205 N.Y. 147 | NY | 1912
The original order brought up for review by this appeal directs the issuance of a peremptory writ of mandamus commanding the commissioners of water supply of the city of New York to afford the petitioner an opportunity to inspect any and all reports of the chief and consulting engineers to the board of water supply on or relating to the passing upon and awarding by the said board of a contract known as contract *150 90 for the construction of a tunnel under the Hudson river between Storm King and Break Neck mountains and two shafts in connection therewith.
The appellants constitute the board of water supply, a board or commission of public officers acting for and in behalf of the city of New York to acquire an additional supply of pure and wholesome water for the inhabitants of the municipality. (Laws of 1905, ch. 724.) In the discharge of their duties under the statute cited, they determined that a tunnel for aqueduct purposes should be constructed under the Hudson river opposite Storm King; and they duly advertised for sealed bids or proposals for doing the work, receivable up to May 23, 1911, in accordance with plans and specifications and under a form of contract previously prepared and approved. Four bids were received, as follows, the figures in each instance representing the aggregate for doing the entire work:
Anthony C. Douglass .............. $1,432,000 Winston Co. and Breuchaud ...... 1,483,936 The T.A. Gillespie Company ....... 1,648,000 McArthur Bros. Co. ............... 1,755,168 ==========
The contract was awarded to the T.A. Gillespie Company, instead of to the lowest bidder, under a provision of the statute which authorizes the board to "select the bid or proposal, the acceptance of which will in their judgment, best secure the efficient performance of the work." (Laws of 1905, ch. 724, § 29.) In their report, passing upon the bids, the commissioners of water supply declare that all the bidders are experienced men; that all the evidence goes to show that the low bidder, Mr. Anthony C. Douglass, is a man of high reputation and integrity, courageous and resourceful, who has done difficult tunneling and shaft work requiring the handling of considerable volumes of water in connection with the power developments at Niagara Falls; but the commissioners "hesitate to make an *151 award of this important contract to him because there are many important differences between the work he has done and the work under Contract 90, which is unusually exacting; because he has had no experience in carrying out work let by competitive bidding on large public contracts; and particularly because he has not done any contracting work for about five years, and consequently has not at hand the necessary facilities and organization which this contract expressly calls for." As to the second bidders, Winston and Company and Breuchaud, who are characterized as clever, reliable, experienced and resourceful, it appears from the report that they were already doing excellent work in connection with the Ashokan dam and the Catskill aqueduct, and the commissioners, therefore, deemed it unwise to concentrate all the links in the chain of construction in the hands of one contractor. "The Board," we are told, "has come to the reluctant conclusion that the interests of the City will not be best served by the award of this contract to them." The third bidders, The T.A. Gillespie Company, were finally preferred because they "have nearly completed for this Board a work involving the same problems and of an exactly similar character, and have at hand an organization trained for this particular class of work." The commissioners had further satisfied themselves as to the financial standing, knowledge, experience and ability of said company.
Upon ascertaining these facts, the petitioner, a resident and taxpayer in the city of New York, desired to see the written evidence upon which the commissioners of water supply had acted in awarding contract 90 to a contractor whose bid was $217,000 higher than the lowest bid and $165,000 higher than the next to the lowest. His request for permission to inspect the reports of the engineers relating to the award of the contract, and all minutes, entries, books and other papers in reference thereto was denied by the secretary of the board, under *152 instructions from the commissioners, and the present proceeding was thereupon instituted.
The petitioner's assertion of his right to inspect the papers in question is based upon section
"All books of minutes, entry or account, and the books, bills, vouchers, checks, contracts or other papers connected with or used or filed in the office of, or with any officer, board or commission acting for or on behalf of any county, town, village or municipal corporation of this state are hereby declared to be public records, and shall be open, subject to reasonable regulations to be prescribed by the officer having the custody thereof, to the inspection of any taxpayer." The petitioner does not allege that he has sustained any special injury in person or property, or that he contemplates bringing a taxpayer's action under the statutes authorizing suits by taxpayers in the public interest; he simply insists that the legislature, by the enactment quoted, has conferred upon him a right or privilege which the commissioners of water supply cannot lawfully withhold.
The appellants, on the other hand, contend that under section
At common law the magistrates of a county were not compellable by mandamus to grant to ratepayers generally *153
an inspection of the bills of charges of county officers. (King
v. Justices of Staffordshire, 6 Adolphus Ellis, 84, 96.) It was conceded that the appellants might have a rational curiosity to gratify by the inspection, but there was not "that direct and tangible interest which is necessary to bring them within the rule on which the court acts in granting inspection of public documents." The language of the opinion of Lord DENMAN in the case cited, however, makes it clear that it was only by reason of the lack of sufficient interest on the part of the ratepayers that the mandamus was refused, for he says: "We are by no means disposed to narrow our own authority to enforce by mandamus the production of every document of a public nature in which anyone of the King's subjects can prove himself interested. For such persons, indeed, every officer appointed by law to keep records ought to deem himself for that purpose a trustee. But the difficulty is to see that the present applicants have any such interest as brings them within the rule." The English common-law cases on this subject, many of which were reviewed by the New Jersey Supreme Court in State ex rel. Ferry v. Williams
(
Another leading case is Clement v. Graham (
Many other cases might be cited bearing upon the common-law *155 rule as to a citizen's right to inspect public records; but the decisions I have mentioned suffice to show what the condition of the law was when the legislature of this state began to enact the series of statutes conferring upon taxpayers, merely as such, the right to maintain actions to prevent waste on the part of public officers. The first of these statutes was chapter 161 of the Laws of 1872, entitled "An Act for the protection of taxpayers against the frauds, embezzlements and wrongful acts of public officers and agents." This was amended by chapter 526 of the Laws of 1879 and chapter 435 of the Laws of 1880. The prior legislation on the subject was replaced by chapter 531 of the Laws of 1881, entitled "An Act for the protection of taxpayers." This statute not only continued the right bestowed upon taxpayers by the earlier acts of the legislature but for the first time conferred upon them in express terms the right to inspect public documents — and in the very words now found in section 51 of General Municipal Law quoted above. The general provisions for the maintenance of an action by a taxpayer to prevent waste of or injury to the property of a municipal corporation are now contained partly therein and partly in section 1925 of the Code of Civil Procedure.
The change thus effected in the status of a taxpayer manifestly gave him an interest in respect to the contents of any public document which would be serviceable to him in the prosecution of such a suit as the new legislation authorized him to bring. The appellants contend, however, that the papers sought to be inspected in this proceeding cannot be utilized for any such purpose because the commissioners of water supply are not subject to restraint at the suit of a taxpayer, and, furthermore, the petitioner has not avowed any intention of bringing a suit against them. They insist, in brief, that the right to an inspection is dependent upon the right to maintain a taxpayer's action, and that the latter right *156 does not exist against these appellants in view of the terms of the statute under which they acted in awarding the contract to one of the higher bidders.
We can find no warrant for implying any such limitation as this into the plain language of section
The decision of this court in Matter of Lord (
The declaration which I have quoted from the opinion of Lord DENMAN in the case of Justices of Staffordshire *157 (supra) to the effect that for all persons interested "every officer appointed by law to keep records ought to deem himself for that purpose a trustee," seems to me peculiarly applicable here. This is not an attempted inquisition into the business affairs of a private corporation. It is an inquiry into the manner in which the public business has been done — an endeavor to ascertain on what grounds and for what reasons a body of public officers charged with the duty of awarding a contract for a vast public engineering work have departed from the ordinary and usual practice of awarding the contract to the lowest responsible bidder, and have thus imposed upon the people a heavier pecuniary burden than was necessary. Instead of resisting a request for light the commissioners might rather be expected to welcome an opportunity to justify their action; for justification is always appropriate wherever a contract is awarded otherwise than to the lowest responsible bidder. Such an award instantly and inevitably suggests the question why was preference thus given; and it can be answered fully only by a disclosure of all the documents which were the basis of action.
But it is said that the papers sought to be inspected are private and confidential, and hence do not fall within the purview of the statute. As to this argument it is to be observed in the first place that a person who sends a communication to a public officer relative to the public business cannot make his communication private and confidential simply by labeling it as such. The law determines its character — not the will of the sender. It may not be denied that there are papers concerning governmental matters which are properly treated as secret and confidential, such for example as diplomatic correspondence and letters and despatches in the detective police service or otherwise relating to the apprehension and prosecution of criminals; but there is no such feature in the present case. It is true that a disclosure of the objections which led the commissioners of water supply to reject the offer *158 of the lowest bidder on contract 90 may restrain objectors from writing thus freely to similar boards in the future; but if such is a consequence of complying with the plain command of a statute it must be endured. A critic who is trying to induce a body of public officers to depart from the customary rule in awarding a public contract ought not to be unwilling that his reasons should be made known — whatever the consequences to himself.
The order appealed from was right and should be affirmed, with costs.
CULLEN, Ch. J., HAIGHT, VANN, WERNER, HISCOCK and CHASE, JJ., concur.
Order affirmed.