Flynn Construction Co. v. Leininger

1927 OK 170, 257 P. 374, 125 Okla. 197, 1927 Okla. LEXIS 37
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 21, 1927
Docket18405
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 1927 OK 170 (Flynn Construction Co. v. Leininger) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Flynn Construction Co. v. Leininger, 1927 OK 170, 257 P. 374, 125 Okla. 197, 1927 Okla. LEXIS 37 (Okla. 1927).

Opinion

HARRISON, J.

This is an original proceeding, which, because of its public importance to road construction throughout the state, has been permitted to be filed in this court for a writ of mandamus compelling the State Highway Commission to pay to plaintiffs the sum. of $6,011.34, alleged to be due plaintiffs for work and labor done and material furnished in the construction of a concrete bridge over Elk river, on State Highway No. 10, in Delaware county, under a contract entered into between plaintiffs and the State Highway Commission for the construction of said bridge.

The only reason assigned for the refusal to pay the amount due is that the contract under which plaintiffs are proceeding is illegal and void, for the reason that the advertised notice for bids required, am.ong other things, that each bidder name his own time in which he would complete the work; it being claimed by defendants that time is an essential element in competitive bidding and.that.by not requiring all bidders to specify the same time for completion of the work to be done, and by requiring each bidder to specify his own time, thus permitting each bidder to name a different time, the contract is illegal and void, for the reason that this manner of bidding does not constitute competitive bidding within the meaning of the statute.

The cause is submitted on an agreed statement of facts, the material substance of which is;

That on October 12, 1926, the State Highway Commission awarded to plaintiff company a contract to construct the - bridge- in question; that prior thereto, said Commission had advertised for bids for the con *198 struction of said bridge and bad required in said advertisement for bids that each bidder should name, among other items, the price and time within which he would complete such bridge; that plaintiff company and seven other contractors each submitted separate bids on like forms containing like plans, specifications, and requirements, furnished by said Commission, under rules and regulations promulgated by said Commission ; that each bidder named in his bid the pi'ice and time within which he could complete the bridge; for illustration, one bid was for $74,339.30 in eight months, one for $67,829.40 in eight months, one for $04,831.-14 in twelve months, one for $63,245.50 in ten months, one for $72,720.20 in ten months, one for $62,951.08 in ten months, one for $59,215.85 in eight months, and plaintiff company’s bid was for $62,934.40 in sis months; that plaintiff company, being considered the lowest and most responsible bidder, was awarded the contract; that pursuant thereto and in compliance with all the terms and conditions thereof, plaintiffs began the construction of said bridge, and have completed all the substructure and á portion of the superstructure thereof, at an expenditure by them of $39,-000 for labor and material, and have already been paid $13,000 as it fell due, under the terms of said contract; that there is nowi due plaintiffs under the terms of said contract the sum of $6,011.34; that plaintiffs have filed a claim for said amount, which claim said Commission has disallowed and refused to pay; that there has.been no fraud nor collusion nor charge of any fraud • or collusion in the awarding of said contract and no- failure nor complaint of failure of plaintiffs to perform the work-in full compliance with all the terms, conditions, plans, and specifications in the contract; that in submitting bids each bidder was required, under penalty of having his bid' rejected, to; bid upon the forms furnished by the Commission and to comply with- all rules and regulations promulgated by the Commission: that all things, both on the part of the Commission and of plaintiffs, have been done in good faith and according to the law as interpreted by said Commission, and in strict compliance with every requirement contained in and made part of the contract, except the refusal of the Commission to pay the amount now due plaintiffs; that the amount- due is npw on .hand and available, fox;, the payment of plain tiff si claim. ..

u And it* is fiirtHer stipulated tlia’t the Com: mission had formerly let contracts upon proposals' wherein: the "Commission named "the time for completion of the work contemplated and required each bidder to bid upon the same time, but that the Commission had found as a fact that more competition and better results had been obtained under the present form, which requires each bidder to name his own time, than under the previous form, where the Commission named the time and required all bidders to name the same time for completion. Other facts more or less material to different phases of the questions of law presented are also agreed upon in the stipulation of facts, and which will be duly considered in passing upon such questions as we reach them.

Plaintiffs contend, in effect, that the Commission is under a twofold obligation to pay the amount now due them:

(1) Because the form of advertisement for bids, the form of the bid itself, the form of the contract and terms thereof, and all the rules and regulations promulgated by the Commission are each and all in full compliance with the statutes.

■ (2) Because plaintiffs in justifiable good faith have entered into and in good faith have performed the work in question under a contract prescribed by the Commission, under a departmental construction which plaintiffs were bound to obey, and which had for a substantial period of time been in effect and had been enforced without question of its validity in scores of other like contracts already completed.

In support of the first proposition, plaintiffs cite the following authorities: Hannan v. Board of Education of City of Lawton, 25 Okla. 372, 107 Pac. 646; Reed v. Roekliff-Gibson Construction Co., 25 Okla. 633, 117 Pac. 168; Miller v. Town of Sebastopol (Cal.) 241 Pac. 593; Woolsey v. City of Tulsa, 90 Okla. 205, 216 Pac. 126; Town of Afton v. Gill, 57 Okla. 36, 159 Pac. 658; Sexton v. Smith, 32 Okla. 441, 122 Pac. 686; West v. City of Oakland (Cal. App.) 159 Pac. 202; Suburban Investment Co. v. Hyde (Fla.) 55 So. 76; Williams v. City of Topeka (Kan.) 118 Pac. 864; Hallett v. City of Elgin (Ill.) 98 N. E. 530; State v. Richards (Mont.) 40 Pac. 210; People v. Dorsheimer, 55 Howard Prac. (N.Y.) 118, 30 L. R. A. (N.S.) 127; Hirsch v. Mayor and Aldermen of City of Vicksburg (Miss.) 105 South. 492; Hornung et al. v. Town of West New York (N. J. L.) 81 Atl. 1116; Dovel Co. v. Village of Lynbrook, 213, App. Div. N. Y. 570; Lee v. City of Ames (Iowa). 203 N.W. 790.

- Some; of-the above decisions, if we fail'to consider .that they were written from vary? *199 Ing viewpoints and upon varying facts, would tend to support the plaintiffs’ contention, but by analyzing and comparing tbem it will be seen that none of tbem were written from tbe precise standpoint from wbicb tbe opinion in tbe instant case must necessarily be written, nor does any one of tbem deny that tbe term “competitive bidding” means bidding upon tbe same subject-matter, bence we feel that none of tbem are so completely applicable to tbe precise questions herein presented as to control our conclusion and decision in this case.

Cases of tbis character should be determined upon tbe actual facts presented and tbe peculiar provisions of law governing such facts rather than by misfitting precedents.

Plaintiffs, in commenting on tbe case of Woolsey v.

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Bluebook (online)
1927 OK 170, 257 P. 374, 125 Okla. 197, 1927 Okla. LEXIS 37, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/flynn-construction-co-v-leininger-okla-1927.