Huston v. County Commissioners

2 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 582

This text of 2 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 582 (Huston v. County Commissioners) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Common Pleas of Ohio, Franklin County, Civil Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Huston v. County Commissioners, 2 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 582 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1904).

Opinion

The first contention made by counsel for the commissioners . is that Section 794, which requires the commissioners to award the contract to the lowest and best bidder applies, and that, therefore, a discretion was vested in the commissioners to determine as to which bid was best, and that under this section, they • were entitled to award the contract to the next lowest bidder instead of to the lowest. On the other hand, it is claimed by the plaintiff that Section 799 governs in this ease, and that the commissioners must award the contract to the lowest bidder. These two sections, apparently conflicting, have been passed upon in the case of State v. Commissioners, 39 O. S., 188, in which the court held, “that the apparent conflict between Sections 794 and 799 does not, in fact, exist; that Section 794 provides for letting contracts in certain cases under certain conditions to separate bidders representing different trades, in respect to which the provisions of that section only apply, and that in all other eases the provisions of Section 799, requiring [584]*584the lowest bidder applies.” In other words, the court holds that the purpose of Section 794, which uses the words “lowest and best bidder,” was to provide a means for bidding upon separate parts of the work by contractors and tradesmen, without requiring them to undertake the entire job, and to prevent combinations and forestall competition, and to entitle them to separate contracts, their aggregate bids must not exceed that of any bidder who includes the whole. As these conditions do not exist in this case, but as the contract was as a whole, I am of opinion that Section 799 applies, and that in this case it was the duty of the commissioners, in the absence of any intervening facts, to award the contract to the lowest bidder. State, ex rel, v. Betts, 4 C. C., 86.

The question now arises as to whether or not the commissioners must, in all cases, award the contract to the lowest bidder. A distinction must be noted between the right of the commissioners to voluntarily agree to and permit the lowest bidder to withdraw, and the right to award to the next highest bidder, if the lowest bidder does, as a matter of fact, withdraw, or refuse or neglect to comply with the terms of the bid and give bond and enter into a contract. To what extent or under what circumstances the commissioners might be empowered to release a lowest bidder, it is not necessary, in this case, to determine.

Assuming, as seems probable, that having once filed a bid, a bidder can not withdraw except under penalty of paying damages equal to the difference between his bid and the bid actually accepted and awarded, and assuming further that, any act or resolution of the commissioners releasing a lowest bidder is ultra vires, and therefore null and void, and as to which corrective action may be maintained in court, nevertheless the case presented here is not to be decided upon the law applicable to either of those legal situations. In this ease the lowest bidder has, in open meeting of the commissioners, confessed its inability to do the work, and has failed and neglected to enter into a contract or to give the required bond, or to agree to do either. The acquiescence of the commissioners in these acts of withdrawal, or failure to carry out their bid, is, no doubt, null and void; and such acquiescence of the commissioners will afford [585]*585the said bidders no ground of relief in a subsequent action for damages against said bidder. But whether this be the law or not, the question squarely presented for decision here is this: In the absence of any circumstance of collusion, and in the event that the lowest bidder fails to act, can the county commissioners award the contract to the next lowest bidder, or are they required to readvertise for bids? The argument is very strongly advanced that under no circumstances should the county commissioners be permitted to award a contract in such ease to the next lowest bidder, but that they ought to readvertise for bids, for the reacon that to open this door of procedure will be to permit, in a great many cases, collusion, whereby parties will purposely bid high and low, and then have the lower bids withdrawn for the purpose of cutting out an actual competitor, or for the purpose of securing higher prices; that this danger is so great that it should be the policy of the law to absolutely forbid such action altogether, rather than to permit it in the cases in which no actual harm might be done. That the commissioners, in advertising for bids and making contracts, must exercise some discretion is most apparent. They must see that the contract itself properly carries out and covers all the subject matters contained in the bid. They must judge as to the sufficiency of th'e bond and of the sureties offered, etc. Boren v. Commissioners, 21 O. S., 311.

Thus, in the last named case, at page 321, the court says that •the requirement of the commissioners that the sureties on a bond must be residents of the state, is not an abuse of their discretionary power, but, on the contrary, is reasonable and not an improper exercise of their discretion. And in that case the court sustained the action of the commissioners in refusing to accept the lowest bid on that ground.

On the other hand, the courts have reviewed the discretion exercised by the county commissioners, and where the same has been abused, have reversed the action. But in taking this action of reversal, the court itself has held that the commissioners of a county have a wide discretion in determining the amount and sufficiency of the bond to be given by the lowest bidder. State v. Hippard, 1 C. C., 194.

[586]*586Against this claim that the door of opportunity for collusion should be shut altogether, thereby preventing any such collusion must be urged not only the presumption that the commissioners will exercise their discretion properly, but the further fact that that discretion is always subject to review and consideration by the courts, and further must be considered the fact that a great many contracts, such, for instance, as the one at bar, require immediate and urgent fulfillment, and the expense of readvertising in such ease and the delay incident thereto would be at the loss of the county, while it would be highly improbable that there would be any difference in the amount of the bids.

In the ease of Boren v. Commissioners, above cited, the lowest bidder for the construction of the Darke county court house having failed and neglected to give a proper bond, the Supreme Court held that the next highest bidder, the relator in that case, was entitled to the contract. In that case, ‘however, the question as to whether or not the commissioners ought to readvertise, was not directly raised.

In the case of State, ex rel, v. Commissioners of Licking County, 26 O. S., 531, the lowest bidder having failed to qualify, the court holds that the next lowest bidder who does qualify is entitled to an award of the contract.

The two cases cited by counsel for the plaintiff herein fail to fit directly the case at bar: In the case of Holden v. City of Alton, 179 Ill., 319, the hid of the lowest bidder was rejected solely because he did not employ members of a certain labor organization, and could not show the union label, which act was set aside; and the case of Twiss v. The City of Port Huron, 63 Michigan, 528, involves collusion between the bidders, whereby they prevented the municipality from awarding to the next highest bidder.

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Bluebook (online)
2 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 582, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/huston-v-county-commissioners-ohctcomplfrankl-1904.