened violation of the provisions of section one of this act.”
For a summary and analysis of the background of this chapter, see
Brookline
v.
Medical Area Serv. Corp.,
The section provides in pertinent part: “No contract for the construction, reconstruction, alteration, remodeling, repair or demolition of any public building ... by any city . . . costing more than two thousand dollars shall be deemed to have been made until the auditor or accountant or other officer of the city . . . having similar duties has certified thereon that an appropriation in the amount of such contract is available therefor. . . . The certificate . . . that an appropriation in the amount of such contract or order is available shall bar any defense by the city ... on the grounds of insufficient appropriation; and any law barring payment in excess of appropriations shall not apply to amounts covered by any certificate under this section.”
Like the Appeals Court, we do not address the city’s argument that the contract was illegal because it violated a certain city ordinance. The ordinance is not properly before us, as it was not included in the record on appeal and is not an appropriate subject of judicial notice.
Fournier
v.
Central Taxi Cab, Inc.,
The judge’s decision was in relevant part as follows: “I find that although the contract was legal performance was illegal. This illеgality was not caused by either party and there has been no breach of the contract by either party. The illegality is fundamental to the contract and makes performance impossible. This reasoning is confirmed by the actions of the parties in mutually rescinding the contract in May of 1972.
“There being no valid binding contract between the parties when arbitration was sought, and the city raising this issue, the arbitrators exceeded their powers in determining that a contract binding upon the parties was in force at the time arbitration was sought.”
But see
Mendez
v.
Trustees of Boston Univ.,
