After performing road work for Twiggs County (County), Epps Brothers, Inc. (Epps) brought suit for payment. B. Rabun Faulk and several others (Intervenors) are County taxpayers who opposed paying Epps, and were allowed to intervene as defendants in the lawsuit. Subsequently, the County and Epps entered into settlement dis *810 cussions, but Intervenors sought an interlocutory injunction against a settlement of the case. The trial court denied the interlocutory injunction, and Intervenors appeal.
The record shows that, at a unit-price rate of $1.50 per yard, the County retained Epps’ paving services for those non-priority paving projects for which funding might be obtained in the future. See generally
Century Health Care v. Willis,
There is a statutory requirement that the County’s contract with Epps result from the solicitation of public bids in advertisements appropriate to the proposed paving projects within the scope of the agreement. OCGA §§ 32-4-65; 36-10-3. A substantial compliance with this statutory requirement is sufficient.
Pilcher v. English,
The record further shows that the trial court was authorized to find that the County properly accepted Epps’ bid of $ 1.50 per yard as the lowest that was submitted. OCGA §§ 32-4-68; 36-10-2. The County’s acceptance of Epps’ bid was entered on the minutes. OCGA §§ 32-4-61; 36-10-1. Thereafter, as County funds became available, Epps was called upon to pave the designated projects. Epps performed, and then submitted an invoice for its services at the agreed upon rate of $1.50 per yard. After verifying the claim, the County entered on the minutes the amount payable to Epps. OCGA §§ 32-4-61; 36-10-1.
No separate written contract complying with all applicable statutory requirements was negotiated for each of the individual paving projects. That is immaterial, however, because there was only one contract between the County and Epps, encompassing all of the separate off-priority paving projects which the County requested that Epps perform. See
Century Health Care v. Willis,
supra;
Advance Security v. Superior Surgical Mfg. Co.,
supra. Under that single contract, the specific amount that was to be paid for each separate project was not finally established until funding was obtained by the County and the work actually was performed by Epps. However, that
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amount due to Epps was always to be calculated at an agreed rate of $1.50 per yard. See
J. R. Watkins Co. v. Harrison,
Taxpayers have legal standing to seek to enjoin an ultra vires act of a governing body.
Newsome v. City of Union Point,
Judgment affirmed.
