86 N.Y.S. 503 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1904
This is a taxpayer’s action brought pursuant to the authority contained in chapter 301 of the Laws of 1892, which authorizes such action where the relief sought is to prevent waste or injury to the property, funds or estate of a municipal corporation, or to prevent illegal official acts on the part of an officer or officers of such corporation. The purpose which this action seeks is to restrain the trustees of the College of the City of Hew York from letting a contract for masón, steel, iron, roofing, carpenter and electric work for buildings to be erected for the use of the College of the City of Hew York. The complaint of the plaintiff, inter alia, shows that the plaintiff is a taxpayer in the city of Hew York, the corporate existence of the College of the City of Hew York, and that the defendant trustees constitute the board of trustees of such corporation ; that, pursuant to chapter 168 of the Laws of 1895, the Legislature authorized the board of trustees of such college to procure grounds and erect thereon buildings, and it invested the board of trustees with authority to construct the buildings to be erected upon the land obtained pursuant to the provisions of the act.
With respect to the construction the act (§ 6) provided: “ And the said building shall be built by contract entered into by said board of trustees after advertisement for proposals therefor. All the provisions of' law and ordinance and of the rules and regulations of the board of education of the city of Hew York relative to advertising for and receiving proposals and entering into contracts for the building of public schools in the city of Hew York shall he and are hereby made applicable to the awarding of and entering into the contract or contracts for the building and construction of said buildings and each of them.”
Pursuant to the provisions of the act, the board of estimate and apportionment of the city of Hew York, by resolution, authorized the issuance of bonds to the amount of $2,000,000 to provide for
Pursuant to this advertisement, three bids and proposals for doing the work were received by the building committee of said board of trustees on the 14th day of December, 1903, viz.: Thomas Dwyer, $1,625,000 ; Y. J. Hedden & Sons’ Co., $1,7.07,267; J. R. Sheehan, $1,740,000. All of these bids were deposited in a sealed box labeled “ Plumbing,” and thereafter and before any of the bids were opened, the board of trustees and the committee upon buildings adjourned until the next day at four-thirty o’clock in the afternoon, at which time the committee and the board met, and the box containing the bids was opened, and the bids contained therein were examined.
Section 35 of the rules and regulations of the board of education of the city of New York, among other things, provides: “3. All proposals received by authority of the Board of the Executive Committee for any of the purposes hereinbefore named shall be opened in the hall of the board immediately after the expiration of the time limited by the advertisement for the receipt thereof, by the officer advertising for the same, in the presence of the secretary of the board, or in the presence of such clerk as the secretary may designate ; all proposals shall be thereafter filed in the office of the secretary, and no proposal shall be received or considered that may be offered or submitted after the time limited, as before specified.”
Under the rules governing the bids, there was required to be attached to each bid a verified statement, made by the person or persons who intended to be a surety or sureties of the bidder, if the bid was let to his principal, that such sureties were worth a sum sufficient to entirely protect the city. Attached to Dwyer’s bid was a statement purporting to be verified by two sureties, who are employees in Dwyer’s office, that in the event that the contract was let to Dwyer they would become his sureties; that they were freeholders
It is evident from the conceded facts that there is no probability of waste of any of the city’s funds if the contract with Dwyer shall be entered into. On the contrary, it clearly appears that his bid is lower by $82,267 than is that of his nearest competitor. A saving of this sum of money to the city makes any claim of waste upon the part of the plaintiff absurd in the extreme. The character of the controversy raises the suspicion, .and some testimony is adduced to sustain it, that this is not a Iona fide action at the instance of a taxpayer, who is smarting under a sense of injury by a proposed waste Of city funds, or of illegal acts to be perpetrated by public officials. It is quite likely that, if an investigation were made of the real nature of this controversy, it would not proceed far before coming in contact with an unsuccessful bidder for this contract, who may, if this action succeeds, be awarded the contract at a largely increased cost above a responsible contractor’s bid. . If we consider the merits,
It is claimed, however, by the appellant that this bid of Dwyer’s is irregular, fraudulent and void, and that if the trustees recognize the same as a valid bid and award a contract based thereon, such act would constitute an illegal official act, and that he brings his case, therefore, squarely within the provisions of the statute, which authorizes its maintenance, and that upon the facts as they are made to appear in this record Dwyer’s bid must be rejected. Four reasons are assigned for this conclusion : (1) That the bids were deposited in a wrong box, marked “ plumbing,” instead of one marked “mason and steel;” (2) that the bids were not immediately opened; (3) that the sureties upon Dwyer’s bond were not worth the amount therein stated; (4) that Dwyer and his sureties did not verify the affidavits which they were required to verify.
The first objection is trifling. It is not pretended that anybody was wronged, or could be, by depositing the bids in this box. The purpose sought to be accomplished was to keep the bids in a secure place. The box in which they were placed was sealed and the bids themselves were protected from being tampered with as securely in that box as they would have been had the box bore another label. To hold the bid bad for this reason would reach an absurdity.
The second objection is equally untenable. The provision in this respect is directory. The main purpose to be accomplished was that the bids should be opened speedily after the time had elapsed for their submission and in the presence of the proper authorities. It prejudiced no one by deferring the opening, as was done in this case. It was to bring the officers together who were charged with the duty of' making the examination, and they being all present and acting within a reasonable time after- the bids were deposited answers the substantial requirements of the provision. The substance of the matter is that they'shall examine the bids within a reasonable time and the officers charged with the duty must be.present. (People ex rel. Rodgers v. Coler, 35 App. Div. 401.) This was accomplished in the present case.
As to the other objections it is plain that there was an evident irregularity, and the act of the notary in attaching his signature to the affidavits without any oath of the affiants was reprehensible in-
It follows that the order should be affirmed, with ten dollars costs, and disbursements.
Yah Brunt, P. J., Ingraham'and McLaughlin, JJ., concurred t, Laughlin, J., concurred in result.
Order affirmed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements.