Opinion
I. INTRODUCTION
Coral Construction, Inc., (Coral) filed this action against the City and County of San Francisco and other individual defendants (collectively, City) challenging the constitutionality of City’s MinorityAVomen/Local Business Utilization Ordinance (the Ordinance). In essence, Coral alleges that the Ordinance’s provisions granting preferential treatment to women-and
minority-owned businesses in bids for City contracts violates article I, section 31
HISTORY
A. The Ordinance 1
The Ordinance is codified in chapter 12D.A. of the San Francisco Administrative Code. Its relevant provisions are summarized by the director of San Francisco’s Human Rights Commission (HRC):
“Under section 12D.A.9(A) (‘Bid Discount Program’), City departments must give specified percentage discounts to bids . . . submitted by businesses certified by the HRC as minority business enterprises (‘MBEs’), woman business enterprises (‘WBEs’), local business enterprises (‘LBEs’), as well as joint ventures with appropriate level of MBE, WBE or LBE participation. [][] Under section 12D.A.17 (‘Subcontracting Program’), bidders for certain types of prime City contracts must demonstrate their good faith efforts to provide certified MBEs and WBEs an equal opportunity to compete for subcontracts. A bidder may comply with the Subcontracting Program by documenting its good faith efforts to inform MBEs and WBEs of subcontracting opportunities. Bidders who show that they plan to use MBE and WBE subcontractors at a level one would expect absent discrimination need not document their good faith efforts.” 2 Any prime contract bid that fails to comply with the subcontracting program is declared nonresponsive.
B. Coral’s Work and Bidding History
Coral is a “specialty highway contractor” whose primary work involves the installation of road and freeway signage as well as guardrails and other safety appurtenances. 3 Virtually all of Coral’s work is in the public sector. Although headquartered in Oregon, Coral performs a large percentage of its work in California, including in the Bay Area. During the five years prior to the filing of this action (1997 to 2001) an average of 40 percent to 50 percent of Coral’s total revenues came from its work in California. For the same five years, the gross revenues from Coral’s work for City have comprised approximately 5 percent of Coral’s total revenue.
In 2002 Coral acquired a controlling interest in D.C. Hubbs Construction, Inc., a California public works contractor. As a result, Coral now has the capability to do additional types of work, in particular, airport construction work. According to Jay Minor, Coral’s chief operating officer, “[t]his acquisition increases Coral’s opportunities for bidding on and for performing
Coral has been bidding on City’s projects since 1996. In 1996 Marinship Construction Services was awarded a bid for work at the new international terminal at the San Francisco International Airport; Coral was the subcontractor for signs and sign structures. In 1997 Coral bid as a subcontractor for work on the relocation of McDonald Road, but the prime contract bid was unsuccessful. In 1997 Coral was also the subcontractor on a successful bid by Kulchin Condon Associates for work on the inbound/outbound terminal ramps at the airport. In 2000 Coral was invited to negotiate a supplemental contract for additional work in the terminal areas. The negotiations were successful, and Coral completed the additional work “on a fast-track schedule in time for the opening of the new terminal in the Summer of 2000.”
In 2000 the airport put out to bid a project for additional signage at the airport (contract No. 5904.A). Two companies submitted bids: Coral and Agnotti & Reilly. Coral’s bid did not include any subcontractors because Coral intended to do all of the work with its own crew. 4 Coral was the low bidder; however, its bid was rejected as nonresponsive. The project manager wrote: “Specifically, Coral’s bid failed to demonstrate compliance with subcontracting goals in that it failed to list its MBE/WBE subcontractors in its bid .... Coral also failed to demonstrate that it made sufficient good faith efforts to utilize MBE/WBE subcontractors by its failure to submit adequate Good Faith Efforts documentation .... The MBE & WBE goals for this contract are 11% and 5% respectively.” The bid was awarded to Agnotti & Reilly, whose bid exceeded Coral’s by 22 percent. 5
After filing this action in September 2000, Coral continued to consider and to bid on projects in San Francisco. 6 In 2001 Coral submitted a subcontract bid to JMB Construction for additional work at the San Francisco International Airport. Coral was accepted as the subcontractor and JMB was awarded the contract. Although Coral purchased the materials necessary to complete the work, in March 2002 this portion of the project was cancelled. The project manager stated that the cancellation occurred solely due to the post-September 11 declining • economy and the resultant decline in airport revenues.
In January 2002, Coral purchased the plans and specifications for another airport project (taxiway Z bypass), but chose not to submit a bid for various reasons, including the relatively short workday
C. Additional Facts
In his declaration opposing summary judgment Jay Minor states Coral is “ready, willing, and able and is continuing to bid on all appropriate and available opportunities that arise within its specialty areas of work in the San Francisco Bay Area. Specifically, Coral is awaiting further opportunities to bid on City projects at the Airport and within the City. When such opportunities arise, Coral is ready, willing, and able and intends to bid again and work on such projects . . . .” Coral’s work meets all professional standards and “[City] ha[s] never rejected any of Coral’s . . . work on [its] projects for failure to perform in a professional and workman-like manner, for failure to perform to contract specifications, for inadequate bonding or insurance, for lack of appropriate licensing, or for inability to perform.”
Minor further avers that Coral is placed at a severe competitive disadvantage when it bids on City contracts because, inter alia, its contract bids are not entitled to the discounts that apply to WBE and MBE contractors and subcontractors, and if it complies with the Ordinance, its expenses are increased by the cost of outreach to MBE’s and WBE’s. Further, the Ordinance requires Coral to use MBE and WBE subcontractors rather than its own employees or other subcontractors of its own choosing, and to discriminate against enterprises not owned by women or minorities who may want to participate as subcontractors. Minor states Coral is placed at risk of liability for such discrimination.
D. City’s Evidence
City presented voluminous declarations and exhibits demonstrating the following facts:
All of Coral’s contracts or bids have been for erecting and installing large, overhead roadway signs. As of the date Coral filed its complaint, City “only rarely” let contracts that involved the kind of signage work performed by Coral, and no MBE’s or WBE’s were certified to do this kind of work. Coral never competed directly with a WBE or MBE either as a prime contractor or as a subcontractor. Coral has bid on only one prime contract let by City.
Before filing its complaint Coral had bid as a subcontractor on three City projects, but these bids were under the pre-1998 ordinance. Coral did not submit bids for signage work included in three department of public works (DPW) projects let for bids in the three-year period from 1997 to 2000. D.C. Uubbs has never submitted a bid on any City contracts. Certain City contracts are not subject to the Ordinance (e.g., contracts funded by state or federal funds,
City also presented evidence that the next three to five years (i.e., 2002-2007) would produce few, if any, bidding opportunities for Coral. City did identify the aforementioned Third Street light rail transit project on which Coral has participated as a subcontract bidder. City also identified a DPW project that entails the installation of overhead signage but noted it would be subject to the California Department of Transportation’s DBF requirements and not City’s Ordinance. Finally, City presented a declaration from the airport’s manager of the bureau of design and construction. He stated the airport has “no current plans to put out to bid any further City contracts involving the installation of overhead traffic signage or the erection of overhead sign structures.” However, he was “hopeful” that by 2007 the airport would have sufficient resources to complete the AirTrain expansion project, which would include construction of an overhead sign bridge. Although the declarant did not so state, the implication is that Coral would be expected to bid on this project and, like the other airport projects, it would be subject to the Ordinance.
E. The Motions and the Trial Court’s Ruling
Coral filed motions for summary judgment, summary adjudication, judgment on the pleadings, peremptory writ of mandate and preliminary injunction. City filed a cross-motion for summary judgment. In its motion, City argued that Coral’s facial challenge to the Ordinance was not ripe for adjudication and was barred by the statute of limitations. The motion’s primary ground, however, was that Coral lacked standing to challenge future enforcement of the Ordinance because “Coral cannot identify specific facts supporting its claim that [the Ordinance] will cause Coral to suffer a future injury that is both (1) concrete and particularized, and (2) imminent.” City’s motion for summary judgment was granted. 8 In a nutshell, the court ruled “the undisputed evidence establishes that, at the time Coral filed its complaint, Coral did not face an ‘invasion of a legally protected interest’ from the Ordinance that is both (a) ‘concrete and particularized[,’] and (b) ‘actual or imminent.’ [Citations.]” Judgment in favor of City was entered on the order, and Coral filed this timely appeal. 9
m. DISCUSSION
A. Standard of Review
The standard of review of a summary judgment in favor of a defendant is well settled. We “independently assess the correctness of the trial court’s
ruling by applying the same legal standard as the trial court in determining whether any triable issues of material fact exist, and whether the defendant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.”
(Rubin v. United Air Lines, Inc.
(2002)
An action challenging a legislative act cannot be brought by any individual or entity that disagrees with it. In order to invoke the aid of the courts, a plaintiff “must be beneficially interested in the controversy; that is, he or she must have ‘some special interest to be served or some particular right to be preserved or protected over and above the interest held in common with the public at large.’ [Citation.]”
(Holmes v. California Nat. Guard
(2001)
1. Concrete and Particularized Injury
In
Northeastern Fla. Chapter, Associated Gen. Contractors of America v. Jacksonville, supra,
The Supreme Court reversed, stating that such proof was not necessary to establish standing.
(Northeastern Fla., supra,
Similarly, in
Monterey Mechanical Co. v. Wilson
(9th Cir. 1997)
The Ninth Circuit reversed.
(Monterey Mechanical, supra,
2. Injury That Is Actual or Imminent, Not Conjectural or Hypothetical
The second half of the “injury in fact” test requires that the party seeking future relief from the provisions of an allegedly unconstitutional ordinance show “actual or imminent” as opposed to “conjectural or hypothetical” harm from its application.
(Lujan v. Defenders of Wildlife
(1992)
That the bidder’s ability and readiness to bid is subject to some delay outside the control of the bidder does not preclude a finding of imminence. In
Bras,
Pacific Bell required service providers to “prequalif[y]” in order to bid on contracts. The prequalification form awarded 10 points to certified minority- and women-owned business enterprises, which Bras was not. Bras
failed to prequalify, despite a history of satisfactory service provided to Pacific Bell. Bras was informed that he would have prequalified if the 10 points for minority- and women-owned businesses had not been considered.
(Bras, supra,
In his complaint, Bras did not allege any
present
intention to bid on contracts for Pacific Bell. Indeed, Bras was precluded from submitting bids for a three-year period “because [the utility] ha[d] entered into long-term business relationships with three architects that [were then] used for all of its architectural service needs.”
(Bras, supra,
In contrast, the plaintiff in
Cornelius v. Los Angeles County etc. Authority
(1996)
Cornelius had worked for a company that had participated as a subcontractor in a bid to build a metro station. The prime contractor’s bid had been rejected, even though it was the lowest bid, because it failed to satisfy the requirements of the DBF program. The contractor sued the MTA, but subsequently dismissed its action. Cornelius then filed suit.
(Cornelius, supra,
The case of
Associated Builders
provides additional guidance. There, petitioner trade association’s members had refused to bid on certain airport construction contracts because they contained a specification called a “project stabilization agreement (PSA).”
(Associated Builders, supra,
21 Cal.4th at pp. 358, 362.) The association (ABC) filed a petition for writ of mandate seeking an order to strike the PSA as violative of the state Constitution and statutes. The petition was denied on the merits.
(Id.
at p. 360.) On appeal the airports commission argued the ABC lacked standing because it had failed to show any history of past bids by its members, failed to show the members had the necessary qualifications to bid in the future, and failed to allege its members would bid on contracts of the requisite size (i.e., those exceeding $50,000).
(Id.
at p. 362.) The Supreme Court rejected these arguments, concluding, “[i]f . . . ABC could demonstrate that the PSA specification has the effect of infringing its members’ rights of association or expression,
or that it has an anticompetitive impact on them,
then ABC might legitimately claim a beneficial interest within the meaning of Code of Civil Procedure section 1086 and cases interpreting that statute. Thus, although ABC’s allegations on the issue of standing are rather scanty,[
11
] we conclude they suffice to confer standing to challenge the PSA on behalf of its members.”
(Id.,
at p. 363, italics added, citing
Adarand, supra,
C. Analysis
1. Standing to Sue
City concedes that Coral has demonstrated a potential future injury that is “concrete and particularized”—i.e., that Coral could be harmed in the future as a potential prime contractor by not receiving the benefit of a discount under the bid discount program, or by having its bid rejected for failure to
comply with the subcontracting program. City argues, however, that Coral has not offered “any evidence that it was likely to bid as a prime contractor on a City contract to
In essence, City tenders this novel theory: Once a defendant has presented proof that there are no “current plans” to put out to bid any contracts subject to the challenged Ordinance for the kind of work the plaintiff has done, the burden shifts to the plaintiff to identify a
specific
contract it will bid upon
in the near future
in order to demonstrate an injury that is “actual or imminent” and not “conjectural or hypothetical.” We do not think this theory accurately reflects the law. City’s contention is predicated primarily on the view that Coral “had to present evidence showing that (1) the City is ‘likely’ to let a prime contract for a specific service [overhead signage] in the
reasonably
near future; and (2) Coral is ‘very likely’ to bid on that contract.
(Adarand, supra,
Contrary to City’s contention, we are aware of no requirement that a plaintiff must prove the agency is likely to let a contract the plaintiff will bid on “in the
reasonably
near future” in order to establish “imminent” injury. In
Adarand
it happened that the plaintiff satisfied the standing requirement by demonstrating the state put certain contracts out to bid on a more-or-less
annual basis, this frequency was not likely to change, and the plaintiff regularly bid on those contracts.
(Adarand, supra,
The term “relatively” is not synonymous with “reasonably.” In this setting, a commonsense meaning of the term “relatively”
In
Thomas
v.
Anchorage Equal Rights Com’n
(9th Cir. 2000)
City also cites
Scott
v.
Pasadena Unified School Dist.
(9th Cir. 2002)
In the fourth cited case,
Schurr v. Resorts Intern. Hotel, Inc.
(3d Cir. 1999)
City also relies on language found in
Lujan
and in
Los Angeles v. Lyons
(1983)
. In Lyons, the plaintiff was injured when a police officer used a chokehold “without provocation or justification.” The plaintiff claimed this practice was the result of a city policy. (Lyons, supra, 461 U.S. at pp. 97-98.) The court held the plaintiff had no standing to seek prospective relief from that policy because the plaintiff did not allege any reasonable likelihood—but only a “fear”—that a future encounter with police officers would result in his being subjected to the chokehold again. (Id. at p. 107 & fn. 8.)
Lujan is even less useful as precedent. There, the Court explained that the quantum of proof to establish standing depends in large measure on whether the plaintiff is among those governed by the regulation at issue. “When the suit is one challenging the legality of governmental action . . . , the nature and extent of facts that must be averred ... or proved ... in order to establish standing depends considerably upon whether the plaintiff is himself an object of the action ... at issue. If he is, there is ordinarily little question that the action . . . has caused him injury, and that a judgment preventing ... the action will redress it. When, however, as in this case, a plaintiff’s asserted injury arises from the government’s allegedly unlawful regulation ... of someone else, much more is needed.” (Lujan, supra, 504 U.S. at pp. 561-562.) In Lujan the challenged regulation did not apply to the plaintiffs and they claimed only that it might, indirectly, affect their activities at some indefinite future time. The court noted that, in a case where no actual injury is claimed, the “ ‘some day’ intentions [of plaintiffs] without any description of concrete plans” (id. at p. 564) stretch the concept of imminence “beyond the breaking point” (id. at pp. 564-565, fn. 2.) “In such circumstances we have insisted that the injury proceed with a high degree of immediacy, so as to reduce the possibility of deciding a case in which no injury would have occurred at all. [Citations.]” (Ibid., italics added.)
As can be seen, Lyons and Lujan have little bearing on this case. Here, Coral indisputably is an object of the challenged regulation, has suffered actual injury from its application, and has stated an unequivocal intention and ability to take action affected by the regulation, to its injury, in the future.
As further support for its contention that Coral cannot demonstrate imminent injury, City points to the additional facts that (a) Coral has bid on only one prime contract, and (b) many City contracts are not governed by the Ordinance. But the fact that some, or even many, of City’s contracts—past and future—are not covered by the Ordinance does not negate the fact that some contracts were, and will be, governed by the Ordinance, or the fact that Coral has bid in the past and stands ready, willing and able tobid in the future on contracts governed by the Ordinance. The issue, simply put, is whether a plaintiff can show it will bid on a contract sometime in the relatively near future under an ordinance that “offers financial incentives ... for hiring disadvantaged subcontractors.”
(Adarand, supra,
Similarly, the fact that Coral has, in the past, bid on only one prime contract is not proof that future injury is only conjectural.
14
In
Associated Builders
the
We are aware of no cases, and City has cited none, holding that the “imminent injury” component of standing, in a case challenging an allegedly illegal bidding ordinance, is negated if a plaintiff has bid only once in the past. Rather, the various formulations of the rule emphasize likelihood, ability and willingness of the plaintiff to bid
in the future.
While multiple past bids would certainly be relevant in determining the likelihood of future bids (see, e.g.,
Adarand, supra,
We would agree that standing cannot be conferred if it hinges upon a single never-to-be-repeated event. But these are not the facts of this case. Here it has been shown: (1) City occasionally puts out contracts for the specialized sign work done by Coral; (2) at least some of those contracts are covered by the Ordinance; (3) Coral has bid on at least one such contract as a prime contractor; (4) Coral suffered an actual injury as a result of the application of the Ordinance; (5) Coral stands ready, willing and able to bid on future contracts; and (6) under the Ordinance, when Coral does bid it will be “forced to compete on an unequal basis.” These facts more than satisfy the standing test articulated in
Cornelius:
“From [the
Adarand, Bras
and
Northeastern Fla.]
cases we distill the principle that in order for a party to show that the future use of the DBE criteria will cause an actual or imminent injury, the party must minimally show it has bid in the past and would continue to bid in the future.”
(Cornelius, supra,
City seeks to avoid this result by arguing that a plaintiff such as Coral— with no
immediate
threat of future harm—can vindicate any past harm and litigate the issue of the Ordinance’s legality by suing for damages, as did the plaintiffs in
Schurr
and
Lyons.
But it is not for City to select
The essence of the standing inquiry, as City itself concedes, is whether a dispute has matured to the point that it is proper for resolution by the judicial branch, i.e., whether “the issues presented are ‘definite and concrete, not hypothetical or abstract.’ [Citation.] In assuring that this jurisdictional prerequisite is satisfied, we consider whether the plaintiffs face ‘a realistic danger of sustaining a direct injury as a result of the statute’s operation or enforcement,’ [citation,] or whether the alleged injury is too ‘imaginary’ or ‘speculative’ to support jurisdiction.”
(Thomas, supra,
We do not hear City to say the issues presented by this action are not sufficiently definite or concrete, as opposed to hypothetical or abstract. Nor do we hear City to say there is no realistic danger of Coral sustaining any direct injury as a result of the Ordinance’s operation—indeed, City concedes such injury has already occurred. What we do hear City to say is that, because Coral cannot prove it will bid on a specific contract in the near future that will cause such harm, the alleged injury is too imaginary or speculative to support standing. If this were an accurate statement of the law, then those who bid on contracts that are let frequently would have standing to challenge a bidding ordinance but those who bid on contracts that are let only sporadically or infrequently would not—even if they can prove (a) an actual injury from past bidding and (b) the intention and ability to continue bidding. But standing does not turn upon the happenstance of contract frequency. Accordingly, the trial court erred in concluding that Coral did not face an “ ‘invasion of a legally protected interest’ from the Ordinance that is both (a) ‘concrete and particularized[,’] and (b) ‘actual or imminent.’ ”
2. Ripeness
City urges us to affirm the judgment on the alternative grounds that the matter is not ripe for adjudication. We conclude the controversy is sufficiently concrete and definite for a judicial determination.
“The ripeness requirement, a branch of the doctrine of justiciability, prevents courts from issuing purely advisory opinions. [Citation.] It is rooted in the fundamental concept that the proper role of the judiciary does not extend to the resolution of abstract differences of legal opinion. . . . [T]he
ripeness doctrine is primarily bottomed on the recognition that judicial decisionmaking is best conducted in the context of an actual set of facts so that the issues will be framed with sufficient definiteness to enable the court to make a decree finally disposing of the controversy.”
(Pacific Legal Foundation
v.
California Coastal Com.
(1982)
In
Pacific Legal,
the plaintiffs challenged the validity of public access guidelines adopted by the Coastal Commission. The suit did not attack a particular permit condition, nor was it predicated upon any specific application of the guidelines.
City’s ripeness argument echoes its challenge to Coral’s standing:
17
“Because Coral [cannot] point to a single contract subject to the Bid Discount or Subcontracting Programs on which Coral intends to bid, at this time its challenge is 100 percent abstract.” But we have already concluded that Coral is not required to identify a contract on which it intends to bid in the near future to demonstrate standing. Further, it is undisputed that Coral’s challenge to the Ordinance is not merely a general, abstract challenge to regulations and policies such as that brought by the plaintiffs in
Pacific Legal, supra,
3. Statute of Limitations
Finally, City argues the judgment should be upheld on the alternative ground that Coral’s action is barred by the statute of limitations. City reasons as follows: Coral filed an action for damages resulting from its disqualified bid; the action also requests a writ of mandate, declaratory relief and injunctive relief, seeking invalidation of the Ordinance. The damage claim was eliminated by way of demurrer, so the remaining causes of action constitute only a facial challenge to the Ordinance. A facial challenge to an ordinance accrues when the ordinance is adopted. The statute of limitations for asserting an infringement of constitutional rights is one year. Coral’s facial challenge to the Ordinance was not filed within one year of its adoption and is, therefore, barred.
We do not agree that Coral’s mandamus and equitable causes of action constitute a purely facial challenge. At best Coral’s claims are hybrids, challenging the Ordinance both facially and as it was applied to Coral’s bids. In fact, in a different context City itself describes the action as an “as-applied challenge.” And, City does not dispute that chapter 12D.A. of the Ordinance remains in full force and effect and will continue to be enforced with respect to all bids to which it applies. Paraphrasing the holding of
Howard Jarvis Taxpayers Assn.
v.
City of La Habra
(2001)
4. Constitutionality of the Ordinance and of Proposition 209
Both parties ask us to address the merits of the controversy. Coral argues that because City admitted in the trial court that the constitutionality of the Ordinance is a legal issue, that question can be decided in the first instance on this appeal. City responds that the constitutionality of the Ordinance cannot be decided as a matter of law because it involves the factual issue of whether the Ordinance falls within Proposition 209’s meeting federal requirements exception. City also urges us, however, to affirm the judgment in its favor on the basis that the application of Proposition 209 to this Ordinance would be unconstitutional because it would “prevent [City] from enacting remedial legislation to assist minorities and women.” Our review of the record makes clear that these issues cannot be decided in the first instance on appeal. Accordingly, we decline the invitations to decide the merits.
IV. DISPOSITION
The judgment is reversed and the cause is remanded for further proceedings.
Reardon, Acting P. J., and Sepulveda, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied March 19, 2004.
Notes
The Ordinance took effect in November of 1998, and was reenacted in virtually identical form in June of 2003. Prior to November 1998, a different MinorityAVomen/Local Business Utilization Ordinance was in effect; the provisions of that ordinance are substantially similar to the 1998 Ordinance, insofar as they are relevant to the core issues of this appeal.
The “level [of MBE/WBE subcontractor work] one would expect absent discrimination” is set by the HRC director and her staff. It is based on the “subcontracting opportunities presented by a particular contract and the availability of certified MBEs and WBEs qualified to do the type of work involved on the contract.”
Coral lists the following as work it regularly performs: “metal guardrail, break away anchors, permanent and temporary highway signing (both ground mount and overhead, including the steel structures, footings and electrical work), precast concrete median barrier, chain link fence, metal bridge and pedestrial rail, impact attenuators and sand barrels, signal structures, guide posts, traffic controls, delineators, electronic changeable message signs (including wiring, conduit, etc.), sound walls (including wood, masonry or concrete), small retaining walls, small concrete free standing walls, rock slope screening and fence protection, small concrete paving and drainage projects, excavation, embankment, hauling, clear and grub, seeding and mulching, blast fencing, exterior and interior building signage . . . , thrie beam barriers, wire mesh overhead rock protection, etc.”
According to Minor, “Coral is ‘An Equal Opportunity Employer,’ [whose employees] are hired without any consideration of their race, sex, ethnicity, color, or national origin. As a result, Coral’s work crews are high quality and ‘diverse’ . . . .”
It appears from the declaration of City’s HRC director that Agnotti & Reilly’s bid included a certified MBE as the subcontractor for the roadside signage. (The Agnotti & Reilly bid and its list of subcontractors are referred to as exhibits to the declaration of Mr. Tsai, the project manager, but are not included in the record.)
We are mindful that a defect in standing cannot be cured by postfiling events.
(Steger v. Franco, Inc.
(8th Cir. 2000)
As of August 2002, the date of the summary judgment motion, the contract had not been awarded.
Coral’s motion for summary judgment was denied; Coral’s other motions were denied as moot.
City purports to cross-appeal from the trial court’s June 1, 2001, order overruling its first demurrer to Coral’s fourth cause of action for damages. This is a nonappealable order, and City has not addressed its cross-appeal in its briefing; therefore, we deem the cross-appeal waived.
In so holding the court did not address
Stocks v. City of Irvine
(1981)
Contrary authority may be found in
Torres v. City of Yorba Linda
(1993)
We leave for another day the untangling of these jurisprudential threads, because we here conclude that Coral has adequately demonstrated standing to challenge the Ordinance under the federal standard.
“ABC predicates its allegation of standing on a declaration by . . . the Executive Director of the Golden Gate Chapter of [ABC], stating that seven named members of Associated Builders and AACA refused to bid on the airport project due to the PSA specification.”
(Associated Builders, supra,
Nor does
Cornelius
hold that bidding must occur in the near future. In
Cornelius
the court articulated the rule in this way: “[I]n order for a party to show that the future use of the DBE criteria will cause an actual or imminent injury, the party must minimally show it has bid in the past and would continue to bid in the future.”
(Cornelius, supra,
Schurr
also does not address the inability to
compete
on equal footing for a contract.
(Northeastern Fla., supra,
City also cites as a separate factor supporting the absence of imminent injury, Coral’s “sporadic” bidding on prime contracts. To say Coral bid “only a single time” on a prime contract and Coral bid “sporadic[ally]” on prime contracts appears to us to be the same thing, merely stated differently. Moreover, there is no evidence in the record there were any prime contracts Coral could have bid on, but did not, other than the 2002 airport taxiway bypass project. There is evidence that in 1997, 1999 and 2000 DPW put out for bid three street and bridge improvement projects that included erection of overhead sign structures, but the record does not elucidate whether Coral was qualified to bid as a prime contractor (as opposed to a subcontractor) on these projects.
Although standing was not at issue in
Hi-Voltage Wire Works, Inc. v. City of San Jose
(2000)
Having found that Coral is not precluded as a matter of law from challenging City’s Ordinance as a past and future bidder on prime contracts, we need not separately determine whether Coral has standing as a past and future subcontractor.
We observe, in this connection, that there is considerable debate as to whether ripeness and standing principles are indistinguishable, or at least, largely congruent. (See Thomas, supra, 220 F.3d at pp. 1138-1139 and articles cited therein.)
