George A. Fuller Co. v. Elderkin

154 A. 548, 160 Md. 660, 1931 Md. LEXIS 119
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedApril 30, 1931
Docket[Nos. 18, 19, April Term, 1931.]
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 154 A. 548 (George A. Fuller Co. v. Elderkin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
George A. Fuller Co. v. Elderkin, 154 A. 548, 160 Md. 660, 1931 Md. LEXIS 119 (Md. 1931).

Opinion

Adkins, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

These appeals grew out of a contract 'awarded to the appellant George A. Fuller Company, by the Board of Awards of Baltimore City, to erect a building for the Enoch Pratt Free Library. The appeal in Fo. 18 was by the said company, and in Fo’. 19 by the mayor and others, comprising the board of awards, the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore, and several heads of city departments. The appeals are from a decree of the Circuit Court Fo. 2 of Baltimore City: (1) making perpetual the injunction theretofore granted restraining the defendants in Fo-. 18 from executing a contract with the George A. Fuller Company for the construction of the Enoch Pratt Free Library Building, and from performing any duties in connection with said contract, and from paying out any moneys of the taxpayers of the City of Baltimore in connection therewith; (2) declaring the action of the board of awards in attempting to award said contract to said company null and void, “for the reason that the bid of the George A. Fuller Company was not in compliance with the proposal and specifications” for the construction of said building: (3) restraining said company from taking any action in furtherance of said award; (4) requiring the individuals constituting the board of awards “to give further consideration to the bids received on December 17th, 1930, for the construction of the Enoch Pratt Free Library Building, and to award the contract for the construction of said building to the lowest responsible bidder who complied with the proposal and specifications.”

*663 The bill of complaint was filed by Clarence E. Elderkin, as a taxpayer, and Consolidated Engineering Company, as a taxpayer and as one of the bidders. In the hill it was alleged that in the specifications it was specifically provided that bids should be submitted on the entire contract, and that, tinder the caption “Instruction to Bidders,” it was provided that all information called for hy the proposal form must he given and all spaces filled in and all alternates and unit prices bid upon; that in the proposal form furnished all prospective bidders “bids or proposals were required to he made on seven different sets of alternates, so that the board of awards, in exercising the discretion vested in it hy section 15 of the Baltimore City Charter, could modify or change the original or base specifications by adding thereto alternates, described as such in the specifications and in the proposal form”; that there were twelve bidders, including the plaintiff and defendant companies; that the building engineer of Baltimore City, with the approval of the chief engineer, recommended that the contract be awarded to the George A. Fuller Company on its base bid of $2,044,000, together with certain alternates, which reduced its net hid to $2,003,000; that the Consolidated Engineering Company’s base bid was $2,046,000 or $2,000 more than the base bid of the Fuller Company; that on the selected alternates the engineering company’s bid was reduced to $2,017,000; that all the other bids were greater in amount; that the plaintiffs protested against the award to the defendant company because an examination of its bid showed that it was defective for the following reasons: (1) In alternate Ro. 4 requiring bids on two heating control systems designated as (a) and (b), being respectively the Webster master control and orifice system, and Dunham differential system, it named additional sums of $3,500 and $6,000 respectively to he added to' the base bid, but failed to give as to each the saving in steam consumption in per cent, as required; (2) in alternate Ro. 5, relating to the air-cooling system, it failed to bid on two of five different alternates, viz. (a) and (c); that among the alternates included in the recommended award were 4 (a) and 5 (b), hut at a subse *664 quent meeting of the- board of awards the building engineer, with the approval of the chief engineer, made a new recommendation, viz:, that alternate Ro. 5 (e) be accepted in lieu of alternate Ro. 5 (b), which further reduced the amount of the net’ bid of the Fuller Company by the sum of $5,000; that, after reading and considering the opinion of the city solicitor as to the effect of the omissions in the bid of the Fuller Company, the board of awards accepted the recommendation of the building engineer, and attempted to award the contract to the Fuller Company, the plaintiffs again protesting; that the action of the board of awards deprives the taxpayers of Baltimore of the benefit of the guaranties specifically required by the specifications and proposals as to alternate Ro. 4 (a); that, in the absence in the bid of the Fuller Company of any guaranty in saving of steam consumption, it was impossible for the board of awards to decide that the Fuller Company was the low bidder on the contract for which bids had been asked; that the failure of the Fuller Company to bid on alternates 5 (a) and 5 (c) constituted a serious and material departure from the requirements of the specifications and proposal forms, and deprived the City of Baltimore of competition on these two' alternates; that, because of its failure to guarantee any saving in steam consumption, the Fuller Company was not the lowest bidder on the •contract, but that the lowest bidder was the Consolidated Engineering Company; that, in any event, the bid of the Fuller Company did not meet the requirements of the specifications, and that the defects in its bid are material and substantial, and of such character as are beyond the power of the board of awards to ignore, disregard or waive; that the plaintiff company complied fully and completely with all of the requirements of law, the advertisements and notices, the specifications and proposals, and is entitled to the award of the contract. Answers were duly filed and testimony taken, whereupon the above-mentioned decree was passed. There are three questions raised by these appeals:

(1) Were there such defects in the bid of the Fuller Company, as to put it beyond the power of the board of *665 awards to award it the contract, if in the exercise of a reasonable discretion the board determined that the Fuller Company was the lowest bidder ?

(2) Did the failure of the Fuller Company to guarantee a saving of steam in its bid on alternate 4 (a) make it impossible for the board, in the exercise of a reasonable discretion, to find that said company was the lowest bidder ?

(3) Did the chancellor have authority by mandatory injunction to require the board of awards to further consider the bids received by it and award the contract to the lowest responsible bidder which complied with the proposals and specifications ?

1. It is not every failure in bidding to comply with specifications that will make an award illegal. “Variations from specifications must be substantial so as to give the bidder special advantage, to invalidate the contract.” McQuillan on Municipal Corporations (2nd Ed.), vol. Ill, sec. 1321. See also, 44 C. p. 11; Abbott on Municipal Corporations, p. 263.

In Maryland Pavement Co. v. Mahool, 110 Md. 397, 407, 72 A.

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Bluebook (online)
154 A. 548, 160 Md. 660, 1931 Md. LEXIS 119, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/george-a-fuller-co-v-elderkin-md-1931.