STATE EX REL. DEMOCRAT PRINTING COMPANY, Aрpellant, v. SCHMIEGE, Director, Bureau of Purchases and Services, Department of Administration, State of Wisconsin, Respondent.
Supreme Court of Wisconsin
November 26, 1962—January 8, 1963.
18 Wis. 2d 325
HALLOWS, J. The underlying issues on this appeal are whether the Director has the authority to reject the lowest bid in its class for state printing as being excessively high and, if so, how the Director‘s authority is to be exercised. Democrat contends the Director has no such authority because the constitution and the statutes of the state mandatorily require the acceptance of the lowest bid for state printing and if the Director has the power to reject the lowest bid, such power may be exercised only after notice, hearing, and opportunity to the bidder to present evidence the bid was not excessive. The Director contends he has such power by virtue of
At the outset we have no difficulty in deciding Democrat‘s sole bids for classes 3 and 4 were the lowest bids. But it does not follow necessarily that because they were the only bids, they were the lowest. Academically, it could be argued that being the only bids in their classes they were the highest bid.
The construction we give to the constitution is in accordance with the administrative practice as evidenced by the Director‘s accepting two bids of other bidders which were the only bids in their classes. This was done at the time the Director rejeсted the bids which are the subject matter of this suit. The Director‘s contention the bid must be a reasonable and fair price to be the lowest bid has no merit. This argument is a way of saying the sole bid might not be the lowest bid if there had been other bidders or if there were another opportunity for bidders to bid. A bid once made in the face of a fair opportunity for competition is the lowest bid, even though the sole bid and excessive as to price. Its rejection must be justified on other grounds than it is not the lowest bid.
For many years and until 1955 the legislature established maximum prices. In that year the legislature established the base-price method as a basis for bidding for public printing (ch. 50, sec. 4, Laws of 1955). In 1959 the Director was given authority to specify base prices to which all printing bids are to be related in terms of discounts or additions (ch. 516, Laws of 1959). In 1955 the legislature also gave the Director the power to reject any or all bids for materials, supplies, equipment, and contractual services (ch. 592, Laws of 1955). Whether this power applies to printing is an issue in this case.
There is some indication in the briefs, relying on an attorney general‘s opinion (23 Op. Atty. Gen. (1934), 550), that the Director prior to 1955 and since 1934 has been exerсising the right to reject any or all printing bids. There is no basis for the grant of such power in the statute prior to the amendment of
The purpose of the constitutional provision is not offended by the granting of the statutory power to the Director to reject any or all bids. Besides the prevention of political favoritism and extravagance in the letting of printing contracts, the mandatory competitive-bidding method was tо secure the cheapest price for the state. Such purpose is safeguarded by the power to reject bids. The constitutional provision means the lowest bidder by contract must be accepted as distinguished from any other bidder, but we cannot find a latent meaning in the constitution that the lowest bidder regardless of any and all
This power, as applied to printing, is more narrow in scope than when applied to other material or contractual services because of the specific provisions contained in
We agree with the trial court the Director‘s right to reject any or all bids cannot be the basis of a rule made by the Director under the authority of
The next question is the manner in which the authority of the Director to reject the lowest bid as excessively high is to be exercised. Democrat contends it may not be exercised without notice, hearing, and opportunity tо present evidence that the bid was not excessive, relying on Ianniello v. Harrison (1926), 4 N. J. Misc. 111, 132 Atl. 78, Sellitto v. Cedar Grove (1945), 133 N. J. L. 41, 42 Atl. (2d) 383, and Housing Authority of Opelousas v. Pittman Construction Co. (5th Cir. 1959), 264 Fed. (2d) 695, 704. These cases deal with the issue of the responsibility of the lowest bidders under statutes requiring a contract be given to the lowest responsible bidder. We do not think the analogy to these cases is conclusive. The question of responsibility of the bidder is a question of fact and includes all the elements which enter into the successful performance of thе contract. These facts generally lie outside the knowledge of the agency given the authority to accept or reject bids.
In the instant case, the power to reject is vested in the Director of the Bureau of Purchases and Services of the Department of Administration. It must be presumed that the Bureau of Purchases and Services and its Director have a working knowledge of fair and reasonable рrices of state printing. Contracting for state printing is not an isolated or infrequent occurrence but is a repeated process every two years. There is no statutory authority granting a right to a hearing before the Director upon the issue of excessiveness of price. The excessiveness of price is a question of fact to be determined by the Director from evidence available to him. In the аbsence of statute, we will not add a requirement that the Director must hold a hearing before exercising his authority. However, in making such a determination, we think it would be good policy for the Director to
Due procеss and fair play are satisfied by a judicial review of the Director‘s action. See State ex rel. Wisconsin Inspection Bureau v. Whitman (1928), 196 Wis. 472, 508, 220 N. W. (2d) 929. The power to reject any or all bids by an administrative official is not to be exercised free from judicial review. In the trial court, Democrat had an opportunity to put in evidence of the reasonableness of its bid and of the arbitrariness of the Director‘s action. No evidence was presented by Democrat оther than that admitted by the pleadings and the stipulation. This was to the effect Democrat lost money on its previous contract for state printing for these classes. This may be so, but this evidence falls short of proving the bids submitted were fair and reasonable in a competitive market. There is insufficient evidence in the record to show the Director‘s determination was so clearly erroneous that it should be set aside.
The trial court found the Director acted in good faith in rejecting Democrat‘s bid and no attack is made on this finding. The record and briefs contain the results of the rebidding in these two classes of printing in justification of the Director‘s action. We consider the results of the rebidding immaterial on this issue. The question of good faith of the Director is to be determined by the evidence before him at the time of the rejection, not whаt happened later. Part of the results of the rebidding is likewise immaterial because class 3 was broken up into different categories and therefore a fair comparison of prices cannot be made. Consideration has been given to the other questions raised, but in view of what has been said it is not necessary to discuss them.
By the Court.—Judgment affirmed.
BROWN, C. J. (dissenting). Although there is much in the majority opinion with which I agree, with respectful regret I am unable to concur in the result by the majority achieved. It seems to me that my brethren have unduly complicated a question which is essentially quite simple.
When I look at the Wisconsin constitution I observe that it gave separate treatment to the problems of procuring printing needed by the state, and in
For the printing now in question Democrat Printing Company was the lowest bidder. There is no contention that the price quoted exceeded any maximum price which the legislature established. Why then is the contract not let to that company? Only because a subordinate official, Director of the Bureau of Purchases, is not satisfied with the bid prices. To me, that is no reason at all. If it could be argued that the legislature had power to delegate to the Director the legislative function of establishing a maximum price and had so delegated it, even then the Director did not set a maximum price nor is it claimed that the Democrat‘s bid exceeded the price so established. Indeed no maximum was set, or has yet been set, of which bidders are notified and which limit they are expected to observe and which they may not еxceed.
Therefore, it is my belief that Democrat‘s bid meets every constitutional requirement; the additional requirement that the bid must satisfy the Director, although the Director has established no price limit, is totally immaterial and beside the point; and the contract must be let to respondent as low bidder in obedience to
Notes
Wisconsin Legislative Council, Staff Report, Constitutional and Administrative History of State Printing, publication No. 59—13, August 21, 1958.
State Printing, Analysis of Memorandum Filed on Behalf of the Printing Industry, by Staff of the Subcommittee on State Publications of the Interim State Government Operations Committee, May 8, 1959.
Provisions of State Constitutions Relating to Public Printing, 1846-1959, by Roy N. Lokken, Research Staff, Legislative Council.
See also note, 1951 Wisconsin Law Review, 556.
“(7) Stationery and printing shall be purchased from the lowest responsible bidder without regard to the amount of the purchase, except when the department of administration exercises the discretion vested in it by sec. 16.82 (4).”
