City of Maryville ex rel. Citizens' National Bank v. Lippman

151 Mo. App. 447 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1910

JOHNSON, J.

This is a suit on a special taxbill issued by Maryville, a city of the fourth class, in payment of the cost of grading, paving, guttering and curbing one of the public streets of that city. The answer pleaded several defenses, only one of which we find it necessary to consider. A jury was- waived and the court after hearing the evidence rendered judgment for defendant. Plaintiff appealed.

It appears from the briefs that the court found .against the validity of the taxbills, to which the one in suit belongs, on three grounds. We find the judgment should be sustained on one of these grounds and, passing the others, address our discussion to that one only. • •

The ordinance providing for the improvement, as well as the plans and specifications on file, provided that the paving should be of vitrified brick and that “the brick shall be of best quality of re-pressed vitrified paving brick of the usual dimensions, not less- than. *451214 x 4x8 inches and not more than 3% x 4x8 inches.” An advertisement for bids was made as provided in section 5989', Revised Statutes. 1899' (sec. 9411, R. S. 1909) and after its completion and on the day preceding the letting of the contract, the board of aldermen amended the ordinance changing the minimum dimensions of the brick from 2% x 4x8 inches to 2% x 3% x 7% inches. It is admitted that after the change in the ordinance relative to bricks no advertisement of any kind was made or had for bids on the work. The contract for the work gave the dimensions of the brick as specified in the amendment.

Referring to the curbing the original ordinance provided “All stone curbs shall be joined with iron dowel pins inserted1 between the stones four inches from the top. The dowel pins are to be formed of straight pieces of half-inch iron, cut into four inch lengths and the holes in the stone shall be of such size that the dowel pins will fit closely.” It is admitted that “during the progress of the work and after entering into the alleged contract the board of aider-men orally released the Likes Improvement Company (the contractor) from performing the portion of the work just referred to (i. e., putting in dowel pins) without any ordinance, resolution or any other record.”

The curb stones were set without being doweled together.

The statute provides (section 59891) that contracts for street improvements “shall be let to the lowest and best bidder upon plans and specifications filed therefor by the city engineer or other officer designated by the board of aldermen, with the city clerk, not less than one week’s advertisement for bids thereupon being made in some newspaper published in the city.” The statute must receive a construction that will give effect to its obvious purpose which is that public work of the character under consideration must be offered *452to competitive bidding and that all who may wish to bid shall have a fair opportunity to compete in a field where no favoritism is shown or may be shown to other contestants. The law does all that reasonably may be done to guard against the possibility of favoritism or fraud being practiced to the disadvantage of the honest competitor. In following the provisions of the statutes city governments should realize that next in importance to avoiding evil itself is the avoidance of the appearance of evil. It is quite as great a stimulus to real competition for those engaged in the contracting business who are honest to feel that all will have a fair field and that no favor will be shown as it is to give to all that hind of a field. Of course, as was held by the Supreme Court in Cole v. Skrainka, 105 Mo. 303, courts should not enforce “the extreme view ‘that in order to recover for these local improvements, the plaintiff must show a literal compliance with all the provisions of the ordinances.’ ” In that case the variance between the depth of the rough granite blocks used and those called for in the ordinance was no greater than the undressed condition of the blocks naturally would make. The court said: “A literal compliance with this ordinance would require the blocks to be brought to the exact depth of eight inches. This can only be done by the use of a chisel and the proof is all one way, to the effect that this would more than double the cost o.f the blocks and render the use of them as paying stones impracticable.”

This case — so much relied on' by plaintiff — is no authority for the proposition that after the advertisement for bids has been made and without readvertising the specifications of work or material may be substantially changed or that the contractor may be released from the performance of a substantial and expensive requirement of the ordinance and contract. It is indispensable that “bidders shall start on a common ground and bid for the production or accomplishment *453of the same identical result.” [Bridge Co. v. Durand (Wis.), 99 N. W. 603.] We quote further from the case just cited:

“A second essential contained in the charter is that plans and specifications and terms, submitted as a basis for the bids, shall not be changed except in such manner as to affect all bidders and persons desiring to bid alike; that in case of a substantial change, either in the character of the structure or the terms of the proposed contract after the first competition shall have been completed, there shall be a second opportunity given to bid upon the new basis. [Wells v. Burnham, supra; McDermott v. Jersey City, 56 N. J. Law 273, 28 Atl. 424.] To permit one person to change his offer in consideration of a variation in the plans and specifications or proposed terms, and to award to him the contract as a result thereof, is the plainest kind of a violation of such a law as the one in question. An award made to a particular bidder through negotiations with him, the work to he done or the terms of the contract being privately varied upon the one side to secure a reduction in the offer to do- the work upon the other, is not a letting to the lowest bidder upon an open competition. On the contrary, it is an award of work privately made upon special terms to produce something not submitted to public competition.”

We give our approval to this doctrine and, applying it to the case in hand, say that the change in the specifications made by the board of aldermen, after the bidding had been closed and without a readvertisement, was a fraud in law on the rights of the property-owners and contractors. We cannot sanction the view that the change was immaterial. If it was immaterial to the successful bidder what was the necessity of providing for it at a time and in a manner so suspicious *454of favoritism? If this contractor wanted the scope of the dimensions of the brick enlarged to include stock he had on hand or to conform to the usual product of his plant, how can. we say that other contractors who did not think they could get the specifications changed for their benefit, were deterred from bidding because of their inability to furnish brick according to the specifications in the time required?

We are not holding there was any actual fraud in this case but we do say that if we approved the rule for which plaintiff contends we would open wide the door to fraud and favoritism. Full recognition should be accorded the presumption invoked by plaintiff of honesty and right acting on the part of public officers but that presumption has nothing to do with the purpose of the law to help public officers to be honest by removing from their path temptations and opportunities to be otherwise.

What we have said applies not only to the change in the specifications for the paving brick, but also to the unwarranted action of the council in releasing the contractor from the task of doweling the curbstones, That action of the council greatly lessened the cost-oí preparing and setting the curbing. Plaintiff virtually concedes the invalidity of the assessment for curbing and asks us to separate it from the assessment for paving on the- ground that the two are ‘ ‘ severable and divisible. ’ ’ [Dick v. Riddle, 139 Mo. App. 584.] But since we find the taxbill is invalid with respect to both paving and curbing it is not necessary to discuss the, question of the divisibility of the contract.

The judgment is affirmed.

All concur.
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