INTERSTATE ENGINEERING CORP. vs. CITY OF FITCHBURG & others.
Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts
May 16, 1975
367 Mass. 751
Middlesex. October 15, 1974. — May 16, 1975.
Present: TAURO, C.J., REARDON, QUIRICO, BRAUCHER, HENNESSEY, KAPLAN, & WILKINS, JJ.
Where it appeared that between the opening of the filed subbids on a public works project of a city subject to
Where the second lowest of the filed subbids for certain work on a public works project subject to
BILL IN EQUITY filed in the Superior Court on July 25, 1973.
The suit was heard by Rutledge, J.
The Supreme Judicial Court granted a request for direct appellate review.
Sally A. Corwin (Joseph M. Corwin with her) for the plaintiff.
Francis H. Fox for Limbach Company.
Robert J. Sherer for Westcott Construction Corporation.
TAURO, C.J. The plaintiff appeals from a final decree which declared valid a subbid for certain mechanical work, which had been filed with the defendant city of Fitchburg by the defendant Limbach Company (Limbach).
The judge made findings of fact, which are not challenged. In the early part of 1973, the city invited general bids and subbids for the construction of a wastewater treatment facility. As authorized by
On May 9, 1973, various subbids were submitted for the interior piping work.3 The plaintiff‘s bid in the
On May 15, 1973, the day before bids from general contractors were due, a representative of Limbach told the president of the defendant Westcott Construction Corporation (Westcott), a company planning to submit a general bid, that Limbach was working on a price for the exterior piping work. The president of Westcott advised Limbach that he was interested in the combined price for the interior and exterior piping work. On the morning of May 16, 1973, before the general bids were filed, Limbach quoted to Westcott a price of $76,000 for the exterior piping work and stated that the combined price for all piping work would be $3,200,000. Westcott and Limbach clearly understood that as a condition to the availability of a price of $76,000 for the exterior piping work, Westcott would have to list Limbach as the subcontractor to do the interior piping work. They also understood that Limbach was willing to do the interior work for the bid price of $3,124,000 in any event. Before bids were opened, the plaintiff quoted to Westcott a price of $305,350 for the exterior piping work.
Westcott submitted a general bid to the city, listing Limbach as its selected subbidder for the interior piping work, at Limbach‘s filed subbid price. In arriving at its total bid for the general contract Westcott took into account Limbach‘s proposed price of $76,000 for the exterior piping work. Westcott entered into separate subcontracts with Limbach for the interior and exterior piping work at the prices previously advanced by Limbach.4 Westcott‘s bid was the lowest, and the city awarded the contract to Westcott.
The plaintiff protested to the city Westcott‘s inclusion of Limbach. However, Westcott rejected the city‘s
The judge did not find, and had no evidence from which he could find, the precise amount by which Limbach‘s bid of $76,000 for the exterior piping work was below the reasonable cost of doing that work. He did find, however, that “the estimated cost of the exterior piping work on the sewer treatment plant would substantially exceed $76,000.” We conclude, as we may, that Limbach bid the exterior piping work well below cost as an inducement to Westcott to select it as the subcontractor for the interior piping work.5 The judge also found that the award of the two subcontracts to Limbach resulted in an over-all saving to the city of approximately $143,000 compared to the price at which the plaintiff would have done the same work.
The judge entered a final decree after hearing, declaring that the Limbach bid was valid, that Limbach entered into two separate, valid contracts with Westcott, and that the plaintiff had no right to the subcontract for the interior piping work. The plaintiff appealed. We granted the plaintiff‘s request for direct appellate review.6
We agree with the plaintiff‘s second argument and hold that the arrangement between Limbach and Westcott constituted an unlawful variance in Limbach‘s filed subbid. Accordingly, we do not decide whether the arrangement rendered the filed subbid “conditional.”
1. We deal here with the competitive bidding statute,
We construe
The provision of
With the above described statutory purposes in mind, we hold that the arrangement between Limbach and Westcott constitutes an unlawful variance in the terms of Limbach‘s subbid. When a subbidder such as Limbach offers to perform a portion of the general contractor‘s Item 1 work on a project at a price which is substantially below the estimated cost of performance and conditions that performance on acceptance of its subbid for a portion of the Item 2 work on the same project, the subbidder has, in reality, varied the terms of its subbid. Such an arrangement is the effective equivalent of a variance in the specific terms of the filed subbid. Since the general contractor must perform all Item 1 tasks, an offer of below-cost performance for one of those tasks immediately reduces the general contractor‘s estimate of over-all cost for Item 1 performance and lowers the price at which it may profitably perform the entire contract. The bid for the entire contract submitted by the general contractor may be lowered correspondingly. Simultaneously, the subbid on which the below-cost offer is conditioned becomes more attractive. In the instant case, Limbach‘s offer to install exterior piping (an Item 1 task) for $76,000 reduced the effective price to Westcott of Limbach‘s interior piping subbid (Item 2) below the
Were we to hold such an effective variance lawful, opportunities for circumvention of the statute and subversion of the statutory purposes would be legion. Subbidders could file subbids with an extra margin of profit without fear of losing the contract to competitors. They could rely upon subsequent bargaining with prospective general contractors to modify the effective terms of an uncompetitive subbid. Thus, public authorities could no longer be assured of receiving the optimum low subbids for projects, and general contractors would no longer know that they stood on an equal footing with other general contractors.15 Unscrupulous general contractors and subbidders would have manifold opportunities to pressure other bidders desirous of securing the job. We cannot countenance this result and believe the statutory scheme requires that we proscribe such machinations.16
2. Having found a variance in the subbid, we must follow the statutory command that variances are to “be of no effect.”
3. The plaintiff asks that we declare that it has a right to the subcontract once Limbach‘s subbid is declared invalid. This we decline to do. “A subbidder has no right to insist that his subbid, however low, be accepted by a general contractor.” East Side Constr. Co. Inc. v. Adams, 329 Mass. 347, 354 (1952). Accord, Rudolph v. City Manager of Cambridge, 341 Mass. 31, 39 (1960). It is not clear from the record that the plaintiff is acceptable to Westcott. See Rudolph v. City Manager of Cambridge, supra, at 38. In any event, the statute (
The interlocutory decree is reversed. The final decree is reversed. A judgment is to be entered declaring invalid Limbach‘s subbid for the interior piping work of the Fitchburg wastewater treatment facility. The judgment will be in conformity with this opinion in all other respects.
So ordered.
WILKINS, J. (dissenting, with whom Braucher, J., joins). I believe that the court‘s decision extends public regulation of subbidding practices for public buildings beyond the range intended by the Legislature, increases the cost of public buildings, and unreasonably burdens awarding authorities.
A general contractor is free to select a subbidder who is not the lowest, at the risk of elevating its own bid and losing the general contract. The statute focuses on the lowest over-all general bid, and if it is made lower by an arrangement between the general contractor and a subbidder such as exists here, that legislative purpose is encouraged. Although reduction in the over-all price to the awarding authority does not justify a violation of a bidding regulation (Chick‘s Constr. Co. Inc. v. Wachusett Regional High Sch. Dist. Sch. Comm., 343 Mass. 38, 42 [1961]), the achievement of a lower cost to the awarding authority, and hence to the taxpayers, is a legislative purpose which properly may be considered in construing the object of the statute.
The court‘s opinion treats the arrangement between Westcott and Limbach as a variance from the terms of the filed subbid. The filed subbid was not varied in any respect. Even if the separate arrangement concerning
By extending regulation to nonfiled subbids, the court opens for scrutiny all conduct between a general contractor and a subbidder from the time of the filing of subbids until the selection of a subbidder. This decision makes any concession by a subbidder, intended or inadvertent, which benefits a general contractor a ground for invalidation of a filed subbid.
Furthermore, the burden of compliance by awarding authorities with the bidding statutes is increased greatly by the court‘s decision. The public interest would be served better by giving greater latitude to awarding authorities, allowing for the possibility that negotiation such as occurred here may save funds for the taxpayers of the Commonwealth. Moreover, an aggrieved subbidder could seek immediate relief directly against anyone whose conduct was unlawful. See, e.g.,
If the Legislature wishes to proscribe an arrangement such as was made between Limbach and Westcott, in order to enhance the integrity of the subbidding process, it may do so. I find no indication that it has done so under existing legislation. I would affirm the decree.
