279 F. 961 | 6th Cir. | 1922
(after stating the facts as above).
“You have the best bid upon the reservoir work and the iron pipe to and from, but it would be for the advantage of the city to have you lay also the wooden pipe, which is a part of the same class of work, rather than to make a separate job of it by some one else, and if you will do that work at the lowest price which has been bid for it, we will add that item to your contract,”
—and that O’Reilly accepted this proposition. Of course, the evidence upon the new trial may develop the situation differently in some material particular than that which we thus assume; but this cannot be now foreseen.
We find no satisfactory reason for thinking that the wooden pipe item of the contract would be invalid under the circumstances so to be assumed. The statute involved is section 4328 of the Ohio General, Code, reading as follows:
“ * * * The director of public service shall make a written contract with the lowest and best bidder after advertisement for not loss than two or more than four consecutive weeks in a newspaper of general circulation within the city.”
One well-known purpose of such a provision is to prevent favoritism among those seeking public contracts. It is at once obvious that the decisions which have reference to the awarding of a unitary contract for one matter, and some of the principles involved in such decisions, have no application to a case where it was contemplated from the beginning that the contract would be awarded in fractions according to discretionary grouping of the fractional bids. Under such circum
Under the class “Pipe Line to and from Main Reservoir,” he did not bid upon furnishing either iron or wooden pipe or gates and fittings, but did bid upon, and seems to have been entitled to, the contract for the work of laying the iron pipe. The plans and specifications required that the outlet pipe and conduit from the reservoir to the filter plant and pumping station should be of iron pipe for part of the way and optionally of wooden pipe for the remainder. It is clear enough that it would very likely be for the interest of the city to have this entire conduit laid by one contractor rather than part of it by another one who was doing no work in the vicinity. If some other contractor hád bid upon all of the items in this class, including the wooden pipe, but upon everything else O’Reilly’s bid was lower, this other contractor could probably not be compelled to take the contract upon his bid for the wooden pipe alone. We see in such a situation no opportunity for favoritism or unfair dealing or prejudice to the city. If the successful bidder upon most of the items is awarded the contract upon condition that he will assume also an item upon which he did not bid, and will do so at a price such that the city cannot be prejudiced, every requirement intended for the .safety of the city has been met and fulfilled by tfce public advertisement and by the reception and consideration of all tire bids made. Any theoretical possibility that there might be favor-it sm is rendered negligible in the case which we have assumed we may infer from the proofs in this case by the fact that the added item is so relatively small. No intent to give O’Reilly an advantage by evading tie bidding law can be found in the supposed facts.
We find no decision of the Ohio Supreme Court which requires any 01 her conclusion. Chief reliance has been placed upon the decision o: that court in Beaver v. Trustees, 19 Ohio St. 97. There a contract was to be awarded by public trustees under a statute which required it to be given to the person offering the lowest price upon sealed proposa's made after six weeks’ public notice. The advertisement for the proposals was made in connection with printed bidding forms which in the class of carpenter work included, for example, “interior principal room doors and trimmings,” and in the class of hardware included door hinges. When the bids were opened it appeared that Beaver as
The situation was plainly and vitally different from that which we have supposed here existed. If O’Reilly’s bid had been high and had been transmuted into the low bid by the shifting done after the bids were opened, we would have a parallel case. Nor do we think the syllabus should be treated as creating a rule of law far broader than anything called for by the facts. We say so, both because of the familiar rule in Ohio that the syllabus is to be read in view of the facts,
The decision in Boren v. Commissioners, 21 Ohio St. 311, is equally far from controlling. In that case the commissioners advertised -for bids for furnishing all the materials excepting brick, and for all the
By the preliminary notice to contractors in the present case, it was specified that the'director of public service might “waive irregularities in bids,” and in the above-quoted paragraph of instructions to contractors it is said that the service director may “waive defects in bids in the interest of the city.” It is not necessary to determine what-effect these provisions have upon the action of the director in permitting the proposal to be somewhat modified. In so far as they are not inconsistent with the statute, their tendency is to support such action.
We observe also that under the General Code, § 4331,
“The whole area of the reservoir shall be cleared by cutting all trees, stumps, and bushes even with the ground, and removing or burning the same, together with all débris. * * * The price bid for this work shall include all such removal. The sides of the reservoir, down to a point where the depth of water thereon at high water will be less than 5 feet, shall be cleaned of all vegetation and top soil.”
The proposal blanks, under this same class heading, contained an item “Clearing and grubbing reservoir site per acre»?’ upon which item plaintiffs bid $35. This blank contained no item referring to any excavation (except for the „ dam foundation) in connection with the reservoir ; but under the class heading, “General Items,” there was an item, “For extra excavation per cubic yard,” and plaintiffs bid opposite this item 75 cents. Both of these bid items, in the same form, were carried into the contract. The eighteenth paragraph of the petition claimed recovery at 75 cents per yard for 3,600 cubic yards as extra excavation in removing top earth, which the engineer deemed necessary to have removed along the high-water mark to prepare the reservoir in accordance with the plans and specifications. It is plain enough that
As it turned out, this was a substantial item. If the top soil removed was one yard deep, the area cleaned would be less than one acre, and1 the cost per acre, at 75 cents per cubic yard would be approximately $4,000. Any intention to include this work in the price of $35 per acre would be against all reasonable inference. The amount of top soil to be removed was not named in the estimates, and if it was too uncertain to be estimated it was too uncertain to be bid for, except at a per yard price. The statement in the specifications that the price bid for the per acre clearing “shall include all such removal” refers only to the things which had been named, and not to that cleaning off top soil which was thereafter named. Considering all the elements, we cannot doubt that the mere reference to this work under the heading “Cleaning and Grubbing” does not operate to make it a part of that c eafiing and grubbing which was to be bid for at a per acre price. On the contrary it was “excavation,” and since the contract was intended to fix prices for everything which it required, and no price is fixed for this excavation, unless it was “extra,” it must be so classified.
“The surface soil shall be removed from the entire site of the embankment io a depth sufficient to reach good sound material. * * * Such excavation ¡¡hall be paid for by the cubic yard at prices bid for excavation. All large s tones or boulders shall be removed.”
Upon the three points last mentioned, there was no error. Por the reasons stated as to other points, the judgment must be reversed, with costs, and the case remanded for a new trial.
In re Poage, 87 Ohio St. 72, 82, 88, 100 N. E. 125.
See_ notes to section 4288, in Page & Adams’ Annotated Code, for numerous Ohio cases recognizing a wide discretion in the director-.
“When it becomes necessary in the opinion of the director of public service, in tfie prosecution of any work or improvement under contract, to make alterations or modifications in sucb contract, sucb alterations or modifications shall only be made upon the order of such director, but sucb order shall be of n) effect until the price to be paid for the work and material, or both, under the altered or modified contract, has been agreed upon in writing and signed b y the contractor and the director on behalf of the corporation, and approved by the board of control, as provided by law.”