Bielec Wrecking & Lumber Co. v. McMorran

42 Misc. 2d 970, 249 N.Y.S.2d 686, 1964 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1838
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedApril 24, 1964
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 42 Misc. 2d 970 (Bielec Wrecking & Lumber Co. v. McMorran) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bielec Wrecking & Lumber Co. v. McMorran, 42 Misc. 2d 970, 249 N.Y.S.2d 686, 1964 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1838 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1964).

Opinion

Louis G. Bruhn, J.

This is an application on behalf of the petitioner for an order adjudicating the respondent in contempt of an order previously issued by this court or in the alternative setting aside the respondent’s action of rejecting all of the bid proposals submitted as being arbitrary and capricious.

To better understand the atmosphere or posture of the present application requires a history of the litigation from its inception.

Pursuant to an advertisement for public bidding the petitioner, on October 24, 1963 submitted a bid for the demolishing of certain houses and structures in the City of Syracuse in the [971]*971amount of $31,335 which bid was claimed to be the lowest bid and lower by over $4,000 to the next bid of $35,583; on November 9, 1963 the respondent returned the petitioner’s deposit and rejected its bid claiming it was “ informal Thereafter the petitioner inadvertently brought a proceeding in this court in Onondaga County and by stipulation of the parties an order was made by the Hon. J. Robert Lynch, Justice transferring such preceeding to a Special Term of this court held in and for the County of Albany on December 13, 1963 and ordering further 1 ‘ that the respondent herein be and he hereby is stayed from taking any further action in reference to the award of the contract involved until the hearing upon this application is had in the Supreme Court of Albany, and a copy of the notice of entry of the order deciding the application is served upon the applicant.” (Apparently intended to be respondent.)

The matter was argued at Albany on December 13, 1963 and an opinion was rendered by this court on January 15,1964 which in effect directed the respondent to accept and consider the petitioner ’s bid in determining which bid should be accepted as the lowest.

Thereafter, this court signed an order dated January 22, 1964 which provided:

ordered, that the application of the petitioner is granted to the extent as hereinafter set forth, and it is
ordered further, that the determination of the respondent that the bid proposal of the petitioner was informal and the return of same as a result of such determination be and hereby is annulled as being arbitrary and capricious, and it is
1 ‘ ordered further, that the respondent accept the bid proposal made by the petitioner on the 24th day of October, 1963, as a formal bid proposal and consider same in determining the lowest responsible bid proposal in making the award of its contract.” (Italics supplied.)

On January 29,1964 a copy of such order was served upon the Attorney-General and on February 6, 1964 the attorney for the petitioner received a letter signed by Henry A. Cohen, Director, by direction of the respondent, which stated:

‘ ‘ After due consideration of the proposals that were received for the above identified project and in view of the requirements at the site as have been recently developed, Superintendent J. B. McMorran, has determined to reject all of said proposals, for the best interest of the State.” (Italics supplied.)

[972]*972The petitioner thereafter instituted this proceeding on or about February 14, 1964 returnable at an Albany County Special Term of this court on February 28,1964; thereafter this. court received a phone call from Mr. Burke, Assistant Attorney-General requesting an adjournment to March 6,1964 because of the -Commissioner’s alleged absence from the State; by letter of February 19, 1964 a request was made by the same Mr. Burke of petitioner’s attorney and such consent was given by him to the adjourned date of March 6.

In the meantime on February 25 the petitioner’s attorney learned that the identical work was being advertised for bids as part of a larger contract to be let on March 5, 1964, the day before the requested and agreed adjourned date; that on February 26, 1964 at the request of the petitioner’s attorney the consent to the adjournment to March 6 was rescinded and the matter was heard on the date originally set, to wit, February 28, 1964.

At no time prior to the return date had Mr. Burke or anyone connected with the Department of Public Works advised either the court or the petitioner’s attorney of the course which was being pursued to readvertise for bids on the same project in spite of the pending proceeding to punish the Commissioner for contempt of this court’s order of January 22, 1964.

That the Commissioner’s underlings were planning to insure that the petitioner’s bid might not be considered even before tin's court made its decision is borne out by the fact that F. I. C. 64-7, the proposal for the contracts to be let as of March 6, was apparently prepared well in advance of this court’s determination and order of January 22,1964.

Such conclusion is borne out by the size of the proposal (consisting of some 335 pages) prepared in anticipation of such bidding, by the fact that such proposal on page “ 1 ” bears the date of January 8, 1964 and from page 19 on contains the identical buildings, unit, quantity and price as contained in the proposal of October, 1963.

On page 5 of the latest proposal appears the item “76 — Maint. & Prot. of Traffic (Req. B) ” with an asterisk which provides “ Omitted by intent. Bidder must state the price in the space provided for this item in the Proposal Form ”.

This particular item has special significance since it differs from the original proposal which bore the inscription only of Omitted by intent ” and is consistent with the argument advanced by the respondent to this court that the petitioner’s bid should be rejected as informal because of the failure to indicate a figure for the item.

[973]*973Curiously and as further indication that efforts were in progress to thwart the petitioner’s proceeding is the fact that on page 93 of the latest proposal there appears this caveat:

ITEM 120 DX DISPOSAL OE BUILDINGS
“ The specifications for Item 120 D shall apply except as modified. The Contractor is advised that Demolition Items 120 DX 1 through 120 DX 83 may be deleted from this contract either prior to or after the award. Legal proceedings concerning these items are in progress. No definite date can be established as to when these legal questions will be resolved and the property made available to the contractor.”

It should be pointed out at this point that these preparations were being formulated and formalized in spite of the injunctive provisions of Justice Lynch that the respondent be stayed from taking any further action in reference to the award of the contract involving such demolition until service of a copy of the order to be entered after the hearing of December 13.

Such conclusion is further fortified by the letter of February 3, 1964 signed by Henry A. Cohen, which states:

The memorandum decision by Justice Bruhn, ‘ In the Matter of the Petition of Bielec Trucking & Lumber Co., Inc.’ etc., concentrates on the footnote, ‘ omitted by intent, ’ on page 2 of the proposal which was referred to by an asterisk in the block for 76-M, maintenance of traffic. Steps had already been taken here through John J.

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Bluebook (online)
42 Misc. 2d 970, 249 N.Y.S.2d 686, 1964 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1838, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bielec-wrecking-lumber-co-v-mcmorran-nysupct-1964.