Mr. Robert Scott Commissioner of Education Texas Education Agency 1701 North Congress Avenue Austin, Texas 78701-1494
Re: Authority of a school district to use a reverse auction conducted by a third party to purchase personal property valued at $ 10,000 or more (RQ-0751-GA)
Dear Commissioner Scott:
On behalf of Beeville Independent School District (the "District"), you ask whether a school district may utilize a private entity to conduct reverse auctions on its behalf for purchases of personal property valued at $ 10,000 or more.1 The reverse auction procedure allows a school district to post upcoming purchases that it plans to make, and, "at a previously scheduled time and Internet location, . . . multiple suppliers, anonymous to each other, submit bids" to provide the designated goods or services. TEX. GOV'T CODE ANN. §
The Legislature has expressly authorized school districts to utilize reverse auctions in making certain purchases of $10,000 or more.See TEX.EDUC. CODE ANN. §§
In contracting with the third party auctioneer, you explain that there "is no direct charge to the school district for participating in the reverse auction." Id. at 2. Instead, suppliers enter into an agreement with the auctioneer, whereby each supplier agrees "to pay a fee to the auctioneer in the event that the [supplier] is successful in obtaining a contract with the school district by using the reverse auction procedure." Id. at 1-2. You also explain that at the end of each auction, the school district has the authority to "reject all offers, using its own judgment and discretion." Id. at 2.
Based on these procedures, you ask whether a school district's use of a third party to conduct a reverse auction improperly delegates authority to a private entity. Id. at 2.3 Your question is based on the long-held general rule that in the absence of statutory authorization, a governmental body "may not delegate unlimited legislative powers and functions" or powers "involving the exercise of judgment and discretion." Moody v. City of Univ. Park,
The statute authorizing school districts to use the reverse auction procedure is silent as to whether they may use a third party to host the auction. See TEX. EDUC. CODE ANN. §
You also ask whether the third party auctioneer's requirement that the potential supplier enter into a contract before the potential supplier may participate in the reverse auction impermissibly limits the number of bidders. District Brief at 3-4. In so asking, you note a previous opinion from this office that prohibited a junior college district from using a designated broker of record to procure bids for insurance, and you compare the broker of record in that circumstance to the reverse auction company here. See id. at 3 (discussing Attorney General Opinion
Based on the description of reverse auction companies that you provide, we cannot determine whether the reverse auction company will be affiliated with a limited number of suppliers or whether that will in turn foreclose a school district's access to the best value for the school district. The answer to your question will depend on the specific contract terms that the reverse auction company requires the potential suppliers to enter into, including the fees suppliers must pay, and whether, in fact, those contract terms result in fewer bidders than would otherwise participate in the bidding. This office does not engage in the factual inquiries necessary to make those determinations. Tex. Att'y Gen. Op. No.
Whether any contractual requirement by the third party auctioneer impermissibly limits the number of potential bidders is a fact question not appropriately answered by the opinion process.
GREG ABBOTT Attorney General of Texas
ANDREW WEBER First Assistant Attorney General
JONATHAN K. FRELS Deputy Attorney General for Legal Counsel
NANCY S. FULLER Chair, Opinion Committee
Virginia K. Hoelscher Assistant Attorney General, Opinion Committee
