Fumo v. Redevelopment Authority

541 A.2d 817, 115 Pa. Commw. 542
CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 2, 1988
DocketAppeals, Nos. 2036 C.D. 1986, 2037 C.D. 1986, 1064 C.D. 1987, 2089 C.D. 1987 and 2090 C.D. 1987
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 541 A.2d 817 (Fumo v. Redevelopment Authority) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fumo v. Redevelopment Authority, 541 A.2d 817, 115 Pa. Commw. 542 (Pa. Ct. App. 1988).

Opinions

Opinion by

Judge Doyle,

Before us. for our consideration are various consolidated appeals arising out. of an invitation to bid on two parcels of property situate in the City of Philadelphia. The two contiguous parcels located at 253 and 255 South Ninth Street in Philadelphia were offered up for bid by the Redevelopment. Authority of the City of Philadelphia (Authority). The lot located at 253 South Ninth Street (lot 60A) contained a four-story commercial/residential building. which was in a state of disrepair; the adjacent lot at 255 South Ninth Street (lot 60) had no structure on it. Three proposals were sub[545]*545mitted to the Authority only two of which need concern us here. Vincent J. Fumo (Fumo) proposed to rehabilitatfe the dilapidated building and turn it into a single family residence and to turn the other parcel into a landscaped garden. His long-range plans, which were not included in his proposal, called for the razing of the existing structure and the building of a new single family residence combining the two properties. The other bidder, the Greek Orthodox Cathedral of Saint George (Cathedral) submitted a proposal which called for the development of each parcel as a professional office building with apartments above each building. Apparently, certain city residents wanted 255 South Ninth Street to be converted into a landscaped garden, and they communicated their wishes to the Authority. Ultimately, Fumo was awarded the bid by a resolution of the Authority on January 8, 1986. The Authority, however, attempted to make the award conditional by requiring a deed restriction which would have mandated that Fumo keep the garden intact for twenty-five years. Fumo appealed the restriction to the common pleas court. By order dated May 15, 1986, the court preliminarily and permanently enjoined the Authority from enforcing the restriction, directed the Authority to honor the award to Fumo, and directed the parties to consummate the contract. The court further denied the Authority’s motions for post-trial relief and a stay, by order dated May 28, 1986; appeals to this Court from the May 28 order followed.1

[546]*546Subsequently, on remand from the common pleas court, the Authority, by a board resolution of June 13, 1986 tendered a second proposed contract to Fumo. In the second proposed contract, the twenty-five-year restriction had been reduced to ten years. Fumo again appealed to the common pleas court this time in the posture of a motion to enforce the courts May 15 order. That motion was granted by order dated April 2, 1987, and the Authority was directed to honor the award to Fumo. However, the April 2, 1987 order, although it enjoined the Authority from enforcing its ten-year restriction, also directed that the garden remain for two years. The Authority appealed that order to this Court as well.2 Post-trial motions were filed by the Authority and the Cathedral and were denied by an order of court dated July 2, 1987. That order was also appealed by the Authority. and the Cathedral;3 it is significant that no appeal was taken by Fumo.4

Although the procedural history of this case is fairly complex, the issues which we must resolve on . appeal are clear-cut. First, we must decide whether the Authority’s resolution, which purported to award the bid. to Fumo with the added condition, constituted an award of the bidding contract or merely a counter offer. Resolution of the question is a necessary prerequisite to determining what relief, if any, is appropriate.

The Authority and the Cathedral contend that it was a conditional award, because it varied the terms of [547]*547Fumos proposal, and constituted a counter offer which Fumo rejected. They, thus, conclude that no contract ever materialized and, consequently, that Fumo is nothing more than a disappointed bidder who had no right to an award of the redevelopment contract. They further contend that Fumos status as a taxpayer does not confer standing upon him to gain the relief he seeks, and that Fumo has no right to equitable relief because he is barred by the “clean hands” doctrine. Specifically, the Authority and Cathedral argue that because Fumo admitted at trial that his long-range plans for the property were different than those in the proposal, he committed a fraud on the public and the Authority. Further, the Authority argues that the common pleas court lacked the power to compel it to enter into a contract that was never intended and that it erred in substituting its discretion for that of the agency. Finally, both the Cathedral and the Authority argue that the only relief the trial court could have granted was to set aside all bids and remand to the Authority with instructions that it readvertise and start the bidding process anew.

We begin by deciding whether the Authority’s resolution constituted an acceptance of Fumos bid or a counter offer. We hold that it was the former. Case law establishes that in the context of public bidding it is the award which gives rise to the contract. Muncy Area School District v. Gardner, 91 Pa. Commonwealth Ct. 406, 497 A.2d 683 (1985). Further, once the award is made it cannot be recanted. Francis v. Luitweiler, 72 Pa. D. & C. 2d 582 (1975). Here, the Authority, by resolution, awarded the contract, but then attempted to attach a condition to it. It is undisputed that nothing in the invitation to bid required that a garden be maintained at 255 South Ninth Street; in fact, the Cathedral [548]*548has maintained in a companion lawsuit5 that the invitation to bid required not a garden, but a structure. We hold that the attempt to attach the condition was beyond the Authority’s power and, hence, of no effect. We believe that the Authority in considering the bid had two options; it could have rejected Fumo’s proposal (and certainly in so doing it could have indicated why), or it could have accepted it. It chose the latter course, and since it did, we believe it could not then have attempted to impose as an afterthought conditions which it had failed to include in its invitation.6

[549]*549It has been held that when devising an invitation to bid, an authority must include all material matters in its invitation. American Totalisator Co., Inc. v. Seligman, 489 Pa. 568, 414 A.2d 1037 (1980). Further, valuative criteria cannot be altered once the bidding process is in motion. Id; Philadelphia Warehousing and Cold Storage v. Hallowell, 88 Pa. Commonwealth Ct. 574, 490 A.2d 955 (1985). Here, the Authority, by imposing a condition not in the invitation, committed an error similar to one involving a post-bid change in valuative criteria. While it did not actually alter the bidding criteria once the process had begun, it instead imposed a condition subsequent upon the successful bidder. This it could not do. Because we have determined that a contract was in fact consummated between Fumo and the City, we hold that the attempt to impose a subsequent condition was impermissible. It necessarily follows, then, that the trial court properly set aside the twenty-five-year and ten-year restrictions.

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Bluebook (online)
541 A.2d 817, 115 Pa. Commw. 542, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fumo-v-redevelopment-authority-pacommwct-1988.