Alyeska Ski Corporation v. Holdsworth

426 P.2d 1006, 1967 Alas. LEXIS 204
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedApril 27, 1967
Docket620
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 426 P.2d 1006 (Alyeska Ski Corporation v. Holdsworth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alyeska Ski Corporation v. Holdsworth, 426 P.2d 1006, 1967 Alas. LEXIS 204 (Ala. 1967).

Opinion

OPINION

Before NESBETT, C. J., and DIMOND and RABINO WITZ, JJ.

RABINOWITZ, Justice.

This appeal involves questions of first impression pertaining to the reviewability of decisions made by the Director of the Division of Lands and the Commissioner of Natural Resources under the leasing of lands provisions of the Alaska Land Act 1 and the standing of an unsuccessful bidder to obtain review of such decisions.

In its complaint appellant alleged that appellee Bell, the Director of the Division of Lands, offered to lease certain lands of the State of Alaska for 55 years at public auction to the highest qualified bidder pursuant to the Alaska Land Act. Appellant further alleged that it was a qualified bidder at the auction and that it offered several bids culminating in a bid of $10,200 annual rental. According to appellant’s allegations, the only other bidder at the auction was Wayne J. Cherrier (who purportedly acted on behalf of appellee Inlet). In regard to Cherrier’s bid, appellant asserted Cherrier had failed to file a development plan with appellee Bell as required by the notice of auction; that Cherrier omitted to file any evidence of his authority to act for appellee Inlet; that Cherrier’s check, which was tendered at the close of the bidding, was neither cash, certified check, money order, nor cashier’s check; and that Cherrier’s bid of $10,400 annual rental was declared by appellee Bell to be the highest bid. Appellant further alleged that it had protested the foregoing and had appealed the director’s determination of the highest bidder to Phil R. Holdsworth, the Commissioner of Natural Resources. The commissioner thereafter rendered a decision in which the director’s determination was affirmed.

Appellant alleged that if appellees Bell and Holdsworth were not restrained from entering into a lease with appellee Inlet, appellant would, to its irreparable injury, be illegally deprived of its right to obtain a lease to the land in question. After contending that it had exhausted its administrative remedies, appellant requested the superior court to issue a temporary restraining order and preliminary injunction against appellees Bell and Holdsworth

enj oining and restraining them from executing and entering into said or any lease with Wayne J. Cherrier, Inlet Co., Inc., or any person other than plaintiff, as a result of the lease auction of December 1, 1964, and that upon final hearing said injunction be made permanent * * *.

The superior court then granted appellant’s ex parte application for a temporary restraining order. 2 Thereafter, appellees Bell and Holdsworth moved, pursuant to Civil Rule 12(b) (6), to dismiss appellant’s complaint on the grounds that it failed to state a cause of action. In support of their *1008 motion, appellees- relied on the fact that the published notice of land lease auction had stated that the Division of Lands of the Department of Natural Resources “reserves the right to reject any and all bids.” Ap-pellees’ legal position in support of their motion to dismiss was that the “universal” rule which is followed in the United States “is that a bidder or potential bidder on a public contract is without standing to bring suit to enjoin the award of a contract to a third party or to have the contract set aside and awarded to him.” Appellees argued that highest-responsible-bidder statutes, and administrative rules and regulations promulgated thereunder, are exclusively for the benefit of the general public and not for unsuccessful bidders, and do not create a right of action in favor of an unsuccessful bidder. 3

In opposition to appellees’ motion to dismiss, appellant argued that the highest-responsible-bidder line of authorities, typified by Perkins v. Lukens Steel Co. 4 relied upon by appellees, is inapplicable. Appellant contended that the case at bar is distinguishable from Perkins in that it involved “the disposal by the State of some of its natural resources; not the purchase by the State of supplies or public improvements under its housekeeping powers or under responsible bidder statutes.” Appellant also argued that by virtue of certain constitutional, statutory, and regulatory provisions it had the right “as an aggrieved bidder, to insist that no lease be issued except under the conditions and limitations prescribed” by Alaska’s laws. 5

As to its standing to bring the action, appellant’s position was that “it has standing to sue on general legal principles, and as an aggrieved bidder to whom Section 17 of Article VIII of the Alaska Constitution applies, and as an interested person aggrieved by the neglect of the defendants to comply with the law of Alaska regarding disposal of State land.” 6 Additionally, appellant claimed that it was the only qualified bidder at the auction within the meaning of the invitation to bid and pertinent Alaska law, and that in order for appellees to bring the case within the Perkins rule they must prove another qualified bidder actually bid at the lease auction.

Appellant then filed a motion for leave to file an amended complaint. The amended complaint proposed an additional cause of action seeking declaratory relief in addition to the injunctive relief which had been previously requested. 7 Appellant’s *1009 motion to amend was opposed by appellees Bell and Holdsworth on the basis that neither they nor the State of Alaska were obligated to issue a lease to any one, and that since the State of Alaska had not been made a party and could not be sued without its consent, declaratory relief was improper. The superior court granted appellees’ motion to dismiss the complaint and allowed further briefs on the question of whether an amended complaint should be permitted. 8

After hearing additional oral argument, the superior court entered an order which dismissed appellant’s complaint, denied appellant’s motion to amend its complaint, dissolved the temporary restraining order (which had been extended by stipulation of the parties), and exonerated the bond appellant had filed in conjunction with its application for temporary restraining order. In entering this order it appears the trial judge was of the opinion that appellant lacked the requisite standing to maintain either cause of action. As to the amendment requesting declaratory relief, the trial judge was of the view that the State of Alaska was an indispensable party since it owned the land in question, and because the state was not a party to the litigation, effective relief could not be granted to appellant. 9 As to both causes of action the court noted appellant had not alleged that appellees Bell or Holdsworth were guilty of fraud, collusion, or deceit in the manner in which the auction was conducted, or in their determinations that appellee Inlet was the highest bidder.

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Bluebook (online)
426 P.2d 1006, 1967 Alas. LEXIS 204, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alyeska-ski-corporation-v-holdsworth-alaska-1967.