Beck v. City of Waterville

221 A.2d 831, 1966 Me. LEXIS 188
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedJuly 20, 1966
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 221 A.2d 831 (Beck v. City of Waterville) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Beck v. City of Waterville, 221 A.2d 831, 1966 Me. LEXIS 188 (Me. 1966).

Opinion

WEBBER, Justice.

After jury verdict for the plaintiffs, defendant appealed from the judgment. Among the stated points of appeal is the assertion of error with respect to the denial of defendant’s motion for judgment n. o. v. The decisive issue here is whether or not any enforceable contract was entered into by the parties. As is required in such circumstances we view the evidence in the light most favorable to the plaintiffs.

The defendant city in June, 1960 recognized the necessity of constructing a new high school building. As a means of implementing the program, the Board of Aider-men and Common Council duly adopted Order No. 44 which because of its importance in controlling the issues in this case we quote in full as follows:

“(City of
Waterville Seal) June 7, 1960
CITY OF WATERVILLE IN COMMON COUNCIL
ORDERED, THAT
the Mayor be and hereby is authorized to appoint an eleven man School Building Committee to supersede the Building Committee appointed under the authority of Order No. 162, December 4, 1956, composed as follows:
No. 1 Mayor
No. 2 Superintendent of Waterville Schools
No. 3 City Engineer
No. 4 Four members of City Council
No. 5 One member of School Board
No. 6 Three citizens
for the purpose of approving plans, supervising preparation of specifications, *832 detailed plans, and bid proposals, accepting bids, overseeing construction under the guidance of a supervising architect of a new 'four year high school’, having a thousand pupil capacity, and to execute any and all contracts necessary for the accomplishment of these objectives within the confines of the scope of the authority granted in this Order.
Powers and authority of the aforesaid committee shall be subject to the following limitations and conditions:
No. 1. The aforesaid new high school shall be constructed upon premises previously purchased by the City of Water-ville in the Libby Field-Oak Knoll Drive area.
No. 2. The fundamental designed features of the new high school shall—
(a) Be based upon the capacity and curricular needs of a thousand students
(b) Include a cafeteria, gymnasium, and auditorium, and/or a combination gymnasium-auditorium
(c) Be conveniently and economically expandable
No. 3. The committee shall immediately procure preliminary sketches of floor plans, perspectives and per square foot cost estimates from several competent architects .at no cost to the city. (Plans submitted previous to the passage of this Order should also be considered.)
No. 4. After consideration of proposed school plans the committee shall recommend acceptance by the City Council of one of the plans, such selection to be made on the basis of the following factors:
(a) Adequacy of design to fulfill curriculum needs of a thousand pupil high school.
(b) Economy of construction costs.
(c) Economy of methods and material of construction.
(d) Long term maintenance costs resulting from general design and materials employed in construction, such as heating, electrical power, janitorial services etc.
No. 5. The committee shall recommend an acceptance by the City Council of an architect after careful weighing of qualifications, with particular reference to his previous experience, a comparison of his past record of cost estimates, and resulting construction costs, for the purpose of drafting detailed plans, preparing specifications and bid proposals, and to supervise construction. Said architect’s fees shall not exceed the sum of five per cent of construction costs. Upon official acceptance of an architect by the City Council the committee shall then be empowered to enter into a contract for the aforesaid services with the said architect.
No. 6. The committee shall submit the plans and specifications to competitive bid. The bid proposal shall among other requirements, empower the committee to—
(a) Reject any and all bids and any part thereof.
(b) Require performance bonds.
(c) Provide for payments upon architectural performance certificates.
(d) And designate whether the bids shall be submitted on a single contract, multiple contract, or pre-file basis.
No. 7. The committee shall be empowered to accept a bid for building construction, the sum of which, including construction costs of the total school plant, referred to in paragraph two, as reflected by the accepted bid, a contingency of five per cent, architectural fees, site development of the immediate surrounding area, shall not exceed $1,400,000. *833 Any bid exceeding the aforesaid amount shall require the majority approval of both chambers of the City Council. (In determining whether a unit bid for site development shall be accepted, the committee shall compare the unit bid price with the cost of the city performing the equivalent work with its own public works forces.) The committee shall not, however, have the power to accept a bid until it shall have:
(a) Made the bid proposals and bids available for public inspection' for a period of at least five days after opening the bids.
(b) Reported to the City Council in joint session the bid the committee anticipates it will accept; responded to any and all inquiries made by members of the City Council in connection with any of the details of the bid proposals and bids, and shall have obtained from the City Council a majority voice vote indicating that the City Council has no further inquiries or comments to be made of the committee.
No. 8. The Committee shall supervise construction; it shall be empowered to approve change orders within the following limitations:
(a) The total of all change orders shall not exceed the amount of five per cent of the accepted construction bid.
(b) No individual change order exceeding the amount of $2500 shall be approved by the committee without the prior approval of the City Council.
(c) All change orders shall be reported to the City Council within thirty (30) days of their approval by the committee.
No.

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City of Waterville v. Bartell Telephone TV Systems
233 A.2d 711 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1967)

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Bluebook (online)
221 A.2d 831, 1966 Me. LEXIS 188, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beck-v-city-of-waterville-me-1966.