116 Ky. 495 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1903
Opinion or the court by
Reversing.
This appeal is from a judgment of the Campbell circuit court sustaining a' demurrer to the petition of appellant. The petition is in two paragraphs. After setting forth 'the usual and formal averments, we quote in substance such portions as are necessary for the determination of the question before us: “That on May 8, 1902, the property holders owning more than two-thirds of the front feet of all the property fronting upon Columbia street, in Newport, Ky., between Third and Fourth streets, petitioned the general council of the city in a written petition for the reconstruction of Columbia street between Third and Fourth streets with cement curb and gutter and a roadway-constructed of brick or other improved material. That after this petition was presented to the council, it, by a vote of two-thirds of the members-elect of both boards, the vote in each case being recorded on the journal of the board, passed the following resolution: “Be it resolved that the reconstruction of Columbia street, between Third and Fourth streets, by grading, combination cement curb and gutter, and bituminous macadam roadway, is hereby declared a necessity, and that the same be done pursuant to the provisions of the act governing cities of the second class and the ordinance of May 7, 1894, of the city of Newport, regulating-the same; and that-the city engineer report a grade for said part of Columbia street, plans and
We can not agree with the contention that, if the requirement of competitive bidding was necessary, a compliance with the forms, as was done in this case, would have been sufficient. It is admitted by the demurrer in this case that Gollopy, the other bidder, agreed and entered into a conspiracy that they would go through the forms of a bidding, and that Gollopy was to offer a higher bid for the work, and that each and all of the members of the council knew this fact, and also knew that appellee Central Bitulithic Paving Company could only make a Iona fide bid for the reconstruction of this street with this material, and that they knew this when they passed this ordinance of May, 1902, fixing bituminous macadam as the only mate-' rial for the reconstruction of this street. To say the law requiring competitive bidding was binding, and to accept.
The other proposition — and the only real question to be decided — is more serious, and that is whether or not the law requiring competitive bids was intended to be and can be made applicable to things or material for .the construction or reconstruction of streets where it is impossible to have'competition as in this case, and thus prevent patent processes from being used, and the city from using such material when it deems it to be for the best interest of the city so to do. This court has never passed upon this question, and the courts of other States are divided upon it. The right of a qity to avail itself of patented inventions in the improvement of streets, etc., where the law required the letting of contracts to the lowest bidder, has been before the courts of several States, and the adjudications thereon are not uniform, and the courts are not unanimous in their opinions. In YVisconsin, California, Louisiana, New Jersey, and Illinois the right has been denied, while in Michigan, Kansas, New York, and Missouri it has been sustained. These cases appear to discuss ordinances or charters that required the city council to accept the bid of the lowest responsible bidder, not giving any discretion to the •council except as to solvency — unlike the ordinance in this case, which required the council to accept the lowest and best bid, which gave the' council the discretion to accept the bid of the lowest and best bidder after considering all the questions involved, such as price, quality, and durability of material, responsibility of the bidders, the interest of taxpayers of the whole city, and especially of those who owned abhtting property. See the case of Trapp v. City of Newport, 25 R., 224, 74 S. W., 1109. The substance of .the reasons given in the cases decided by.the courts oh
It is unnecessary for this court to determine which doctrine is correct, that of Michigan or that of New Jersey, for the reason that the charter or ordinance under consideration in these cases required the council and made it imperative that it should accept the bid of the lowest responsible bidder. The ordinance in' the case at bar required the council to accept the bid of the lowest and best bidder, and the reasoning given by the court in the case of Fishburn v. Chicago, 171 Ill., 338, 49 N. E., 542, 39 L. R. A., 482, 63 Am. St. Rep., 236, decided February 14, 1898, is peculiarly applicable to the case under consideration. The court in that case said: “If the requirement that the asphaltum to be used in the improvement should be obtained from Pitch Lake, in the Island of Trinidad, tended to restrict competí
For the reasons given, we are of the opinion that the ordinance requiring the street to be .improved with bituminous macadam, without placing it in competition with other like or equally as good material for such purposes, was and is void, and the court erred in sustaining a demurrer' to appellant’s petition. WTierefore the judgment of the lower court is reversed, and the cause remanded for'further proceedings consistent herewith.
Judge Paynter dissents.