135 N.Y.S. 747 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1912
Defendants are the mayor and other subordinate public officers of the city of Syracuse. As such they constitute the board of contract and supply. As such board they received bids on July 19, 1909, for paving Marcellus street, the common council by ordinance having determined that a new pavement should be laid in that street. Relators submitted a bid, as did a number of others, and claim to have been the lowest bidders, and, hence, entitled to have the contract awarded to them. This claim has been sustained by the court at Special Term.
The material facts out of which the controversy arises are not in dispute.
The Syracuse Rapid Transit Railway Company has its tracks laid in Marcellus street. By section 98 of the Railroad Law (Gen. Laws, chap. 39 [Laws of 1890, chap. 565], as amd. by Laws of 1892, chap. 676) it is required to “have and keep in permanent repair that portion of such street * * * between its tracks, the rails of its tracks, and two feet in width outside of its tracks.” Under this section it has been held that a street surface railroad company is required to pay for its por
By the franchise granted by the city of Syracuse to the Syracuse Rapid Transit Railway. Company, provision is made to the effect that when the common council determines to pave any street upon which the railway company’s tracks are laid, it shall cause to be served upon the railway company a certified copy of the resolution ordering such pavement, and at - any .time before the expiration of four months from such service, the railway company may commence the work of paving the railroad strip according to the plans and specifications, upon giving to the city twenty days’ previous notice in writing of its intention to commence such work, and in case the railway company fails to serve such notice or to commence the work of paving the railroad strip within four months, it shall thereby lose its right to pave said railroad strip and the city may then proceed to pave the same and to charge the cost thereof “at the contract price for the balance of the street ” to the railway company and collect the same from the company.
The city served the railway company with proper notice and the railway company allowed four months to expire without beginning .the work of paving the railroad strip or serving-notice of its intention so to do. This occurred before the bids had been received on July 19, 1909. By the specifications for the pavement an extra foundation was provided for in the railroad strip, amounting to 6,960 square yards in excess of the regular foundation such as was provided for the rest of the street, and the bidders were required to-specify and did specify the amount of their bids respectively for this extra foundation in the railroad strip. Relators’ bid for this extra foundation was $1,392. The bid of R J. Baker, whose total bid was next higher than relators, was for this extra foundation $3,480. The specifications for the pavement contained this clause: “ The Common Council reserves the right through the Commissioner of Public Works to increase or diminish the quantity of work to be done by adding to and deducting from the work contemplated in the ‘ Railroad strip. ’ ” Also a clause under ‘ ‘ Notice to Contractors,” as follows: “The Board of Contract and Supply
The motion papers in this proceeding had, however, been served on September thirteenth, the.notice of motion being for a Special Term to be held on September twenty-fifth.
The Special Term has held that after the bids had been received, opened, tabulated and published, and the property owners had selected the kind of pavement to be laid in view of the bids received, the power of the board of contract and supply to.reject-all bids is gone, and the lowest bidder for the particular kind of pavement selected by the property owners has a legal right to have the contract awarded to him. It was also held that relators made the lowest bid for brick block pavement, and that mandamus was their proper remedy. .
These questions turn upon the interpretation to be given' to sections. 120, 121 and 124 of the Second Class Cities Law (Consol. Laws, chap. 53; Laws of 1909, chap. 55). Section 120, after specifying what city officers shall compose the board of contract and supply, provides: “ Except as otherwise provided by law, it shall be the duty of such board, after public notice and in accordance with regulations to be prescribed by general ordinance of the common council, to let to the lowest bidder, who will give adequate security therefor, all contracts for the performance of any work or for the supply of any material required by or for the use of any officer, board, body or department of the city, in all cases where the expense of such work or materials, or both, shall exceed the sum of two hundred and fifty dollars [except in certain emergencies not material here]. * * * The board shall have power to reject all bids or proposals if in its opinion the lowest bid or proposal is excessive.”
Section 121 prescribes the methods to be pursued in receiving and opening bids for public work of the city, including the time, place and manner of opening bids, and also provides as follows: “The board may reject all bids or proposals received at any meeting and advertise again for new bids or proposals to be received at another meeting as above prescribed.”
We are unable to concur in this view. There seems to be no sound reason for making a different rule in reference to paving contracts than for any other public city work, and we do not think such a distinction is made or intended by this section. It seems reasonably clear that the general power conferred upon the board of contract and supply by sections 120 and 121 to reject all bids for work to be let by public bidding applies generally and is intended to include paving work as well as other work.
In the present case bids were received for six different types of pavement besides the brick block. There were nine separate bids for the brick, and from one to three for each of the other varieties. When these bids were received and tabulated the board could not know which type of pavement the property owners would select; the bid for one type they might consider fair and reasonable, and for another type excessive, but unless the property owners should select the type for which the bids were considered excessive, -there was no occasion to reject all bids for fear of that result. The proper time for this board to exercise its discretion would seem to be after it knew the type of pavement preferred and selected by the property owners. The three sections of the statute referred to are found in article 8 of the general statute, which is entitled "Department of Contract and Supply. ” We think they should
In Walsh v. Mayor, etc. (113 N. Y. 142) construction was given to the provisions of an act, applicable to the city of Hew York (Laws of 1860, chap. 308) and relating to public contracts, which required that all such contracts “shall be awarded to the lowest bidder for the same respectively with adequate security, and every such contract shall be deemed confirmed in and to such lowest bidder, at the time of the opening of the bids, estimates or proposals therefor, and such contract shall be forthwith duly executed * * * with such lowest bidder,” and it was held that this more definite and specific language did not prevent the public authorities from rejecting all bids and readvertising, and was not intended to have that effect.
In that case, as here, the bidders were warned in the advertisement and specifications that the right to reject all bids was reserved, but the decision was not placed upon the legal effect of such reservation but squarely upon the construction and legal effect of the provisions of the statute.
Moreover, provisions of this character in city charters are not made for the benefit of contractors or bidders upon public works, and are not available for them to compel the execution in their favor of such contracts by city officials. They are intended for the benefit and protection of the public, as has been recently held by the Court of Appeals in the case of Molloy v. City of New Rochelle (198 N. Y. 402). The charter of the city of Hew Rochelle (Laws of 1899, chap. 128, § 33) contained this provision: “Whenever any expenditures to be made or incurred by the common council or city board or any city officer in behalf of the city for work to be done, or materi
It must be equally true here. As the statute we are considering was not enacted for the benefit of relators, they can have no remedy by reason of its provisions.
The case is, we think, controlling against relators’ claim to be awarded the paving contract in question.
There is a further question as to whether relators were in fact the lowest bidders. •
We think it was within the discretion of the common council to waive the default of the Syracuse Rapid Transit Railway Company and permit it to pave the railroad strip at any time before the contract was actually let to others, or at least that part of it described as the extra foundation in the railroad strip. The specifications stated: “The Common Council reserves the right through the Commissioner of Public Works to
In view of what has been said it is unnecessary to consider the question as to whether mandamus is the proper remedy in such a case as this.
We think the judgment and order appealed from should be reversed and the writ dismissed, with costs to the defendants.
All concurred, except McLennan, P. J, who dissented upon the opinion of Andrews, J., delivered at Special Term.
Judgment and order reversed and writ, dismissed, with costs of this appeal and in the Special Term.