Dickinson v. . City of Poughkeepsie

75 N.Y. 65, 1878 N.Y. LEXIS 829
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 12, 1878
StatusPublished
Cited by47 cases

This text of 75 N.Y. 65 (Dickinson v. . City of Poughkeepsie) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dickinson v. . City of Poughkeepsie, 75 N.Y. 65, 1878 N.Y. LEXIS 829 (N.Y. 1878).

Opinion

Hand, J.

The section of the statute, conferring the powers material to be considered by us upon the water commissioners of the city of Poughkeepsie, is not entirely free from ambiguity. It authorizes them, among other things, to build reservoirs, etc., employ engineers, laborers, and all other help, and do all acts that may be needed to take waters and introduce them into the city, “ or they may put the whole or any part of the same out on one or more contracts, first giving at least two weeks’ public notice of proposals in all the city newspapers, and such contract or contracts shall be given to the lowest bidder, who shall give due security for the performance of the same.” (Laws of 1867, chap. 333, § 6, subd. 2.) But this language although hardly precise,' is tolerably plain in its meaning. It gives to the commissioners power to build the reservoir by their own engineers, themselves employing the laborers and purchasing the materials ; or they may let out the whole or portions of the work by contract. In case they do the latter, they must issue proposals and receive bids, on two weeks’ notice in all the city papers, and must award the contract to the lowest bidder. 0

In case, therefore, they elect to put a reservoir under contract, their powers with reference to such contracts are sharply defined. Their entire authority to let out the work on contract is conferred by the statute, and that statute prescribes how and how only they can make a contract; it must be upon public notice, be open to competition upon proposals, and must be made with the lowest bidder appearing upon such competition. Any other contract is wholly unauthor-. ized, beyond their powers, and therefore void. (In re Eager, 46 N. Y., 100; Dillon on Mun. Corp., § 388, and cases cited.)

Under this statute, the water commissioners elected to “ put out ” the College Hill reservoir on contract. Sealed proposals were invited by public notice, according to the *69 statute, and it was stated in the notice that the form of proposal, drawing and contract, in conformity to which the work would be done, were to be seen, up to the day of open-ins: the bids, at the commissioners' office. A form of contract and specifications was adopted by the commissioners and exhibited to the bidders, in accordance with the notice. This form of contract only required to be filled in with names, dates, and prices, to be a complete contract. A notice to contractors was also furnished, showing an approximate estimate of quantites, by which it was stated that the bids were to be canvassed, to determine who was the lowest bidder ; but it contained classifications not mentioned in the proposals. Three bids were put in for the work; one by the plaintiffs, one by Nelson, and the third by Ward & Lary. Nelson and Ward & Lary were not residents of the city of Poughkeepsie. These bids were presumably put in on or before the thirtieth day of September, the day fixed by the notice ; and it appears by the minutes of the board of water commissioners that they were all opened on the fourth of October and referred to their engineer, Band, for calculation and comparison. It is said by the plaintiffs that Nelson's bid was rejected for informality in not naming suretiés, and in some other respects, but no formal rejection appears upon the minutes of the commissioners. The bid was referred to the engineer for “ comparison,’.' and its aggregate was reported back by the engineer as the highest of the three. Indeed the informality referred to also existed in the plaintiffs’ bid, as well as other more important departures from the form.

It is established beyond question, in the evidence, that after the reference of the bids to the engineer Band, a series of interviews were. had between him and the plaintiff Dickinson, and the plaintiffs’ bid was between them altered in several respects. The engineer finally reported to the commissioners the result of his canvass of the three bids, by which he made it to appear that the plaintiffs were the lowest bidders, Nelson the highest, and Ward & Lary intermediate. These results were produced by varying all the bids. Ficti *70 tious prices were added to the bids actually put in by Nelson and Ward & Lary for items not included in the form of proposals furnished th<$m, and, in some instances, the prices actually bid by them were raised. The prices actually bid by the plaintiffs were lowered ; in one instance, the bid of $1.25 per yard for puddle being cut down to twenty-five cents per yard, bringing it below Nelson’s bid of thirty cents. This single item made the bid of the plaintiffs appear in the canvass nearly $10,0.00 less than it really was, and less than was inserted in his contract, finally signed and now sued upon. Added to their canvass, it alone would have made them considerably higher than Nelson’s canvass, falsely swelled as it was, and higher than Ward & Lary’s canvass, as made, though not higher than it would have been if the prices bid by the1 last for puddle had not been, for some reason, omitted therefrom. The alterations actually made, at these interviews, in the plaintiffs’ bid are claimed, by the plaintiffs, to have been, in the aggregate, to the advantage of the city ; and by the defendants, to have been to the advantage of the plaintiffs. This is not perhaps very important, in the view we take of the case, but it is clear that some of these changes were to the advantage of the plaintiffs, and some of them had the result of giving them prices for classes of work not offered to the other bidders or made the subject of competition at all. The defendant confidently claims, and I think the evidence establishes, that upon a fair canvass of the bids, as actually put in and opened by the board, the plaintiffs were not the lowest bidders.

After these canvasses, which it must be conceded were false and illusory, had been presented by the engineer to the board of commissioners and obtained from them on the fourteenth of October an award of the contract to the plaintiffs of all the work of building the reservoir, with certain exceptions, a contract was drawn up by the engineer. To this was attached another proposal of the plaintiffs, which is dated October fourteenth, the first one being dated Septem *71 bcr thirtieth. This proposal appears to differ from the original, even after its alteration, in many respects, in some cases raising the prices bid. Whether it was submitted before the award or not, or at all, I am not able to ascertain from the evidence. The contract, as drawn by the engineer, varied from the award, in including the work expressly excluded by it. It also varied, in material particulars, from the form of contract submitted to the bidders, adding classifications of work not competed for or included in the proposals or form of contract, and prices for which it appears had been arranged verbally between the engineer and the plaintiffs, after the bids were opened ; and including, among other things, the price of puddle “ material to be furnished by contractor,” at $1.25 a yard, although this had been presented to the board at twenty-five cents a yard, presumably to get below Nelson’s actual bid. It gave twenty-five cents a yard for “making puddle,” which clearly under the contract as competed for was to be done without other compensation than the payment for earth excavation and embankment, and for which the other bidders would have had nothing.

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Bluebook (online)
75 N.Y. 65, 1878 N.Y. LEXIS 829, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dickinson-v-city-of-poughkeepsie-ny-1878.