Empire Masonry Corp. v. Town of Franklin

555 N.E.2d 603, 28 Mass. App. Ct. 707, 1990 Mass. App. LEXIS 324
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedJune 22, 1990
DocketNo. 89-P-1331
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 555 N.E.2d 603 (Empire Masonry Corp. v. Town of Franklin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Appeals Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Empire Masonry Corp. v. Town of Franklin, 555 N.E.2d 603, 28 Mass. App. Ct. 707, 1990 Mass. App. LEXIS 324 (Mass. Ct. App. 1990).

Opinion

Kass, J.

Upon report by a single justice of this court we are to consider two questions: (1) whether in connection with public construction under G. L. c. 149, §§ 44A-44H, an awarding authority is bound by the substitution procedure described in G. L. c. 149, § 44F(4)(c), if a low sub-bidder withdraws its sub-bid after execution of the general contract; [708]*708and (2) whether, under § 44F(4)(c), a general contractor must obtain executed subcontracts for the subtrades on a job prior to execution of the general contract. When the low filed sub-bidder falls away, the substitution procedure requires the general contractor to look to the next lowest eligible sub-bid: der in the trade concerned, and so on up the line until a sub-bidder in that trade signs up. In this case the town of Franklin (“the town”) is the awarding authority, John T. Callahan & Sons, Inc. (“Callahan”), is the general contractor, Ras-cicot Masonry (“Rascicot”) is the sub-bidder who filed the lowest masonry sub-bid, and Empire Masonry Corp. (“Empire”) is the next lowest masonry sub-bidder, who would be entitled to the masonry subcontract if the substitution procedure is applicable.2

We add such details of the history of the controversy as are necessary to consider the questions presented. Callahan was the low bidder with a bid of $2,190,000 to build a police station for the town. Filed sub-bids were opened June 26, 1989. Rascicot’s low bid on the masonry component of the job was $595,000.3 Empire was second lowest with a bid of $661,000. The town conditionally awarded the general contract to Callahan on July 20, 1989, subject to appropriation. In mid-August, the town voted the appropriation for the work and on September 5, 1989, executed a general contract with Callahan. The general contractor now called for signed contracts from its designated sub-bidders.4 By letter dated September 7, 1989, Rascicot informed Callahan that “[d]ue to financial circumstances we are unable to commence this project . . . [and] must regretfully withdraw our bid. . . .”

Empire insisted that it was thereupon entitled to the masonry subcontract. Callahan was entirely willing to have Empire do the work, provided that the town adjusted the con[709]*709tract price to reflect Empire’s higher price." The town took the position that it had a contract for a fixed price with Callahan and it was Callahan’s problem to find a masonry subcontractor who would match Rascicot’s price. On September 26, 1989, Empire brought an action for a declaratory judgment that it was entitled to the subcontract as matter of right under the statutory scheme and for an order restraining masonry work on the Franklin police station job by anybody else. After a Superior Court judge denied injunctive relief, Empire sought review before a single justice of this court under G. L. c. 231, § 118. A laudably pragmatic stopgap solution was arrived at. Empire was to proceed with the masonry work. The town paid $66,000 (the amount by which Empire’s bid exceeded Rascicot’s lowest bid) into an escrow account, pending decision of the disputed questions, which the single justice referred to a full panel. If we were to decide that the town was bound by the substitution procedure, the escrow fund would be disbursed to Empire in proportion to so much of the masonry work on the job as had been completed; were we to determine otherwise, the escrow fund was to be disbursed to the town. Callahan would then bear the incremental cost.

We conclude that the substitution procedure prescribed by § 44F(4)(c) may apply after execution of a general contract for a public construction job and that it applied in this case.

To set the context we summarize how the public bidding system prescribed by G. L. c. 149, §§ 44A-44H, works. All citations to statutory provisions are to sections found in G. L. c. 149 (1988 ed.). The public agency undertaking the construction project, the awarding authority, provides each general contractor and subcontractor who so requests a set of plans and specifications for the project. § 44B(1). At least four days5 before the opening of general bids (§ 44F[3]), sealed sub-bids must be filed with the awarding authority, accompanied by bid deposits equal to five percent of the amount of the sub-bid. §§ 44B(2) and 44F(3). Sub-bidders [710]*710may restrict use of their sub-bids to specified bidders on the general contract (general bidders). § 44F(2). The awarding authority is to open the sub-bids forthwith. § 44F(3).

Within two days, after weeding out all the formally defective bids, the awarding authority sends out a list of the eligible sub-bidders (and their sub-bids) to every person who had requested a set of plans and specifications. § 44F(3). General bidders must choose from among these listed sub-bidders in preparing their bids, ibid., and, like the sub-bidders, they must include a five percent bid deposit with their bid forms. § 44B(2).

Within five days of the opening of the general bids, the awarding authority rejects nonconforming bids (§ 44E[3]) and returns all the general bid deposits, except those of the three lowest responsible and eligible general bidders. § 44B(3). Likewise, the bid deposits of all sub-bidders except those of sub-bidders named by the three lowest responsible and eligible general bids and those of the three lowest responsible and eligible sub-bidders for each trade must be returned within five days of the opening of general bids. § 44B(4). If Federal approval of the contract is not involved, the awarding authority is to award the general contract to the lowest eligible and responsible general bidder within thirty days of the opening of the general bids. § 44A(3).

The selected general bidder then has five days in which to execute a contract with the awarding authority in accordance with the general bid and to furnish performance, labor and materials bonds in the sum of the contract price. § 44E(2). The bid deposits of the three lowest general bidders are returned upon execution and delivery of the general contract. § 44B(3). If the selected general bidder fails to execute the contract and furnish the bonds, the awarding authority keeps the bid deposit as liquidated damages (§ 44B[3]) and awards the contract to the next lowest responsible and eligible general bidder. § 44A(3).

Once selected, the general bidder must “promptly” confer with the awarding authority on the question of sub-bidders. § 44E(2). The awarding authority is entitled to replace any [711]*711sub-bidder named in the general bid with a sub-bidder from the prepared list, provided the selected general bidder does not object to that sub-bidder’s ability and standing. Ibid. There is no statutorily prescribed time within which the selected general bidder must award subcontracts to sub-bidders. The sub-bid form, however, requires that, within five days after presentation of the subcontract by the selected general bidder, the selected sub-bidder must execute a subcontract with the general bidder, “in accordance with the terms of [the] sub-bid, and contingent upon the execution of the general contract, and, if requested so to do in the general bid by the general bidder,” furnish a performance and payment bond for the full subcontract price. § 44F(2).

That brings us to the substitution procedure contained in § 44F(4)(c) which this case requires us to construe and apply.

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Bluebook (online)
555 N.E.2d 603, 28 Mass. App. Ct. 707, 1990 Mass. App. LEXIS 324, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/empire-masonry-corp-v-town-of-franklin-massappct-1990.