173 Mo. App. 671 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1913
—The object of this suit is the enforcement of the lien of special taxbills issued by Kansas City in payment of the cost of building a district
The issues thus raised were tried without a jury and-were resolved by the court in favor of plaintiff for whom judgment was rendered. Defendant appealed. The ordinance under which the work was done was passed March 10, 1902, and approved by the mayor April 7, 1902. To comply with the requirements of the city charter (section 10, article 9, Charter and Revised Ordinances of Kansas City, 1898), it was necessary' that the ordinance prescribe the dimensions, material and character of the sewer proposed to be constructed or refer to plans and specifications then on file and approved by the board of public works. (Richardson v. Walsh, 142 Mo. App. 328; McCormick v. Moore, 134 Mo. App. 669; Barton v. Kansas City, 110 Mo. App. l. c. 40; Dickey v. Holmes, 109 Mo. 721.) The ordinance in question did not give detailed specifications but did contain the provision that “said sewer shall conform in detail to the plans and specifications prepared for the construction of said sewer, said plans now on file in the office of the board of public works.”
This constituted a sufficient compliance with the charter requirements relating to specifications in the
The point that the tax bills are void because- the city engineer failed to prepare an estimate of the cost of the work is answered by pointing to the charter of Kansas City which makes no such requirement. Sections of the General Ordinances (791, 793 and 811) imposed the duty on the engineer of submitting estimates of the cost of public improvements when required to do so by the council or board of public works, But this falls far short of requiring the making of a preliminary estimate as a condition precedent to the enactment of an initial ordinance for a public improvement.
Defendant introduced evidence to the effect that there was only one manufacturer of such brick in Kansas City and it is contended by defendant that because the contractor thus was compelled to obtain the brick used in the construction from this manufacturer the tax bills should be held void.
The courts of this State have been zealous in the protection of the public against every tendency to the practice of fraud, corruption and favoritism in the letting of contracts for public improvements. Whenever it is possible to have competitive bidding a fair opportunity must be given for such competition and any scheme or device designed to promote favoritism will render the whole proceeding void. In Curtice v. Schmidt, 202 Mo. 703, the Supreme Court say: “Vitrified brick is neither a patented article, nor is it 'one controlled by a single person or corporation, so as to put it upon the basis of a patented article. The evidence shows, and our experience teaches us, that vitrified brick sufficient for paving purposes are manufactured, made and furnished by a number of persons, companies or corporations. The designation, of material in the ordinance, as well as the selection made by the board of public works, should have been couched in such language as would secure unhampered and unrestricted competitive bidding, and the contract should have so followed. If you can say in your specifications,
But in the present case neither the ordinance, plans and specifications nor advertisement for bids (so-far as the record discloses) contained any provision restrictive of the right of the successful bidder to purchase the vitrified brick to be used in the construction in the cheapest and best market. There was no suggestion of favoritism in the proceedings until after a fair opportunity for competitive bidding had been given and the competition closed. The contract had been awarded by the city on terms which left the successful bidder free to buy the vitrified brick in any market and if he chose to allow the city to insert an agreement in the contract in excess of the terms offered to bidders and on which he had been awarded the contract, that was a matter in which the public was not concerned, since its rights had been fully safeguarded. We would not so hold if it appeared that bidders had been advised before the letting of the contract that the successful bidder would be required to enter .into a contract containing terms obnoxious to the law, but there is no suggestion in the evidence before us of any such understanding, nor that Kansas City brick was of inferior quality, and we would not feel justified in holding the tax bills void because, as it appears, the contractor allowed the city to insert an agreement in the contract that was not within the terms of the proposal to bidders.
The point that the work was not completed within proper time is obviously not well taken and will not be discussed.
The judgment is affirmed.