City of Sweetwater v. Solo Const. Corp.

823 So. 2d 798, 2002 WL 812861
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedAugust 21, 2002
Docket3D01-3349
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 823 So. 2d 798 (City of Sweetwater v. Solo Const. Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Sweetwater v. Solo Const. Corp., 823 So. 2d 798, 2002 WL 812861 (Fla. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

823 So.2d 798 (2002)

CITY OF SWEETWATER, Appellant,
v.
SOLO CONSTRUCTION CORPORATION, Appellee.

No. 3D01-3349.

District Court of Appeal of Florida, Third District.

May 1, 2002.
Dissenting Opinion on Denial of Rehearing August 21, 2002.

*799 Irizarri & Gersten and Ramon Irizarri, Miami, for appellant.

Elder, Kurzman & Vaccarella and David R. Elder and Vincent F. Vaccarella, Miami, for appellee.

Before SCHWARTZ, C.J., and COPE and SORONDO, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

The City of Sweetwater appeals from the following judgment with which we entirely agree:

FINAL JUDGMENT

THIS CAUSE came before the Court on September 20 and 21, 2001 for Trial on Plaintiff's Complaint for Writ of Mandamus and Injunctive Relief, and the Court, having heard testimony of the witnesses, reviewed the evidence introduced, reviewed proposed findings of fact and final judgments considered argument of counsel, and being otherwise duly advised in the premises;
It is hereby Ordered and Adjudged as follows:
Findings of Fact:
1. On June 15, 2001, the City of Sweetwater issued an Invitation to Bid for City Project NO. SW01-2001, The City of Sweetwater Stormwater Improvements Project. Instructions to Bidders were included in the Invitation that informed Bidders of the conditions for bidding. Paragraph 18 of the Instructions to Bidders established the basis for the award of the contract and provided:
"The Contract will be awarded to the responsive, responsible Bidder submitting the lowest acceptable Proposal."
2. Paragraph 18 also defined the term "responsible bidder" as follows:
"Responsible bidder shall be defined as any person, firm or corporation submitting a bid for the work contemplated who maintains a permanent place of business, has adequate plant equipment to do the work properly and within the time limit that is established, and has adequate status to meet his obligations contingent to the work."
(Plaintiff's Ex. 1).
3. On June 26, 2001, a pre-bid meeting was held wherein Bidders were informed that the time for contract performance would also be part of the selection process. (Testimony of Greg Jeffries, Plaintiff's Ex. 7.) On July 11, 2001, bids were opened at the City commission meeting. (Plaintiffs Ex. 8.) Solo Construction Corporation was the apparent low bidder submitting a bid for the total amount of $2,168,230.00, and offering to perform *800 the work in 180 days. Felix Equities, Inc. submitted the second lowest bid in an amount of $2,285,610.00. United Engineering Corporation was the third lowest bidder submitting a bid that totaled $2,339,204.00, and offering to perform the work within 270 days. United's bid was $170,974.00 higher than the bid of Solo, and 90 days slower in time for project completion. (Testimony of Greg Jeffries, Plaintiffs Ex. 3 and 4.)
4. At the July 11, 2001 Commission Meeting, the Mayor of the City, Jose Diaz, announced that a bid review committee of himself, the City Attorney, Ramon Irizzari, Esq., and the Consultant Engineer, Greg Jeffries, would review the bids and award the contract to the "most responsible bidder". (Plaintiff's Exhibit 2 and 8.) At trial, Mayor Diaz admitted that he believed that he could award the contract to the most responsible bidder, testifying as follows:
Q. On July 11 of this year did you, as the strong mayor, believe that you could evaluate responsible bidders and determine which of those bidders you were going to award a contract to?
A. Yes sir.
Q. An even though Solo was the low bidder, one of the responsive bidders and one of the responsible bidders, you believed at that time you could still award it to another contractor?
A. Yes, based on all the information. (Testimony of Mayor Diaz, Transcript p. 49-50 lines 22-7.)
5. Subsequently, the Mayor appointed three individuals to evaluate the bidders and find the "most responsible" bidder. The individuals appointed by the Mayor differed from the individuals identified at the July 11, 2001, City Commission meeting. The individuals appointed by the Mayor were Domingo Moya, assistant to the Mayor, Carlos Lanza, Director of Building and Zoning and Public Works for the City, and Greg Jeffries, the consultant engineer. (Testimony of Mayor Diaz.)
6. The bid review committee members were given "Contractor Selection Scoring" sheets by the Mayor and asked to find the most responsible bidder. The contractor selection scoring sheets included numerous categories, which were not advertised as part of the bid manual and included columns to score and compare each bidder. (Plaintiff's Exhibit 6.) The scoring criteria for the various and sundry categories was not advertised, or defined in the bid documents. (Plaintiff's Exhibit 1.) The members of the selection committee were not given any directions or standards as to how the bidders were to be scored. Ultimately, the manner in which bidders were scored was not uniform. (Testimony of Greg Jeffries, Domingo Moya, Carlos Lanza.)
7. The testimony given by the bid committee members revealed a wide disparity in how bidders were scored. Carlos Lanza did not recall completing his contractor selection scoring sheet and as he had only recently been appointed to his position, did little to evaluate the bidders. Domingo Moya did not perform any investigation into the bidders, and scored his selection sheet based solely upon the City of Sweetwater Police Department's Background check. Greg Jeffries made some calls to public agencies to attempt to ascertain recommendations about the bidders, but admitted that such recommendations could be arbitrary. (Testimony of Greg Jeffries, Transcript p. 90 lines 14-15.) All of the bid committee members compared *801 the various bidders based upon their total scores to arrive at a winner or most responsible bidder. (Plaintiffs Exhibits 6 and 10). United Engineering Corporation was selected for award as the most responsible bidder as it was scored the highest on the Contractor Selection Scoring Sheets.
8. Solo Construction Corporation received scores of 70, 73 and 80 out of 90 from the committee members. All of the committee members testified that Solo submitted a responsive bid. (Plaintiffs Exhibit 6, Testimony of Mssrs. Jeffries, Lanza and Moya.)
9. The testimony of the committee members revealed that Solo was found to be a responsible bidder. In fact, all of the committee members testified that they believed that Solo had appropriate experience, equipment and status and was qualified to perform the project. The Mayor testified that Solo was a responsible bidder.
Q. And there is nothing on those evaluations, because I know you answered that question honestly, that says Solo is not a responsible bidder. True?
A. I stated that the most responsive responsible bidder I didn't believe was Solo.
Q. No. But there is nothing on those evaluations that indicates Solo is not a responsible bidder?
A. No.
Q. Its not there.
A. No.
Q. Solo is a responsible bidder and United is a responsible bidder?
A. They are all responsible bidders.

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