The plaintiff (Ahern) seeks to recover a $1,000 bid deposit furnished with a subbid made in 1955 in connection with the construction of a school for the defendant (the school district). The case was heard in the Superior Court on a statement of agreed facts. The trial judge made a general finding for the school district, in effect
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an order for judgment. See
Thurlow
v.
Crossman,
In August, 1955, the school district advertised for bids, specifying that subbids would be taken on certain parts of the work including (a) painting and (b) heating and ventilating. Each subbidder on painting was required to furnish $1,000 bid security. See G. L. c. 149, § 44B (as amended through St. 1954, c. 645, § 2). 1 Ahern mailed a subbid of $11,413 for the painting to the school district with a certified check for $1,000, and also sent its subbid to J. F. Rand & Son (Rand), a general contractor, and to two other firms which were bidding on the project. It was agreed that the “testimony [emphasis supplied] of . . . [the] president of . . . [Ahern] is that . . . [the] subbid submitted to . . . Rand . . . was . . . $11,415 . . . by . . . mistake ... $2 higher than the figure . . . submitted to the other general contractors and . . . than the figure in the record copy of the . . . subbid filed with the” school district.
General bids were seasonably received on or prior to September 14, 1955, from six general contractors. Rand was the low bidder, at $1,170,383. The next lowest bid was $1,223,000. Each of these bidders had included Ahern as subcontractor for painting, Rand at a figure of $11,415 and two others at a figure of $11,413.
On September 15,1955, the architect received a letter from Ahern stating that it “would like to withdraw . . . [its] bid” because it had discovered an error in its quoted figure amounting to “many thousands of dollars.” On October 11, 1955, the school district accepted Ahern’s painting subbid *357 and executed a general contract with Rand, which included an allowance of $122,000 for heating and ventilating. The school district did not accept any subbid for the heating and ventilating. It had received too late a subbid of $121,090 for this work from J. J. Hurley & Co., Inc. (Hurley), and decided “to rebid the heating and ventilating work at a later date” despite the fact that the subbidders who seasonably filed subbids for this work “were responsible, competent, and eligible.” All “six general contractors bidding . . . [had] selected . . . Hurley ... as subcontractor for heating and ventilating.”
Ahern, when notified that its painting subbid had been accepted, refused to execute a subcontract with Rand. The work was then awarded to the next lowest painting sub-bidder at an additional cost to the school district of $1,337. On November 7, 1955, Ahern requested that its bid deposit be returned. The school district refused to do this because of Ahern’s failure to execute a subcontract.
On November 29, 1955, new heating and ventilating sub-bids were opened and the school district, by a change order approved March 20, 1956, requested Rand to enter into a subcontract with the low subbidder. Classes opened in the school in September, 1957. After this action was entered on December 2, 1957, Ahern for the first time stated as a ground for the return of its bid deposit “alleged deficiencies with respect to the nonacceptance of heating and ventilating subbids in October, 1955.”
1. Ahern contends that there were two irregularities in its subbid which rendered its rejection mandatory. The first is that Ahern left blank in its subbid the space available for reference to certain “addenda” to the plans and specifications mentioned in the prime contract between Rand and the school district. The agreed facts do not show (a) wrhat these addenda were, (b) when they came into existence, or (c) that they existed when the subbids were filed. The addenda are not attached to the copy of the prime contract incorporated by reference in that statement. Nothing in the record shows that these addenda had anything to do
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with the painting subcontract. The second irregularity asserted is the alleged discrepancy of $2 between the subbid filed by Ahern with Rand and that filed by Ahern with the school district. There is no agreement (as opposed to a statement of testimony) by the parties either upon the existence of this discrepancy
2
or upon facts showing that the trivial discrepancy had any significance. Nothing in this record leads us to infer that either alleged defect had any importance, or existed when the subbids were made. Even if such formal discrepancies did exist when the subbids were filed, they are too trivial to provide any basis for relief. See
Loranger
v.
Martha’s Vineyard Regional High Sch. Dist. Sch. Comm.
2. Ahern argues that, in rejecting all subbids for heating and ventilating and in executing the prime contract with an allowance for this work, the school district took action which rendered the prime contract invalid under
Grande & Son, Inc.
v.
School Housing Comm. of No. Reading,
It may be pointed out that, in repudiating its subbid by its letter of September 14, 1955, Ahern did not rely upon any alleged infirmity in the school district’s action on the heating and ventilating subbids. If this contention, never made until 1957 after the school building was completed, had been advanced in 1955, the school district could perhaps have avoided any risk of improper procedure. Instead, Ahern in its letter merely asserted that it had made an error 4 in computation. The practical effect of Ahern’s repudiation of its bid has been to increase, in an amount exceeding Ahern’s deposit, the school district’s costs in performing a contract which no person entitled to do so has questioned, by forcing employment of the next lowest painting subbidder.
Order for judgment affirmed.
Notes
Section 44B, as thus amended, reads in part: “Every bid submitted by . . . subcontractors . . . for any work referred to in section forty-four A shall be accompanied by ... a certified check on ... a responsible bank . . . payable to the . . . district ... in the name of which the contract for the work is to be done. ... If a bidder on any item of work designated in item two fails to execute a contract with the selected general contractor, contingent upon the final execution of the general contract, within five days . . . after presentation thereof by the general contractor the amount so received as bid deposit from the bidder through his . . . certified check . . . shall become and be the property of the said . . . district ... as liquidated damages . . ..” See for general discussion of bid deposits
Wheaton Bldg. & Lumber Co.
v.
Boston,
Rand’s records containing its copy of Ahern’s subbid have been burned and were not available.
As was pointed out in the
Loranger
case,
Nothing in this record establishes that any error in computing its bid was in fact made by Ahern. Accordingly, there is no occasion for considering whether, in connection with bid deposits under G. L. c. 149, § 44B (as amended through St. 1954, c. 645, § 2), there is any room for application of principles like those discussed in
Mayor & City Council of Baltimore
v.
DeLuca-Davis Constr. Co. Inc.
