306 N.Y. 413 | NY | 1954
Plaintiffs are building contractors who, having put in a bid to erect a building for the State, and having discovered, after the several competitive bids had been opened and theirs found to be the lowest, that they had made a serious omission in calculation of the amount of their bid, informed officials in the State Department of Public Works of the alleged error and requested that they (plaintiffs) be relieved of their bid because of the mistake, and that their bid check of $7,500 be returned. After conferences, the State officials refused to accede to this request. Plaintiffs then brought this action in the Supreme Court. In form, it runs, not against the State itself, but against various State officers. The complaint says that the defendant State officers have declared that the bid check, which is on deposit in a special fund of the State, will be declared forfeit and placed in the State’s general fund, that this will result in great and irreparable loss and damage, and that plaintiffs have no adequate remedy at law. The prayer for judgment is that the allegedly mistaken hid of plaintiffs he rescinded and cancelled, and that defendants be enjoined from declaring the plaintiffs in default or from transferring the bid check or declaring it forfeit, or from using the check in any way, or placing it in the State’s general fund, and for a direction that the bid check or its proceeds be returned to plaintiffs. The answer denies the allegations as to mistake by plaintiffs, and sets up an alleged separate defense to the effect that the State notified plaintiffs that theirs was the lowest bid and that it was accepted and the contract awarded to plaintiffs, that the contract documents were delivered to plaintiffs for execution by them, that plaintiffs refused to sign on account of the alleged
At the trial, as by an earlier separate motion, the State continued to insist that the Supreme Court had no jurisdiction, besides asserting that no mistake had in fact been made by plaintiffs. Both those questions were decided in favor of plaintiffs. The Official Referee held that plaintiffs’ bid was mistakenly computed and was not plaintiffs’ real bid or one which they had ever intended to submit, and ordered that the bid be rescinded and cancelled, and that the defendant State officers be restrained from using the check in any manner, and that they return the check or its proceeds to plaintiffs, with the bid itself. While the Appellate Division reversed on the law and dismissed the complaint, its order specifically affirmed the facts as found by the Referee. Since that fact finding of a mistake, affirmed in the Appellate Division, was justified on this record, there is no question before us as to whether or not the mistake actually was made. The real question is one of jurisdiction of the Supreme Court to grant the demanded relief.
It seems to be conceded that the Court of Claims has, under section 9 of the Court of Claims Act, no jurisdiction to grant strictly equitable relief, but to award money damages only against the State, in appropriate cases. Plaintiffs assert that they, accordingly, could not have obtained relief against the State in the Court of Claims on this claim, since they would
Referring to section 879 of the Civil Practice Act, which says that where a duty is imposed by statute on a State official an injunction to restrain him from the performance of that duty can be granted only by the Supreme Court at a term held in the department where the officer performs his duties, the Appellate Division opinion correctly ruled that this statute does not grant any authority not elsewhere found, for injunctions against State officers, but is a merely limiting statute providing that such injunctions, if granted, must be by the Supreme Court sitting in the department where the public office or officer is officially located.
The State here calls our attention to section 1 of article Y of the State Constitution, as amended in 1938, which says that the refund of any money paid to the State, except upon order by the Comptroller, is void. The same idea is carried into sections 111 and 140 of the State Finance Law. Section 111 says that no money in any fund, title to which is in the State, shall be refunded except upon audit of the Comptroller. Section 140 says that whenever a deposit of money is required in connection with a bid, the bid may be withdrawn if no award of the contract is made within forty-five days after the receipt of bids, and that, upon such withdrawal, a bidder’s deposit shall be returned to him. Section 140, however, goes on to say that any bid money required by statute shall be retained under the jurisdiction of the Comptroller until returned or forfeited, which language makes it clear to us that this bid money was State money even though kept, pursuant to section 8 of the Public Buildings Law, with the bid money of the two next lowest bidders in a separate fund. Those changes in the statutes were, plainly, for the purpose of seeing to it that bid moneys are treated as State moneys, not kept lying around in various departments. Beading these various statutes together makes it plain that these bid moneys are in the possession of the State itself, with the result that a judgment commanding their return would be a judgment against the State itself.
Quite possibly, our affirmance means that these plaintiffs, and others in like position, have no cause of action anywhere to get their money back. This, however, does not mean that an assertion by a bidder that he has made a mistake is to get no hearing at all. Conferences were held in this matter, and the State officials decided not to credit plaintiffs ’ assertions or to exercise the power that apparently was theirs under subdivision 4 of section 8 of the Public Buildings Law to reject any or all proposals, and to advertise again for proposals. We need not
Samuel Adler, Inc., v. Noyes (285 N. Y. 34, supra), is the most recent case which involves an effort by a citizen to get back money deposited with the State for a special purpose. Plaintiff Adler had applied to the State Commissioner of Agriculture and Markets for a milk dealer’s license and had tendered the amount required as the fee, but the commissioner, although denying the license, refused to return the fee, apparently because there was no statute specifically providing for such return. The money was held with other similar license fees in a single fund under the control of the commissioner. Adler sued in the County Court for the return of his money and got judgment below, but the judgment was reversed here on the ground that any duty to make reimbursement was a duty of the State and any claim against the State therefor must be prosecuted in the Court of Claims. Adler’s claim arose in 1937 before the passage of the statutes referred to in the second paragraph above herein but, significantly, those statutes were noticed in this court’s opinion, written after those statutes had come into effect, as follows: “ Any duty to make such reimbursement was a duty of the State. The Legislature has now made this plain. (See L. 1940, ch. 178.) ” (285 N. Y. 36-37.)
The judgment should be affirmed, with costs.
Lewis, Ch. J., Conway, Dye, Ftjld and Froessel, JJ., concur with Desmond, J.; Van Voobhis, J., concurs in the result upon the ground that the State of New York is the real party in interest, and that the State has not been joined as a party defendant.
Judgment affirmed, etc.