International Meters, Inc. v. City of New York

47 Misc. 2d 924, 101 N.Y.S.2d 208, 1950 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1311
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 27, 1950
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 47 Misc. 2d 924 (International Meters, Inc. v. City of New York) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
International Meters, Inc. v. City of New York, 47 Misc. 2d 924, 101 N.Y.S.2d 208, 1950 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1311 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1950).

Opinion

Samuel Dickstein, J.

This is a taxpayers’ action brought under section 51 of the General Municipal Law to restrain the defendants from perfecting or awarding a proposed contract for the purchase of parking meters after the opening of bids therefor.

Plaintiffs assert in their complaint that the notice of proposal for bids and the specifications are unreasonable, arbitrary and illegal in at least two respects, thus precluding free and competitive bidding and causing a waste of the taxpayers’ money. The first of these two requirements that plaintiffs ’ claim is arbitrary, unreasonable and illegal is as follows: “ Qualification of Bidders. The manufacturers must have been engaged in the manufacture of parking meters for at least five years and must submit satisfactory evidence of the successful operation for three years in the field of at least 500 meters made by them and of the general type proposed to be furnished under this bid ”.

Plaintiffs object to this provision because they have only been manufacturing and selling their twin-type parking meters for about four years.

The second requirement plaintiffs object to is as follows: ‘ ‘ The meters shall be designed to regulate parking in one and only one parking space.”

Plaintiffs’ objection to this provision is based on the fact that they manufacture only the twin parking meter which is designed to take care of two parking spaces with a single stanchion and meter.

The City of New York has completed surveys in the interest of traffic control to determine particularly whether meter parking would be feasible in New York City in the regulation of traffic. It has determined the five selected areas should be tested for that purpose by the installation of single-space type meters according to planned specifications drawn after full physical research. The entire plan is experimental only and restricted to a very minute portion of the ultimate area of such control should the plan be utilized eventually in its fullest possible scope. Plaintiffs’ twin-type meter is a device that controls two car spaces. This, defendant says, was rejected as being inflexible and not adaptable to the varying situations confronted on New York City sidewalks. The manifold obstructions and installations render the twin-type meter unusable.

[926]*926The instant proposal was for 1,500 single-type meters. Section 347 of the Charter of the City of New York requires All purchases shall be based upon specifications which are definite and certain, which permit of competition”. It is not unusual in the purchase by the city of mechanical devices to require a minimum of years of experience in manufacture and a minimum of years of successful operation of a minimum number of the machine to be purchased. It does not necessarily follow that a practice followed and handed down from administration to administration or a particular set of specifications customarily used as departmental practice are reasonable in the particular instance. In connection with the exclusion of an article claimed to be able to do the job desired it must be shown that the type selected is superior to the type excluded. It is for plaintiffs to establish fraud, corruption or bad faith and it is for defendants to establish superiority. The taxpayer is not to be denied the competition of an article and possible advantages and savings in the absence of clear superiority.

“ While the court may not substitute its judgment for that of the responsible officials charged by law to act, in the absence of fraud, corruption, or bad faith (Talcott v. City of Buffalo, 125 N. Y. 280; Ziegler v. Chapin, 126 id. 342; cf. Brockway Motor Truck Corp. v. City of New York, 145 Misc. 693, 698), where there is no clear showing that the particular product specified is so far superior as to require its exclusive use in order to meet performance requirements desired, the agents of the city are not justified in, and will be enjoined from, restricting bids to that product in exclusion of all others. (See Warren Brothers Co. v. City of New York, 190 N. Y. 297, 309.) For in these circumstances the intentional arrangement of specifications so as to shut out competitive bidding, whatever the motives may have been, renders that act illegal. (Matter of McNutt Co. v. Eckert, 257 N. Y. 100, 107.)

“ It is true that mere illegality is not enough to justify injunctive relief at the request of a taxpayer where waste or injury is not involved. (Western New York Water Co. v. City of Buffalo, 242 N. Y. 202, 206.) It must further appear that ‘ the threatened act is such as to imperil the public interests or calculated to work public injury or produce some public mischief. ’ (Altschul v. Ludwig, 216 N. Y. 459, 467.) But 4 where a statute requires purchases to be made by competitive bidding, the fact that such bidding is prevented is in itself presumptive evidence of injury to the taxpayers.’ (Grace v. Forbes, 64 Misc. 130, 139.) In this view, actual waste or injury to the municipal corporation need not be shown, but may be presumed. ‘ Public injury and mis[927]*927chief ’ has a broader concept than mere loss to the municipality in dollars and cents. (Altschul v. Ludwig, supra; Hathaway v. City of Oneonta, 148 Misc. 695; Blanshard v. City of New York, 141 id. 609, 612.) ” (American La France & Foamite Corp. v. City of New York, 156 Misc. 2, 4, affd. 246 App. Div. 699.)

After hearing the witnesses and examining the proofs the court is satisfied that the witnesses of the defendant were evasive and contradictory. They were so lacking in candor as to inspire more than suspicion that their disinterest in plaintiffs’ product was not altogether related to its quality or ability to do the job desired. The conclusion is reached that inadequate thought, if any, was given to the fact that the present plan is experimental only and involved a very minor expenditure by the city in the light of the extent of meter parking if fully applied and its attendant cost. In this prospective view, the interest of the city at large would be served, it would seem, in enlarging the experiment to include the use of every reasonably available device that has a measure of adaptability which defendants have conceded to plaintiffs ’ product.

Plaintiffs had manufactured its product for four years. They did not have 500 units in successful operation for three years. The exact figures do not appear but they have several thousand twin meters in operation in over 100 communities throughout the United States. They have the preponderant proportion of meters installed in Detroit where defendant Reid was employed during the period when installation was there under consideration. Apart from the question of the degree to which Detroit is comparable to New York City, since insinuation was made in this connection, defendants should have been anxious to inquire and to develop why in that city a two-year manufacturing qualification was considered adequate although at that time plaintiffs only had one year of manufacturing experience, and, furthermore, how it came to pass as plaintiffs endeavored to establish that their meter was finally installed.

Defendant Reid was aware of plaintiffs ’ product. The defense witnesses disagreed on the question whether plaintiffs had submitted a sample product. They demonstrated considerable lack of knowledge of its mechanism or distinterest in it entirely.

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47 Misc. 2d 924, 101 N.Y.S.2d 208, 1950 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1311, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/international-meters-inc-v-city-of-new-york-nysupct-1950.