Davin v. City of Syracuse

69 Misc. 285, 126 N.Y.S. 1002
CourtNew York County Courts
DecidedOctober 15, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 69 Misc. 285 (Davin v. City of Syracuse) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York County Courts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Davin v. City of Syracuse, 69 Misc. 285, 126 N.Y.S. 1002 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1910).

Opinion

Ross, J.

On June 29, 1909, the board of contract and supply of the city of Syracuse advertised for sealed proposals for laying a pipe line across the city, connecting from the standpipe to University Hill, in accordance with plans and specifications on file in the office of the bureau of water.

The advertisement for sealed proposals was in form as follows:

Office of the Board of Contract and Supply,
Syracuse, New York, June 29, 1909.
Sealed proposals will be received at the office of the Board of Contract and Supply until 1:30 p. m. Tuesday, July 6, 1909, for laying a line across the city, connected from the standpipe to University Hill, in accordance with the plans and specifications on file in the office of the Bureau of Water. A certified check for 5$ of the total amount of each proposal, payable to the order of J. D. Stemmier, City Treasurer, to be forfeited upon failure to enter into contract within five days after notice of award from the Secretary of •this Board, must accompany each proposal.
“ Frederick T. Pierson, Secretary”

. The board of contract and supply submitted to the bidders, together with the plans and specifications for the work for which bids were received, a statement entitled “ Infor[287]*287mation for Bidders,” which contained, with other matters, the following: “No bid will be received and deposited unless accompanied by a certified check upon a National or State Bank in Syracuse, N. Y., or by a New York Draft drawn and made payable to the order of the City Treasurer for 5 per cent, of the total amount of the bid.

“All such deposits, except that made by the bidder to whom the contract shall be awarded, will be returned to the person or persons making the same within three days after the decision as to who shall receive the contract.

“ If the bidder to whom the contract shall have been awarded shall refuse or neglect, within ten days after due notice that the contract has been awarded to him, to execute the same and furnish the security required, the amount of the deposit made by him shall be forfeited to, and retained by, the Oity of Syracuse as the liquidated damages and not as a penalty for such neglect or refusal, and shall be paid into the funds of said city for his default; but if the said bidder to whom the contract is awarded shall execute the contract and furnish the said security within the time aforesaid, the amount of his deposit will be returned to him.”

Thereafter the plaintiff filed in the office of the board of contract and supply a bid to perform the work heretofore mentioned, the amount of said bid being $16,688. There were other bids submitted. The plaintiff at the time of submitting his bid also deposited with the secretary of the board of contract and supply his check for $900, the amount of which has been received by the city of Syracuse; and to recover said sum is the object of this action.

On July 6, 19'09, the board of contract and supply passed a resolution authorizing the secretary of said board to enter into a contract with John W. Davin, Jr. (the plaintiff) for laying the pipe in question in accordance with his proposals submitted July 6, 1909, he being the lowest bidder. The plaintiff refused to enter into the contract in question, although notified that the contract had been awarded to him, and thereafter, on July 19, 1909, the board of contract and supply passed a resolution reciting that the plaintiff had refused to execute or carry out the contract in question which [288]*288had. been awarded to him by said board of contract and supply, which said resolution further provided: “Resolved, that the certified check of John W. Davin, Jr., deposited as required to secure the entering into of said contract, on his part, which is in the sum of $900.00, be, and the same hereby is forfeited to the Oity of Syracuse and all other bids rejected.”

On July 20, 1909, the board of contract and supply advertised for proposals to lay a line of pipe connecting the standpipe with University Hill, in accordance with the plans and specifications on file in the office of the bureau of water. While the purpose was the same as in the first plans and specifications, the details were materially different, following to some extent a new route and varying materially from the plans and specifications submitted to the' public on June sixth. The board of contract and supply received sealed proposals for performing the work called for in the notice of July twentieth, and a contract was let at a price greater than that at which the plaintiff offered to perform the work specified in the original notice of June sixth.

Thereafter and on November 22, 1909, the common council of the city of Syracuse passed a resolution, which was in due course approved by the mayor, in substance authorizing that the amount of the check of $900 be refunded to John W. Davin, Jr., and asking that the comptroller be directed to draw a warrant for said amount, and directing the treasurer of the city of Syracuse to cash the same and to charge the account thereof to the fund for miscellaneous receipts. The comptroller of the city of Syracuse refused to draw a warrant payable to the order of the said John W. Davin, Jr., pursuant to the resolution of the common council; and the plaintiff has not received from the city of Syracuse the amount of said check.

What are the terms of the contract I am required to construe? The city of Syracuse, through its accredited agent, the board of contract and supply, advertised to the public for bids to perform an important public work and announced in such public notice that a deposit of five per [289]*289cent, of the amount hid must accompany such hid to he forfeited upon failure to enter into contract within five days after notice of award.” When the plaintiff examined the specifications, he found this provision so amplified that if he failed “ to execute the same and furnish the security required, the amount of the deposit made by him shall be forfeited to and retained' by the City of Syracuse as the liquidated damages and not as a penalty for such neglect or refusal;” and thereafter he submitted his bid and made the required deposit, without which his bid would not- have been considered. There is no ambiguity thus far, or any doubt as to the precise meaning of the language employed.

The plaintiff submitted his bid, acquiescing apparently in the interpretation which the city put upon the contract.In such bid he stated, “ That he has examined the form of contract and specifications approved by the Corporation Counsel and drawings therein referred to and also the premises on which the work is to be done and that by personal examination of said premises and by other means he is satisfied as to the nature of the work to be. done, and he proposes and agrees, if this proposal be accepted, that he will contract in the .form so approved to perform all the work mentioned in said approved form and contract and the specifications. * * So that we "have a case of a party to a contract eoncededly violating its provisions and invoking the aid of the courts in such violation, an aid which necessitates giving to plain language a meaning against the apparent intention of the parties.

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Bluebook (online)
69 Misc. 285, 126 N.Y.S. 1002, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davin-v-city-of-syracuse-nycountyct-1910.