98 Ga. 688 | Ga. | 1896
The reporter of this court published a notice that bids would be received by him up to the 25th of November, 1895, for the printing, binding and eleetrotyping of the reports of the Supreme Court of Georgia, reserving the right to reject any and all bids, and also the right to contract for one or more volumes. Several bids were submitted, the lowest of which was made by C. P. Byrd. Subsequently, all the bids were rejected, and the contract for publishing five volumes of the reports, from 96 to 100 inclusive, was on December 31st, 1895, awarded by the reporter, with approval and consent of the Governor, to the Franklin Printing & Publishing Co., which had made no bid at all, but at the price named in Byrd’s bid. The latter sought, by mandamus, to compel the awarding of the contract to himself, and also to enjoin the reporter and the Franklin Company from carrying out the contract which had been awarded to it; prayers for both of the above mentioned remedies being embraced in the same petition. At the hearing of the same, the trial judge refused the mandar mus, but granted an order enjoining “the parties to the •contract of December 31st, 1895. . . . from the execution of said contract, as prayed.” This order was subsequently amended by providing that it should have no application to the 96th volume of the reports. The reporter and the Franklin Company excepted to the granting of the injunction, and brought the case to this court for review.
It is not now necessary to decide whether or not the two
1. By the act of August 23d, 1879, the office of public printer was abolished, and it was declared that after the expiration of the then existing term of the incumbent of that office, the public printing'of the State should be let to the lowest bidder, or bidders; the secretary of State, the comptroller-general, and the treasurer, as commissioners, to-advertise for sealed, proposals to do the public printing. Acts of 1878-9, p. 37; Code, §1040(a) et seq. On October 20th of the same year, the General Assembly passed an act to regulate the publication and sale of the Supreme Court reports, etc., and it provided that the printing and binding-of these reports should be done upon the terms and in the manner that other State printing was done. Acts of 1878-9, p. 158; Code, §228(c). Then came the act of September 26, 1883, “to regulate the publication of the Supreme Court reports, and for other purposes,” the second section of which provides: “That the- reporter of the Supreme Court, with the consent and approval of the Governor, shall have power to award the contract for the publication of the Supreme Court reports in the same general manner as the- contract for other public printing is now awarded, but in making such award, the said Governor and the reporter shall not be limited to the lowest bidder, but may take .into consideration the responsibility of such bidder, and his capacity and ability to perform such contract, in all cases making such award as will promote the best interests of the State and secure the cheapest and most prompt and efficient performance of said contract.” Acts of 1882-3, p. 77.
In view of the above recited legislation, we have no difficulty in reaching the conclusion that it is the duty of the Supreme Court reporter to advertise for bids for the printing and binding of the Supreme Court reports. As will
2. We see no good reason why the reporter, with the consent and approval of the Governor, may not, within reasonable and proper limits, award a contract for the publication of more than one volume of the reports. It is not to be supposed that these officials will abuse the discretion conferred upon them by law, by letting out a contract for so large a number of volumes as would, in effect, create a monopoly or deprive the State of the benefit which might accrue from a decline in prices for work of this kind. With reference to this matter, the chief executive and the reporter may safely be trusted, we think, to look well to the interests of the State. At any rate, the General Assembly were evidently of the opinion that they were entitled to confidence in attending to this business. At the same time, there is a manifest advantage to the State in allowing the contract to embrace more than one .volume, for the simple reason that a contractor could well afford to bid lower and do the work cheaper upon a large job than upon a small one.
3. In awarding the contract to the Franklin Company at
4. The only remaining question is: Did Byrd, in his capacity as a citizen and taxpayer, have the right to institute in his own name an equitable proceeding against the reporter and the Eranklin Company for the purpose of testing the legality of the contract which the reporter, with the Governor’s consent and approval, had made with that company, or of obtaining an injunction preventing such contract from being carried into effect? He could not do this, for several reasons. In the first place, the State, being a party to the contract, would be a necessary party to such a case; and it could not, without its own express consent, be subjected to- an action of any kind. It is hardly necessary to cite authority for the proposition that a sovereign State is not liable to suit at the instance of a citizen, unless per
But, secondly, the injunction granted necessarily operates against the Governor of the State; not eo nomine, because he is not a party to the record, but practically, because it suspends the operation of a contract which he participated officially in making. In Mayo v. Renfroe, 66 Ga. 427, this court said: “The Governor could not be made a party — being the head of a co-ordinate branch of the government, the courts may not well enjoin him— equity, as well as law, would seem to forbid it. The process of the courts is directed to the subordinate officers of the executive and those agents who are illegally using the authority of the State to oppress the citizens.” This accords with the universal trend of authority as to cases in which an executive function involves the exercise of judgment and discretion as distinguished from mere ministerial action. “With respect to the power of the courts to control the action of the Governor of a State, many cases haAre arisen thereupon. It is entirely clear that the executive of a State is not subject to control from the courts, Avith respect to the exercise of his political powers, or his powers in any other matter, where his action is left to be guided by his ovm judgment and discretion.” Throop, Pub. Off. §795. The same doctrine is, in effect, laid down in 2 High on Inj. §1326, from which we make the folloAving
And, thirdly, 'even if obstacles above pointed out were not in Byrd’s way, he was not, as a mere taxpayer, entitled to maintain his petition, because he utterly failed to show that, as such, he was in any way injured by the letting of the contract to the Franklin Company. It was, in any •event, absolutely essential for him to show that, in consequence of the action taken by the Governor and the reporter, he, as a private citizen, sustained some injury. It is difficult to conceive how, in this capacity, he could have been injured^ at all, except by an increase in the amount of his State taxes; and as to this, there was no contention— nor even a pretense — that the publication of the Supreme -Court reports by the Franklin Company would cost the State a single cent more than would have been the case if the contract had been awarded to Byrd himself or to some one else. He was not in a position to insist, and did not insist, that the State could, in any event, get the work done •at a price less than his own bid.
It has been held that one not an owner of real estate, and . therefore not liable to a tax upon realty, would not be allowed the aid of an injunction to prevent the enforcement ■of such a tax, because he had no interest in the matter. 1 High on Inj. §573. Again, one seeking to enjoin a pub-
The doctrine thus laid down by the text-writers is supported by Sherman v. Billows (Ore.), 34 Pac. Rep. 549. And, without searching for other decisions of this court, wet
As already intimated, it is to be presumed that the State’s officers will take the proper care of her interests as to affairs with the disposition of which they are specially entrusted. If in any given instance, through inadvertence or an omission to observe legal requirements, an unlawful or improper contract has been made in behalf of the State, resulting to her disadvantage, it can be set aside at her instance upon proper proceedings instituted for the purpose by the attorney-general. 10 Am. & Eng. Enc. of Law, p. 798.
We have omitted to mention some minor points, for the reason that the case is absolutely controlled by the principles which we have endeavored to discuss. The court was right in refusing the mandamus, but erred in granting the injunction. Judgment reversed.