42 Mass. App. Ct. 773 | Mass. App. Ct. | 1997
As if to demonstrate that no good deed goes unpunished, the town of Barnstable encouraged women and minority subcontractor participation in a public construction job on which it invited bids and then rejected a low subcontractor’s bid on the ground that the inclusion of women’s participation as provided was an “addition [in the bid response] not called for.” A judge of the Superior Court concluded that the subcontractor’s bid violated G. L. c. 149, § 44F, that the town acted lawfully in rejecting it, and that the subcontractor was not entitled to damages. The subcontractor appealed from a judgment for the town.
These are the pertinent facts. In early 1993, Barnstable
Before the opening of bids, the town addressed to subcontractors a series of “addenda” to the bid invitation on the subject of participation by enterprises that women or members of a minority group controlled. Addendum No. 2,
In the relative arcana of compulsory sub-bidding in Massachusetts, a paragraph E sub-sub-bid refers to subtrades that are identified in the specifications as ones for which the bidder shall list a sub-subcontractor unless the subcontractor customarily performs that class of work. See G. L. c. 149, § 44F(3), 4th par. For the HVAC work, the anticipated sub-sub-bids were four: sheet metal, automatic temperature controls, mechanical insulation, and testing/adjusting/ balancing.
Addendum No. 3, issued two days later, on March 12, 1993, made women and minority participation mandatory, but that requirement had a short life as on March 15, 1993, an Addendum No. 4 issued, deleting the mandatory W/MBE. Addendum No. 4 added the following:
“As stated in Item 4 of Addendum No. 2, ‘Filed subcontractors are encouraged to subcontract portions*775 of their work to SOME A approved W/MBE subcontractors. Supplementary sub-bid forms are available to all filed sub-bidders to list W/MBE subcontractors with whom they will sub-contract and the dollar amount or percentage of those proposed subcontracts.’ The forms referred to are those documents Usted in and provided with Addendum No. 3, under Item 3.”
Albeit the precatory word, “encouraged,” a prospective subcontractor could be forgiven for thinking that the flurry of directives meant that the town desired W/MBE participation and would smile upon a bid that included it. A responding subcontractor could also reasonably understand that the cross reference in Addendum No. 4 to Addendum No. 2 incorporated the sentence that placed a limit of 20% on W/MBE participation through sub-subcontractors, exclusive of the designated paragraph E categories. Amanti thought so and with its low bid furnished a letter of intent — on a form furnished by the town — with McCarthy Mechanical, Inc., a SOMWBA certified women’s business, that McCarthy would furnish supplementary labor and materials for the piping system for a price of $240,000. That amount constituted 16% of Amanti’s bid for the HVAC work.
Barnstable and the general contractor cheerfully embraced Amanti’s bid but two other sub-bidders, including the next to lowest sub-bidder, protested the award of the HVAC subcontract to Amanti to the Department of Labor and Industries (DOLI).
Sophisticates in the mysteries and nuances of the public bidding process are not, however, so easily misled by the ap
As Amanti’s bid violated § 44F, Barnstable was bound to reject it unless the deviation was minor or solely matter of form. Gil-Bern Constr. Corp. v. Brockton, 353 Mass. 503, 505-506 (1968). Modern Continental Constr. Co. v. Lowell, 391 Mass. 829, 840 (1984). J. D’Amico, Inc. v. Worcester, 19 Mass. App. Ct. 112, 115 & n.5 (1984). In analyzing the significance of the deviation we concentrate on the purposes of the public bidding system and on the view of the town of the importance of the W/MBE request in its bidding process.
A first objective of the competitive bidding process prescribed by G. L. c. 149, §§ 44A-44J, is to obtain the lowest price from a responsible contractor. Interstate Engr. Corp. v. Fitchburg, 367 Mass. 751, 757 (1975). The focus of controversy, the proffer of the W/MBE participation, did not interfere with the goal of the public authority getting the best price for the HVAC work; Amanti’s bid was the lowest.
Concerning the importance of W/MBE participation, the position of the town now is that the request was entirely prec-atory and that Amanti should not have been so obtuse as to take it seriously, least of all by responding to the request in a manner uncompliant with § 44H. If the W/MBE proffer was just dispensable surplusage, then it must have been a minor matter of form that Amanti could dispense with, as it was ready to do. Indeed, the W/MBE proffer was not part of the bid response form furnished to bidders but was responded to with an appended letter of intent, on a form supplied by the town. We think the town cannot have it both ways: that the W/MBE request was not serious but that a response to it was so serious as to disqualify a subbidder who responded to it. This is not a question of estoppel because the courts are reluctant in the extreme to apply principles of estoppel to public bodies. Phipps Prod. Corp. v. Massachusetts Bay Transp. Authy., 387 Mass. 687, 693 (1982). We look to the town’s attitude toward the W/MBE request solely to measure whether it was an insignificant rather than a significant factor in the bidding process.
On the peculiar facts of this case, in which a statutory violation (if it was such) was invited by the public authority but subsequently disavowed as a serious request, we are of opinion that Amanti’s W/MBE proffer was a minor deviation
We do not think it a satisfactory response to our reasoning that Amanti could have responded to the W/MBE request in the specialized paragraph E subtrades. The bid invitation, perhaps in recognition of the difficulty of achieving significant W/MBE participation if confined to the specialized subtrades, had invited W/MBE participation outside of the specialized subtrades.
There remains the question of remedy. Amanti failed in its effort to obtain injunctive relief, and the HVAC work was done by the second lowest bidder. In such circumstances the damages which Amanti may recover are limited to its bid preparation costs. Paul Sardella Constr. Co. v. Braintree Hous. Authy., 3 Mass. App. Ct. 326, 333-335 (1975), S.C., 371 Mass. 235, 243 (1976). Sciaba Constr. Corp. v. Boston, 35 Mass. App. Ct. 181, 191 (1993).
In circumstances involving failure by a public authority to consider bids fairly and in good faith, this court has suggested that lost profits may be recoverable, as they are when a general contractor, in a public bidding setting, in bad faith deprives a sub-bidder of its. contract. Bradford & Bigelow, Inc. v. Commonwealth, 24 Mass. App. Ct. 349, 358-359 (1987). Amanti suggests Barnstable acted unfairly by including an unlawful requirement that it should have known, on the basis of experience in a bidding contest in 1989, was unlawful. At most, however, the conduct of Barnstable exhibited confusion about how to ride the W/MBE horse. There was no bad faith directed at Amanti or any other bidder. The occasion recalls the observation of Justice Holmes
More than twelve years ago, in JJ Assocs., Inc. v. Fall River Hous. Authy., 19 Mass. App. Ct. 45, 53 (1984), we remarked about the conflict between the objectives of the public bidding laws and those affording special opportunities for W/MBE participation in public construction contracts. We said that “The area appears to be one where the risk of confusion would be reduced greatly by a more complete and explicit expression of legislative intention.” That risk of confusion, as the instant case illustrates, persists. Equally unfortunate is that the demands of § 44F, as interpreted by DOLI, convert the program to encourage W/MBE participation in public construction into a masquerade, with resultant cynicism about the purpose and carrying out of the policies described in G. L. 23A, §§ 41 to 44.
The judgment declaring that Barnstable rightly rejected Amanti’s bid is reversed, and a judgment shall be entered declaring that Amanti is entitled to recover its bid preparation costs.
So ordered.
Addendum No. 1 is not in the record, and we surmise that it dealt with an unrelated subject.
The acronym stands for State Office of Minority Business Assistance and in 1987 became translated to SOMWBA, the State Office of Minority and Women’s Business Assistance. See G. L. c. 23A, § 44, as appearing in St. 1987, c. 525, § 35.
This acronym stands for women’s/minority business enterprise.
General Laws c. 149, § 44H, conferred on DOLI authority to require compliance with the public bidding laws although its decisions were not self enforcing and could only be enforced through proceedings that DOLI might initiate in Superior Court. See Doric Bldg. Assocs. v. Department of Labor and Indus., 27 Mass. App. Ct. 1175, 1177 (1989); Petricca Constr. Co. v. Commonwealth, 37 Mass. App. Ct. 392, 394 (1994). Since an amendment made to the statute by St. 1996, c. 151, § 386, the compliance function is the duty of the Attorney General.
Amanti was not the only subcontractor on the Barnstable Middle School job to have offered M/WBE participation in work that was not paragraph E specialty subtrade work through a SOWMBA-certified subcontractor. The low and successful bidder on the electrical work, LeVangie Electric Co., Inc., subcontracted some of its work to a W/MBE subcontractor. No other bidders on the electrical work made any objection, and the town acquiesced in the letting of a subcontract to LeVangie, which proceeded to do the work. The town appeared to proceed on a “don’t ask, don’t tell” basis.