Long v. Johnson

70 Misc. 308, 127 N.Y.S. 756
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 70 Misc. 308 (Long v. Johnson) 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
Long v. Johnson, 70 Misc. 308, 127 N.Y.S. 756 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1911).

Opinion

Betts, J.

This is an. action commenced by Mr. Long, a resident and taxpayer of the county of Ulster, against the defendants .asking an injunction to restrain the defendants from -awarding any contract for the construction of á new 'State prison, under "the plans and specifications adopted by them and under which Lids had been advertised for; and that it shall be determined in this -action whether the same be for the best interest of the State; -and that said commissioners be, during the pendency of the action, restrained -and enjoined from awarding any contract.

Upon the complaint and affidavit of plaintiff, which sets forth substantially the same facts as the complaint, a preliminary injunction was issued on December fourteenth returnable at a Speci-al Term held on December seventeenth when the plaintiff asked that the injunction should be continued during the pendency of the action and the defendants asked that the same should be vacated.

It -appeared on the hearing and by the statutes that, by chapter 610 of -the Laws of 19'06, the Governor was authorized to appoint a commission of not less than three nor more than five -persons whose duty it should be to select a suitable site for a new State prison; the design of the statute being to provide for a new State prison in place of the one at Sing-Sing or Ossining.

By chapter 521 of the Laws of 1907, the act was amended among other things by giving to said commission in substance authority to erect a 'State prison, and providing that the cost should not aggregate more than two millioji dollars and that the said State prison plant should be capable of housing not less than 1,400 prisoners.

By chapter '208 of the Laws of 19'0-8, the act was further amended by appropriating $125,000 for commencing the work of constructing such new prison and for the erection of temporary barracks, barns, shops and -a stockade, etc.

[310]*310By chapter 214 of the Laws of 1908, the act was further amended, in regard to the erection of such prison.

Chapter 447. of the Laws of 1909 further amended said act by making a preliminary appropriation of $150,000 for preliminary work; and the Commission was authorized to expend the “ sum of two million two hundred thousand dollars ($2,200,000) for the buildings and for the heat, light and power equipment, not including, the grading and other preliminary work on the cost of the s-ite or architectural supervision or for so mitch of said plant as can be constructed for such sum.” The contract shall provide that the State shall not he liable for any failure on "the part of the Legislature to appropriate sufficient money for .the completion of the contract within the terms thereof, and $500,000 was appropriated toward the erection of said prison.

The first prison site selected having later been appropriated by the Palisades Park, chapter 365 of the Laws of 1910 authorized the Commission on Bow Prisons to select a new site upon which to establish a new State prison and to construct such new prison to take the place of Sing Sing on such new site; and the Commission was authorized to use so much of the $5 00,000- appropriated by the statute of 1909 as might be necessary for the purchase of such new site and the balance of said sum was reappropriated and made available for the construction of such prison plant.

Under this statute five Commissioners were appointed of which only two, Cornelius V. 'Collins, the Superintendent of Prisons, and Elisha M. Johnson, the president of said Commission, of the original appointees are now members of it. In place of others dying or resigning, three of the present Commissioners were appointed by Governor Hughes and Cornelius Y. Collins was continued as ''Superintendent of Prisons by Governor Hughes during his term of office.

The action of the Commission in advertising for bids for the erection of said prison is attacked by the plaintiff upon the grounds that said plans and specifications are so made and drawn as to prevent free competition among parties desiring to bid for the erection of said prison, in that they specify and provide that the stone to he used in the construe[311]*311tion of said prison shall be of a certain kind which is known to exist in only one locality in the State of Hew York, by reason of which it would give the owner or owners of such stone the exclusive right to have awarded to him or them the contract for building said prison; whereas, stone equally as serviceable for the building of said prison exists in many localities in the State of Hew York; and that the plans and specifications as drawn are so drawn that, if the contract be awarded under the same, the cost of constructing said prison would be a sum far in excess of what it would cost if said plans and specifications were so drawn as to permit free competition -among bidders and the use of other materials than those specified in said plans and -specifications were permitted ; -and that, if a contract be awarded by said Commission pursuant to said plans and specifications, the people of this State and plaintiff -as a taxpayer of the same will be put to useless, unnecessary and exorbitant cost and -expense, all greatly1 to the damage of every taxpayer of the State and particularly to this plaintiff; and plaintiff’s affidavit accompanying the same is practically to the same effect as the complaint.

Upon the hearing the 'Commission appeared by -a Deputy Attorney-General and urged that the injunction be vacated and the letting of the contract and the construction of the prison be permitted; and it further appeared on the hearing that one bidder, the P. J. Carlin Construction Company, had made a bid which was less than the sum" of $2,200,000 by $4,000, and said bid omitted the construction of certain buildings provided for by the plans and specifications, which omi-ssion was permitted by the plans and specifications and advertisement, as is asserted by the defendants’ attorneys.

A verified history of the various proceedings under the statutes, given by the secretary of this Commission on Hew Prisons, by the president thereof, by the State Architect and by the architect -of the Commission on Hew Prisons and by Patrick J. Carlin, president of the construction company, was submitted by the Deputy Attorney-General. It seems from such affidavits that the first design was to have the prison located where a sufficient quantity of trap or other [312]*312rock suitable for use in building the new prison could be had and where the inmates of the present State prison might work upon the same. Later on that provision seems to have been lost sight of. The first plans and specifications in substance provided for the building of the exterior walls of plain red brick with the corners or ornamental facings of Indiana limestone. This did not meet the approval of Franklin B. Ware, the 'State Architect, and he suggested the advisability of changing the exterior finish of the buildings that would be conspicuous from the Hudson river from common brick to cut stone which might be gotten in the locality; that the Commission

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Bluebook (online)
70 Misc. 308, 127 N.Y.S. 756, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/long-v-johnson-nysupct-1911.