Evans Equipment Corp. v. Borough of Sharpsville

37 Pa. D. & C.2d 489, 1965 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 281
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Mercer County
DecidedJuly 29, 1965
Docketno. 2
StatusPublished

This text of 37 Pa. D. & C.2d 489 (Evans Equipment Corp. v. Borough of Sharpsville) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Mercer County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Evans Equipment Corp. v. Borough of Sharpsville, 37 Pa. D. & C.2d 489, 1965 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 281 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1965).

Opinion

McKay, J.,

This is an action in equity filed by plaintiff, a paving contractor, to require defendant borough to refund to plaintiff the major portion of a deposit paid in connection with the awarding of a bid for constructing and paving certain streets in the borough. The facts are stipulated as follows:

[490]*490On or about December 1, 1962, under the Federal Public Works Acceleration Act, the borough was awarded a Federal grant for certain needed street construction and paving, and advertised for bids for the project. One of the conditions of the grant was that work on the project would be under way by April 1, 1963. Plaintiff corporation submitted a bid of $113,558 for the job and delivered to the borough its certified check for $5,677.90 as a guarantee that if its bid was accepted, it would, within 10 days of notice of such acceptance, execute a formal contract with the borough and furnish a satisfactory performance bond and laborer and materialmen’s bond with a surety company as surety, as was required by the conditions of the Federal grant.

The bid form provided that the bid security attached in the sum of $5,671.90 was to become the property of the owner in the event the contract and bonds were not executed within the time above set forth “as liquidated damages for the delay and additional expense to the owner caused thereby”.

Likewise, paragraph 7 of the information for bidders, one of the contract documents provides:

“The successful bidder, upon his failure or refusal to execute and deliver the contract and bonds required within 10 days after he has received notice of the acceptance of his bond, shall forfeit to the Owner, as liquidated damages for such failure or refusal, the security deposited with his bid.”

The specifications applying to a contract security in paragraph 30 states:

“If at any time the Owner for justifiable cause, shall be or become dissatisfied with any surety or sureties then upon the Performance or Payment Bonds, the Contractor shall within five (5) days after notice from the Owner so to do, substitute an acceptable bond (or bonds) in such form and sum and signed by such other [491]*491surety or sureties as may be satisfactory to the Owner. The premiums on such bond shall be paid by the Contractor. No further payments shall be deemed due nor shall be made until the new surety or sureties shall have furnished such an acceptable bond to the Owner.”

On or about March 4, 1963, plaintiff being the lowest bid, the contract was awarded to plaintiff and the following day it executed the contract.1

On March 15, 1963, plaintiff furnished to the borough a performance bond and a labor and materialmen’s bond with the Stuyvesant Insurance Company as surety. The bonds were executed on behalf of the company by one Samuel Wesoky, presumably under a power of attorney which was attached to the bond. However, when the borough solicitor examined the power, it was discovered that Wesoky did not have authority to execute laborer and materialmen’s bonds on behalf of the surety company at all, and on March 16, 1963, the borough solicitor notified plaintiff that the bonds were invalid.

Although the proper officer of plaintiff immediately contacted the bonding company and even went directly to its home office in Newark, N. J., in an effort to obtain valid bonds, because of the government requirements of certain certifications and proof of financial stability on behalf of the contractor on such a project, plaintiff was unable to obtain the required bonds in time for the borough to meet the April 1st deadline for commencement of the work. Accordingly, on March 19, 1963,2 the [492]*492borough council passed a resolution voiding the award and forfeiting plaintiff’s certified check as liquidated damages, and, one week later, it awarded the contract for the project to the next lowest responsible bidder in the amount of $124,045.50, as was its right.

At about the same time, plaintiff had a similar contract with the city of Struthers, Ohio, under the same Federal Public Works Acceleration Act to remove an existing bridge and build a new one, which involved approximately the same amount as the Sharpsville job, and for which it had furnished similar bonds, executed on behalf of the Stuyvesant Insurance Company by Wesoky. When the invalidity of the Sharpsville bond was discovered, plaintiff was able, apparently without difficulty, to replace the invalid bonds on the Struthers job with valid ones.3 The Stuyvesant Insurance Company has since obtained an injunction in the United States District Court for the Western District of Pennsylvania, enjoining Wesoky from writing any further bonds on its behalf.

The borough council has since authorized by resolution the return to plaintiff of $5,427.90 of the sum forfeited, being the original amount, less the actual cost of the administrative work and expenses incurred by the borough in the reawarding of the contract, $250, conditioned upon a determination by the court that it may legally make such refund.

Accordingly, the question before the court in the present case is whether, under the circumstances, the borough has the authority to return that portion of the proceeds of the deposit to plaintiff.

[493]*493At first glance, it might appear that the borough had no legal right to make the refund. A municipality may not give away its money, and in this case, as we have noted, the documents expressly stated that the bid security was to become the property of the owner (borough) as liquidated damages for the delay and additional expense to the owner caused thereby, in the event the contract and bonds were not executed within 10 days after notice of acceptance of the bidders.

If, therefore, the deposit, as the language in the documents seems to say, is liquidated damages for delay and additional expenses to the owner, the borough cannot refund it.

On the other hand, if instead of being liquidated damages for delay and expense, the retention by the borough would amount to a forfeiture, the borough has the power to refund it, provided that the circumstances are such as to reasonably warrant it.

The Borough Code4 provides that “The council of the borough shall have power: II. To mitigate or remit fines and forfeitures in reasonable cases”. Hence, this case hangs upon the question whether the retention of the balance of the deposit5 by the borough would be a forfeiture or merely retaining liquidated damages.

A forfeiture is defined as “A thing forfeited; that which is lost by a crime, offense, neglect of duty, or breach of contract; hence, a fine; a penalty”: Webster’s New Collegiate Dictionary. So considered, for the borough to retain the deposit in this case would mean that plaintiff had breached a condition of the bidding and, hence, forfeited the deposit.

Is the deposit liquidated damages or a forfeiture? If [494]*494we look beyond the language of the bidding documents and inquire whether, in reality, the retention is, in fact, liquidated damages for the delay and additional expense to the owner caused by the failure to deliver valid surety bonds on time, we are confronted with the fact that, although the deposit was $5,677.90, the actual stipulated expense incurred by the borough was only $250.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
37 Pa. D. & C.2d 489, 1965 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 281, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/evans-equipment-corp-v-borough-of-sharpsville-pactcomplmercer-1965.