146 A. 24 | Pa. | 1929
Argued March 21, 1929. In response to an advertisement, seven bids were received for the construction of a public school. The four lowest were: Dick Construction Company, $34,740; S. A. Hamel Son, $36,659; Frank L. Cadule, $36,740 and A. C. Slencamp, $36,990. By a vote of three to two the board of school directors awarded the contract to the highest of these four bidders, whereupon the present taxpayer's bill was filed, which resulted in a decree perpetually enjoining the school directors and Slencamp "from putting into effect the contract" for the construction *411 of the building. From this we have the present appeals; one by the school district and the three school directors, and the other by Slencamp. In determining them, we shall assume, but do not decide, that the board exercised a sound discretion so far as respects the Dick Construction Company and Slencamp, but it is very clear this was not so as to Hamel and Cadule, each of whom was a lower bidder than Slencamp.
Section 617 of the School Code of May 18, 1911, P. L. 309, 350, as amended by the Act of July 10, 1919, P. L. 889, provides as follows: "All construction . . . . . . upon any school building . . . . . . where the entire cost . . . . . . shall exceed $300, shall be done under contract or contracts to be entered into by such school district with the lowestresponsible bidder, upon proper terms, after due public notice has been given asking for competitive bids." 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,
In Hibbs v. Arensberg,
In the instant case, the trial judge found as a fact, and this was later approved by the court in banc, that "no investigation was made by any member of the board *413
to ascertain the financial standing, reputation, experience, resources, facilities, judgment, and efficiency as builders," of any of the bidders except the Dick Construction Company and Slencamp. There was ample evidence to sustain that finding, which must, therefore, be accepted as correct: Williams v. Finlaw, Mueller Co.,
What has been said shows that the board never were in position to determine whether or not Hamel and Cadule were responsible bidders, and in fact never did determine that question. When compelled to speak by the exigency of the suit, they gave excuses, not reasons, for their conduct; evidently after-thoughts entitled to no weight. We have often said, and now repeat, that the discretion vested in public officials in the making of contracts requiring the expenditure of public money, is not unbridled, but must be a sound discretion, exercised according to the standards fixed for the protection of the public; and that, as distributors of public money, they cannot act as they might do if expending their private funds.
The decree of the court below is affirmed, and the appeals are dismissed at the cost of the respective appellants.