Laabs v. City of Milwaukee

294 N.W. 814, 236 Wis. 192, 1940 Wisc. LEXIS 345
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 10, 1940
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 294 N.W. 814 (Laabs v. City of Milwaukee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Laabs v. City of Milwaukee, 294 N.W. 814, 236 Wis. 192, 1940 Wisc. LEXIS 345 (Wis. 1940).

Opinions

The following opinion was filed October 8, 1940:

Fritz, J.

On this appeal it suffices to note the following facts, which were found by the court upon proof that was virtually undisputed. Pursuant to an advertisement duly published by the city of Milwaukee, requesting the submission to its commissioner of public works of sealed proposals by April 11, 1939, for the performance of a contract for *195 the furnishing of the equipment, and the doing of the work required for the collection and disposal of dead animals, etc., found in or ordered to be removed from the city during a five-year period in accordance with sec. 862.2 of the city code, the plaintiff, William Laabs, and the defendant, Martha Basken, administratrix of the estate of August Basken, deceased, submitted proposals to do the work for $3,600 and $3,500 a year, respectively. August Basken was the owner of a rendering plant with equipment suitable for the performance of the work under the contract, and upon his death on March 19, 1939, the operation of the business in Ozaukee county was continued as a going concern by his widow, Martha Basken, and their oldest son, as manager, both of whom had assisted therein during his lifetime. Martha Basken was appointed by the county court of Ozaukee county as special administratrix on March 20, 1939, and as general administratrix on May 2, 1939, and she duly qualified as such. The county court records show the estate to be solvent. On April 24, 1939, the commissioner of public works, Roland E. Stoelting, sent a report of the proposals to the city’s common council, with an attached letter signed by Charles L. Senn, assistant chief of the sanitation division of the city’s health department; and also a letter signed by Dr. John P. Koehler, as commissioner of health of the city. Senn stated in his letter that the existing sewage disposal system in the Basken rendering plant was not satisfactory and made three recommendations, which, if carried out, were believed to make the Basken plant reasonably satisfactory. Koehler stated in his letter,—

“I do not know how long it will take to carry out Mr. Senn’s recommendations, but when such improvements are completed, I would consider the Basken rendering plant eligible to enter into a contract with the city of Milwaukee for the disposal of dead animals.”

*196 Stoelting stated in his report,—

“It is my judgment that the lowest bidder, Martha Basken, executrix of the estate of August Basken, is incompetent and unreliable for the performance of the work for which she bid, the said estate of August Basken not ■being in possession of a rendering plant which at this time meets the requirements of the health department. . . . The next lowest bidder is Mr. William Laabs, and I hereby recommend to your honorable body to accept the bid of Mr. William Laabs as being the lowest, competent and reliable bidder for such work."

The council referred Stoelting’s report to its committee on finance-printing, which held meetings from time to time pending further investigation. On May 1, 1939, Senn reinspected the Basken plant and reported to his superior that “the sewage-disposal system has been improved, so that it is now believed to be satisfactory;” and that “if the Basken rendering plant is maintained and operated in its present condition, no nuisance will be created; that by providing an extra lock on the rear door of the truck, and by painting the inside, the truck will be satisfactory for use in the city of Milwaukee.” Koehler transmitted this report to Stoelt-ing, who took it to the council’s committee on finance-printing. He also sent Paul Johannig, an engineer in his department, to inspect the Basken and Laabs plants with a delegation of aldermen, and the engineer reported orally to Stoelting. On June 5, 1939, the council, on a report by a majority of its committee on finance-printing, recommending that the contract be awarded to the lowest bidder (Basken estate), adopted a resolution to that effect, which was approved by the mayor. By an order entered June 8, 1939, the county court of Ozaukee county authorized Martha Basken, as administratrix of the August Basken estate, to enter into the contract. On July 6, 1939, the contract was entered into between Martha Basken, as such *197 administratrix, as the first party, a surety company as the second party, and the city of Milwaukee as the third party, and it was executed on behalf of the city by Stoelting as commissioner of public works and by the city comptroller. Martha Basken, as such administratrix, began performing the work pursuant to the contract on July 10, 1939.

The plaintiffs’ principal contention is that the award of the contract by the council to Martha Basken, as administra-trix, was void because of the failure to properly comply with certain provisions in the city charter and its code, to wit: — a provision in sec. 862.2 of the code, which required the commissioner of public works to advertise every five years for sealed proposals for the collection and disposal of dead animals, etc., and upon receiving the proposals to enter into a contract with the lowest responsible bidder for the work; and the provisions in the charter (sec. 7.17) that city contracts are to be entered into “in the manner and under the limitations prescribed by the laws of this state or the charter;” (sec. 7.29) that all work over $200 “shall” be let by advertisement to the lowest bidder, as provided by certain charter provisions including sec. 7.23; and (sec. 7.23) that,—

“whenever any bidder shall be, in the judgment of said commissioner (of public works), incompetent, or otherwise unreliable for the performance of the work for which he bids, the said' commissioner shall report to the common council of said city a schedule of all the bids for such work, with a recommendation to accept the bid of the lowest competent and reliable bidder for such work, with its reasons for such recommendation, and thereupon it shall be lawful for the said common council to direct said commissioner either to let the work to such lowest competent and reliable bidder, or to relet the same anew.”

Plaintiffs claim that under these charter provisions the council, after receiving Stoelting’s report of April 24, 1939, *198 was authorized to do only one of two things, i. e., (a) to direct the commissioner of public works to let the work to Laabs (as the “lowest competent and reliable bidder”), or (b) “to relet the same anew.” In that connection plaintiffs argue that after Stoelting’s recommendation had been made pursuant to the charter, there was really only one “bidder,” William Laabs, and he was the only one to whom the council could let the contract; that either he was to be awarded the contract or there had to be a new advertisement, and that, consequently, when the council directed the commissioner to let the contract to the Basken estate, it clearly exceeded its charter power.

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Bluebook (online)
294 N.W. 814, 236 Wis. 192, 1940 Wisc. LEXIS 345, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/laabs-v-city-of-milwaukee-wis-1940.