155 A.2d 118 | Pa. | 1931
The defendant City of Pittsburgh supplies approximately one hundred and twenty-five thousand customers with city water and is gradually changing from a flat rate to a meter system. In the furtherance of this plan the city, in the spring of 1930, enacted an ordinance making, inter alia, an appropriation, directing the proper authorities to advertise for sealed proposals "For the furnishing of 3,000, more or less, Water Meters *27 and Water Meter Parts, for the Bureau of Water." The information to prospective bidders included a proposed contract and specifications. The latter expressly invited bids for "The Keystone Model Meter, made by the Pittsburgh-Equitable Meter Company; the Trident Model Meter, made by the Neptune Meter Company; or the H. F. Model Meter, made by the Hersey Manufacturing Company; or, in the opinion of the director, their equal." An examination of the proposals disclosed that the Neptune Meter Company was lower by at least five per cent than that of any other responsible qualified bidder for the water meters and water meter parts, but the director of the department of supplies awarded the contract to the Pittsburgh-Equitable Meter Company. To prevent the execution and performance of the contract in accordance with the award, the plaintiff, Edward E. Pearlman, a taxpayer of the city, filed this bill in equity.
The case was heard upon bill, answer and testimony. The uncontroverted evidence established that the Neptune Meter Company was large, of long experience and high repute. As to that the chancellor found, inter alia, that "The Neptune meter, as well as the repair parts of the kind for which this bid was taken, was in satisfactory use to the number of 3,500,000," that "The Neptune Meter Company is financially responsible, is of good integrity and reputation, and has the skill and ability to perform the contract under the bid," and that "The Neptune Meter Company complied with all the requirements of the specifications and its meter was one upon which bids were invited." But the chancellor, approved by the court in banc, refused plaintiff the relief sought and dismissed his bill on the ground that the Neptune Meter Company's bid was unbalanced, in that for certain specified repair parts it was much below their cost and unfair. A five-year contract was specified and also that the successful bidder should supply the needed repair parts. As to certain of these the bid of *28 the Neptune Meter Company was much below cost. Aside from this the bid of that company for the original meters was lower, as above stated, by some five per cent, than that of the company to whom the contract was awarded. The reason given by the trial court was insufficient. It was the policy of the Neptune Company, in connection with furnishing water meters, to contract for supplying repair parts at nominal cost, based doubtless largely on the experience that the original parts did not wear out. The bid would not have been invalid even had it agreed to furnish the needed repair parts free of charge. It is a novel proposition that the bid of a perfectly responsible party can be ignored because it is in whole or in part too low. There was no suggestion either by the director or by the trial court that the Neptune Company's bid as to any item was too high, hence, in a legal sense, the bid was not unbalanced.
The statute requires that contracts be awarded to the lowest responsible bidder and the courts hold it is for the municipal authorities in the exercise of sound discretion to determine who is such. The award of a contract to one not prima facie the lowest bidder, however, must rest upon a full and honest investigation of the qualifications, etc., of the respective bidders. As stated by Mr. Justice KEPHART, speaking for the court, in Hibbs et al. v. Arensberg et al.,
The municipal authorities having determined who is the lowest responsible bidder, discretion ends and the contract, if awarded, must be given to him. Referring to the statutory language "lowest responsible bidder," Mr. Justice SIMPSON, speaking for the court, in Schuck v. School District of Baldwin Twp., supra, says (page 411): "This language is mandatory, not discretionary, and if there is more than one responsible bidder, the work can be authorized only under contract with the lowest: Summit Hill School Directors,
Other reasons suggested by the director, in the instant case, were without merit and properly rejected by the chancellor and court in banc. For example, the director concluded that, as the Pittsburgh-Equitable Meter Company, a local plant, had installed nearly all the many thousands of water meters now in use in the city, it was desirable to have them standardized, that is, all of one make. This cannot avail. No such requirement is suggested in the specifications, and, on the contrary, bids were expressly requested on the kind of water meter made by the Neptune Company. Furthermore, it cannot be held that the city could limit the purchase of water meters to those made only by one company. To do so would stifle competition. The specifications here are, as indeed they must be, if possible, such as to afford reasonable opportunity for competition. See Carroll v. Phila.,
Counsel for the Pittsburgh Company urge that the bid is unbalanced, as condemned in case of Matter of Anderson,
The decree is reversed, plaintiff's bill is reinstated and the record is ordered remitted with directions that the lower court make the injunction permanent. Costs to be paid by the defendants. *32