Heyl v. Lower Merion Township School District

81 Pa. D. & C. 168, 1951 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 210
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Montgomery County
DecidedAugust 17, 1951
Docketno. 14
StatusPublished

This text of 81 Pa. D. & C. 168 (Heyl v. Lower Merion Township School District) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Montgomery County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Heyl v. Lower Merion Township School District, 81 Pa. D. & C. 168, 1951 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 210 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1951).

Opinion

Knight, P. J.,

Did the Board of School Directors of the Lower Merion School District abuse its discretion in awarding a' contract for the building of a tennis court in the Wild Garden area of the EL EL Arnold Athletic Field?

Did the board of school directors violate the Public School Code of 1949 by rejecting the bid of F. C. Feise Company and returning the deposit accompanying the bid?

Did the board of school directors violate section 772 of the Public School Code of 1949 in authorizing the construction of a tennis court in the Wild Garden area?

Findings of Fact

I. Plaintiffs are residents of the township of Lower Merion and taxpayers in the School District of Lower Merion Township.

II. Plaintiffs own homes which are adjacent or abut on the General H. H. Arnold playing field owned and maintained by the School District of Lower Merion Township.

III. Defendant School District of Lower Merion Township is a school district of the second class. Defendant R. H. Johnson Company is a corporation engaged in the contracting business. Individual defendants are duly elected or appointed school directors of the School District of Lower Merion Township.

[170]*170IV. The General H. H. Arnold Athletic Field is an open space containing approximately 18 acres of land on which is erected a stadium and on which are maintained playing fields for football, baseball, hockey, track and other sports.

V. The athletic field is maintained in connection with the Lower Merion High School, with 1,338 pupils, and the junior high school, with 589 pupils.

There are no tennis courts on the athletic field although the township maintains 25 public courts in various playgrounds and recreation centers throughout the township. The township has a population in excess of 50,000.'

VI. Along the western boundary line of the athletic field is a strip of land somewhat lower in grade than the rest of the field. This strip contains approximately two acres of land. It is designated as the Wild Garden and is planted with various ornamental bushes and shrubs being used as a propagating area for the school district. In this Wild Garden there are also a number of large trees, oaks, maples and other hard woods.

VII. In January of 1950 the school board through its athletic committee and its committee on grounds and buildings considered the building of tennis courts on the H. H. Arnold Field. Plans and specifications were prepared and bids were asked for the construction of six tennis courts on the site of those now in controversy. The bids were opened at a meeting of the board on April 17, 1950, and all bids were rejected. In the budget for 1951-1952, the sum of $38,000 was appropriated for the building of tennis courts.

VIII. The site for the six tennis courts was selected as the best available after considering two other locations in the field and after inspection by committees of the board and after considering the advice of Mr. Morris, who is in charge of the buildings and grounds of the school district and the maintenance thereof.

[171]*171IX. In May of 1951 the school board again advertised for bids for the construction of six tennis courts located in the southwestern corner of the athletic field. Five of these courts were contiguous, that is, built adjoining each other. The sixth court was located on a lower level, roughly in the rear or to the west of the five courts. The sixth court is separate and apart from the other five but near them.

X. The proposal for bids called for two estimates, A and B. Estimate A was for the five courts. Estimate B for the six courts.

XI. At a properly called special meeting of the school board called' for “general purposes” held on June 4, 1951, three bids for the construction of the tennis courts were received and opened. Paul J. Mira-bile bid $26,674 for estimate A and $36,547 for estimate B. F. C. Feise Company bid $25,410.10 for estimate A and $6,540 for estimate B. R. H. Johnson Company bid $19,699 for estimate A’’and $26,711 for estimate B.

XII. The school board, deeming that the estimate of F. C. Feise Company for B was an obvious mistake, added that bid to the Feise estimate for A and found that the total exceeded the bid of R. H. Johnson Company. Accordingly a motion was made, seconded and carried that the contract be awarded to R. H. Johnson Company at the quoted price of $26,711. Eight members of the board were present and all voted “aye.” The votes of the individual members were recorded in the minutes. The contract with the R. H. Johnson Company was executed, necessary bonds were furnished and at the time of the hearing the rough grading had been done on the five contiguous courts.

XIII. The sixth court (see finding 9), if constructed, will be located in the Wild Garden area (see finding 6). No work has been done on this court, except employes of the school district have removed all bushes [172]*172and shrubs worth saving that would be otherwise destroyed in the construction of the court.

XIV. The construction of the sixth tennis court in the area of the Wild Garden will require the removal of 12 trees: Seven oaks, one alder, one red maple, one American thorn and two ash. These trees vary in diameter from 31 inches to 4 inches and in age from 25 to 75 years.

XV. When some of plaintiffs learned of the proposed destruction of the trees they called upon Dr. Zimmerman, a member of the school board, who told plaintiff, Mrs. Heyl, that he did not know how many trees were involved. On July 3, 1951, plaintiffs, Mrs. Heyl and Mrs. Ross, met with Mr. Scott, president of the school board, Mrs. Cuff and Mrs. Jeffers, members of the board and Mr. Morris, the superintendent of grounds and buildings of the school district, but nothing has been done by the board up to the time of hearing.

XVI. The six tennis courts are needed by the Lower Merion School District for the use of students in the senior and junior high schools.

Discussion

Plaintiffs do not object to the construction of the five tennis courts but they do object to the construction of the sixth court in the Wild Garden area. The gravamen of their complaint is the destruction of trees made necessary in constructing the sixth court.

They contend that the destruction of these trees is contrary to the spirit, if not the letter, of the Public School Code, that the contract for the construction of the six courts was awarded to the second lowest bidder without investigating the reliability of the lowest bidder; for these reasons they contend that the contract awarded to the Johnson Company is illegal. They also contend that the directors awarded the contract without knowing that it would involve the destruction of [173]*173trees and in so doing without investigation they abused the discretionary power granted them by the law.

We will consider these contentions in their reverse order.

Those who seek to set aside an action of a board of school directors on the ground of an abuse of discretion carry a very heavy burden. This is the doctrine of all of our cases.

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Bluebook (online)
81 Pa. D. & C. 168, 1951 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 210, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/heyl-v-lower-merion-township-school-district-pactcomplmontgo-1951.