Edward D. Sloan, Jr., individually, and as a.citizen, resident, taxpayer, and registered elector of Greenville County, and on behalf of all others similarly situated, brought this declaratory judgment action against the School District of Greenville County and the individual members of the District board. Sloan requested a declaration that certain contracts entered
FACTS
The District awards contracts amounting to $25,000 or more through competitive sealed bidding under its procurement code. 1 That code provides an emergency procurement may be made when an emergency condition arises and the need cannot be met through normal procurement methods. The code limits such procurement to “when there exists an immediate threat to public health, welfare, critical economy and efficiency, or safety under emergency conditions as defined in regulation.” The District’s applicable regulation provides examples of such emergency conditions, including floods, epidemics, riots, equipment failures, and fire loss. The regulation also requires the condition “must create an immediate and serious need for supplies, services, equipment, or construction^] ... the lack of which would seriously threaten: (1) the functioning of the District; (2) the preservation or protection of property; or (3) the health or safety of any person.” The emergency procurement is to “be made with as much competition as is practicable under the circumstances.”
On February 23, 1998, the District decided to procure construction contracts for three schools under the emergency exception to its competitive sealed bid procedure. It justified the need for the emergency procurement by asserting it would assure completion of the construction prior to school opening in August 1999, as required by the “Long-Range Facilities Plan.” Eston Skinner, a purchasing agent in the District’s procurement office spoke to Larry Sorrell, the Manager of Audit and Certification for the State Budget and Control
The District invited contractors to submit fee proposals for the construction of the three middle school projects. After reviewing the proposals, the District awarded the contracts to Beers-York Construction Company, Inc. for construction of all three schools. Construction of the schools began soon thereafter.
Sloan brought this declaratory judgment action challenging the award of the contracts. He conceded he did not try to bid on the project. Instead, he asserted he was a taxpayer, contesting an illegal expenditure. Relying on
Citizens for Lee County, Inc. v. Lee County,
TAXPAYER STANDING
Sloan argues the trial court erred in holding he lacked standing to challenge the District’s award of the contracts.
A fundamental prerequisite to institute an action is the requirement that the plaintiff have standing.
Blandon v. Coleman,
A private person may not invoke the judicial power to determine the validity of executive or legislative action unless he has sustained, or is in danger of sustaining, prejudice therefrom. ‘(I)t is not sufficient that he has merely a general interest common to all members of the public.’
Id.
at 398,
In the case at bar, Sloan is not maintaining this action as a “private person,” nor is he maintaining it merely as a “member of the public.” Sloan has pursued this action as a taxpayer of Greenville County.
In
Mauldin v. City Council,
“The injury charged as the result of the acts complained of is a private injury in which the tax-payers of the county ... are the individual sufferers, rather than the public. The people out of the county bear no part of the burden; nor do the people within the county, except the tax-payers, bear any part of it. It is therefore an injury peculiar to one class of persons, namely the tax-payers of the county .... ”
Id.
at 20,
A taxpayer’s standing to challenge unauthorized or illegal governmental acts has been repeatedly recognized in South Carolina. In
Sligh v. Bowers,
This is an unlawful use of the public funds, which the court, in the exercise of its equitable powers, will enjoin. In Crampton v. Zabriskie, Mr. Justice Field used this language: “Of the right of resident taxpayers to invoke the interposition of a court of equity to prevent an illegal disposition of the moneys of the county ... there is at this day no serious question.”
Id.
at 413,
In
Kirk v. Clark,
In
Brown v. Wingard,
Although South Carolina has allowed taxpayer standing in other contexts, we have not been confronted with a case wherein a taxpayer challenges a violation of a statute requiring competitive bidding in the award of governmental contracts. However, other states have addressed this issue and held taxpayers have standing because competitive bidding laws are for the benefit of taxpayers.
Independent Enters. Inc. v. Pittsburgh Water & Sewer Auth.,
The taxpayers of Greenville County have a direct interest in the proper use and allocation of tax receipts by the District. Therefore, we find Sloan, as a taxpayer of Greenville County, has standing to challenge the District’s award of the allegedly illegal contracts due to the District’s failure to abide by the competitive sealed bidding requirements in its procurement code.
PUBLIC IMPORTANCE
Our decision to allow Sloan to proceed with this suit does not rest entirely on his status as a taxpayer of Greenville County. Recently, in
Baird v. Charleston County,
In this ease, the public interest involved is the prevention of the unlawful expenditure of money raised by taxation. “Public policy demands a system of checks and balances whereby taxpayers can hold public officials accountable for their acts.... Taxpayers must have some mechanism of enforcing the law.”
Eastern Missouri Laborers Dist. Council,
Although the District adopted its own procurement code, the General Assembly’s intent is relevant when examining the public policy of competitive sealed bidding in the award of public contracts. The General Assembly stated its intent as follows:
Section 2. It is the intent of the General Assembly to ensure that the heads of state agencies, departments, and institutions are held accountable for the effective and efficient use of the public resources entrusted to them annually in the appropriation process.
Act No. 178, 1993 S.C. Acts 1367.
As required by law, the language used in the District’s procurement code is “substantially similar” to the General Assembly’s expression of intent. S.C.Code Ann. § 11-35-70 (Supp.1999) (requiring school districts’ procurement codes to be “substantially similar” to the South Carolina Consolidated Procurement Code). In particular, it states:
The underlying purposes and policies of this code are:
1. to provide increased economy in procurement activities and to maximize to the fullest extent practicable the purchasing values of funds of the District;
9. to promote increased public confidence in the procedure followed in public procurement
The General Assembly’s intent and the District’s purposes are equivalent. Both manifest the desire to ensure continued public trust and confidence in governmental spending.
The requirement of standing “is not an inflexible one.”
Thompson v. South Carolina Comm’n on Alcohol & Drug Abuse,
TRIAL COURT’S RELIANCE ON CITIZENS FOR LEE COUNTY v. LEE COUNTY
The trial court relied on
Citizens for Lee County, Inc. v. Lee County,
The trial court’s reliance on Citizens for Lee County was misplaced and is inapposite for the following reasons. First, Sloan’s declaratory judgment action involves an allegedly illegal expenditure of public funds by the District. In Citizens for Lee County, an expenditure of public funds was not at issue. Instead, the issue was a lease agreement between Lee County and a private corporation to maintain a solid waste disposal facility on county property. This lease agreement did not involve the expenditure of public funds by Lee County.
Second, Sloan is maintaining this action as a taxpayer. In
Citizens for Lee County,
there is no mention of the plaintiffs’ status as taxpayers and the Supreme Court did not rule\on that issue. The Supreme Court identified the plaintiffs as “a special-interest group and two private citizens.”
Id.
at 28,
Citizen§ for. Lee County stands for the proposition that a procurement code does not create an implied right of action for special-interest groups and private citizens who do not have “a direct, intrinsic interest in the procurement practices of governmental entities.” Id. As explained above, competitive sealed bidding requirements are principally for the benefit of taxpayers to ensure their money is spent wisely. As a taxpayer, Sloan has “a direct, intrinsic interest in the procurement practices” of the District, and therefore, he has an implied right of action under the District’s procurement code.
We also must consider whether Sloan has stated a sufficient cause of action under the Declaratory Judgment Act. When bringing an action under the Declaratory Judgment Act, “[a]ll that is required is that the [plaintiff] demonstrate a justiciable controversy.”
Brown v. Wingard,
For the foregoing reasons, we find the trial court erred in holding Sloan lacked standing to pursue this declaratory judgment action.
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
Notes
. The District is exempt from the provisions of the South Carolina Consolidated Procurement Code, pursuant to S.C.Code Ann. § 11 — 35— 70 (Supp.1999), as it has adopted its own procurement code and its procedures have been approved by the Office of General Services.
. In
Mauldin,
the Supreme Court held that operation of certain utilities by cities and towns would be
ultra vires.
After
Mauldin,
the South Carolina Constitution was amended to allow cities and towns to operate water systems.
See Berry v. Weeks,
. Recently, in
United States v. City of New York,
