The issue presented is whether the Public Competitive Bidding Act of 1974 (61 O.S. §§ 101 et seq.), insofar as it relates to the advertising, receiving bids and awarding public improvement contracts, applies tо a “Home Rule” municipality which has charter provisions for competitive bidding on public improvement contracts. If the Act is applicable we must then determine if the contract involved here is within its terms.
We hold the Act is not applicable 1 and reverse the judgment of the trial court.
The City of Tulsa (City), a “Home Rule” city, followed its charter provisions instead of the Act in advertising, receiving bids and awarding a contract for еlevator maintenance service for two public buildings. Otis Elevator Company (Otis) was the successful bidder, and United States Elevator Company (USEC) was an unsuccessful bidder. After the contract was awarded to Otis, USEC brought an action seeking an injunction enjoining City from complying with its contract with Otis. In turn, City sought to have its contract with Otis declared invalid in the event USEC was grаnted its requested relief.
USEC’s action is based upon its contention that public improvement contracts are of statewide concern, and City should have followed thе Act instead of its charter provisions in advertising, receiving bids and awarding the service contract. On the other hand, City and Otis contend that since City (Tulsa) is a “Home Rule” city, and its charter provides for competitive bidding on contracts such as the one involved here, the Act was not applicable and the charter provisions were properly followed.
The trial court granted summary judgment to USEC and declared the contract between City and Otis invalid. City and Otis appealed.
The parties recognize that municipalities may adopt charters containing provisions not in accord with the general law, and insofar as such charter provisions conflict with the state law on subjects relating to purely municipal matters, the state law is thereby suspended.
City of Muskogee v. Senter,
The application of this principle in the light of the various decisions has been likened to cutting a path through a jungle. Merrill, “Constitutional Home Rule for Cities Oklahoma Version”, 5 Okl.L.Rev. 139, 159 (1952). Professor Merrill said that in searching for the “harmonizing principle” to be applied in determining which items are “municipal affairs,” we mаy not simplify the process by concluding that matters of general concern, and hence not “municipal affairs”, are those which concern the state at large or affect the people generally. Nearly every function of any local government may be said to affect “the people generally” in this mobile sоciety. Practically any action of a city will have an impact upon persons not permanent residents of that municipality.
There are no constitutional guidеlines for awarding public improvement contracts by a municipality that are comparable to those involving municipal bonded indebtedness over which the state mаintains its complete sovereignty.
Sublett v. City of Tulsa,
Okl.,
We do not find this argument persuasive. Article X, §§ 26, 27, and 35 of the Oklahoma Constitution, cited in this regard by USEC, relate to limitations on municipal indebtedness and procedures for incurring such indebtedness. They do not speak to the manner in which municipalitiеs may carry on ordinary business affairs or for letting public building contracts. And we are not concerned here with how the contract in question will be paid or financed. Nor dоes the fact that the legislature has enacted numerous statutes concerning the financial affairs of a municipality, and the procedures to be used in providing fоr payments from certain funds dictate a finding that the Act pertains to general matters of state wide concern. We are concerned with a public improvement contract of a municipality and must determine whether the power which the City exercised in providing for its own bidding procedure “is purely municipal, or whether there is a wider public interest.”
City of Wewoka v. Rodman,
“. . . not any single thing upon which we are to concentrate our attention. Rather, we are to take into account all the factors which center around the partiсular exercise of power and strike a balance to determine whether we can say there is a public interest ‘wider’ than a purely municipal interest. This we cаn not do by rule of thumb, but by a balancing of the interests affected by the matter under consideration. It is this overall consideration of factors involved which offers the best way to a satisfactory explanation of the otherwise oft perplexing course of decision.”
USEC places great emphasis uрon the dollar amount of the service contract, and urges that when all municipal contracts of this type are aggregated it involves a substantial amount of taxpayer funds. What is at issue here is not the amount of the contract, i. e. City’s “indebtedness” and how it will be financed, but under which law (state or municipal) was City required to follow in letting the public improvement contract. In City of Muskogee v. Sen ter, supra, we said that in the absence of a charter provision prescribing the manner in which the City of Muskogee (a Home Rule city) could make contracts for professional services, the authority to make such contracts was governed by the general law of the state.
We need not determine whether the Act would be applicable to a “Home Rule” city whose municipal “law” did not provide for any “competitive bidding” procedure, or which expressly provided for some other method of letting contracts. We are satisfied that the specific procedures to be followed in advertising and accepting competitivе bids on public improvement contracts is a “municipal affair" and outside the scope of that “wider public interest” which would allow the state law to supersede thе municipal provisions of a “Home Rule” city. The particular manner in which a “Home Rule” municipality may let and approve public contracts based upon сompetitive bidding has no overriding impact beyond the municipality so as to authorize state interference in the conduct of such business affairs of the municipality.
Acсordingly, we need not determine whether the service contract involved in this case would be otherwise covered by the provisions of the Act. Since it is not contendеd that the procedures followed by City in letting this contract did not comply with the requirements of the applicable law, i. e. the municipal law, the judgment of the trial court must bе reversed, and the case remanded with instructions to deny USEC injunctive relief and enter judgment for City.
REVERSED AND REMANDED WITH INSTRUCTIONS.
Notes
. Our holding that the Public Competitive Bidding Act of 1974 (
