Mari & Sons Flooring Co. v. Southeastern Massachusetts University Building Authority

337 N.E.2d 921, 3 Mass. App. Ct. 580, 1975 Mass. App. LEXIS 682
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedNovember 28, 1975
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 337 N.E.2d 921 (Mari & Sons Flooring Co. v. Southeastern Massachusetts University Building Authority) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Appeals Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mari & Sons Flooring Co. v. Southeastern Massachusetts University Building Authority, 337 N.E.2d 921, 3 Mass. App. Ct. 580, 1975 Mass. App. LEXIS 682 (Mass. Ct. App. 1975).

Opinion

Goodman, J.

The plaintiff appeals from a decree declaring (G. L. c. 231A; Fred C. McClean Heating Supplies, Inc. v. Westfield Trade High Sch. Bldg. Comm. of Westfield, 345 Mass. 267, 269-270 [1962]) valid an award to M. Frank Higgins Co., Inc. (Higgins) of a contract for the furnishing and installation of carpeting in student housing which was contracted for by Southeastern Massachusetts University Building Authority (Authority) with J. A. Schroeder Construction, Inc. (Schroeder) as general contractor. The plaintiff attacks the trial judge’s determination that Higgins was the “lowest eligible and responsible bidder” and argues that it, rather than Higgins, was the lowest bidder and entitled to the contract. (It was conceded that both the plaintiff and Higgins were “eligible and responsible.”) The trial judge made findings and rulings. The evidence is reported.

1. We discuss first the argument made by Higgins2 that [582]*582the Authority was not in any event required to award the contract to the lowest bidder. We disagree.

Section 17 of the act3 establishing the Authority (St. 1964, c. 703, as amended) makes applicable to the Authority the competitive bidding statute (G. L. c. 149, §§ 44A-44L), which has as one of its “fundamental... objectives ... [to] enable [ ] the public contracting authority to obtain the lowest price for its work that competition among responsible contractors can secure.” Interstate Engr. Corp. v. Fitchburg, 367 Mass. 751, 757 (1975). It is true, of course, that under § 44H of that statute it is contemplated that thé sub-bids be opened before the general contract is awarded and that the qualifying sub-bids be circulated among prospective general contractors, each of whom is free to use a sub-bid which may not be the lowest. The general contractor does so, however, at the risk of elevating his own bid and losing the general contract (id., dissenting opinion at 762-764); and thus the interest of the public in the lowest possible cost is safeguarded.

In this case the Authority solicited bids for the carpeting contract after the general contract had been awarded — how long afterward does not appear from the record. But the Authority was assured that the cost would be minimized by the procedure established for the project in the general conditions and the supplementary general conditions of the United States Department of Housing and Urban Development (this being a federally aided project). Those conditions, included in the bidding documents (Condition No. 36 and Supplementary General Condition 2, both captioned “Stated Allowances”), provided a “Cash Allowance” for the furnishing and installation of carpet[583]*583ing, thus fixing a flat amount which each bidder for the general contract was to include in his bid to cover this item instead of the amount of a specific sub-bid for this work. The general contractor was required to “purchase the ‘Allowed Materials’ [the carpeting, including installation in accordance with the specifications] as directed by the Owner [the Authority] on the basis of the lowest and best bid of at least three competitive bids” — with the general “contract price... adjusted accordingly” if there should be a difference between the amount of the carpeting sub-bid and the “Cash Allowance.”

It is significant that this procedure is in substance the same as that provided in G. L. c. 149, § 441(1) for the selection of a sub-bidder when, following an invitation for sub-bids pursuant to §§ 44C and 44H, “no sub-bid is filed ... or... a rejection of all sub-bids... occurs.” In such case an “addendum” is issued in lieu of a fist of sub-bidders for the particular class of work which sets out “the amount to be included by a general bidder... for such sub-trade.” Thereupon, the awarding authority solicits new sub-bids and the general contractor is required to “cause the work covered by such sub-trade to be done by the lowest responsible and eligible sub-bidder...” — with the general “contract price... adjusted by the difference between the subcontract sum and the amount stated in the addendum.”

Reading that condition and supplementary condition together with the “Form for General Bid” in § 44F (to which, as is unquestioned, the general contract was subject) in the light of §§ 44H and 441, it is clear that the installation and furnishing of carpeting was intended to be, and was, encompassed in the total construction for which the general contractor was responsible. He was not, however, to do the carpeting as “[t]he work of the general contractor” in “Item 1” of the “Form for General Bid” but rather through a subcontractor. The carpeting was therefore a “class of work for which the awarding authority deem[ed] it necessary or convenient to receive sub-bids” pursuant to G. L. c. 149, § 44C (18), and was in effect a sub-bid under [584]*584“Item 2” of the statutory form for which, however, an “addendum” had been substituted.

“The work called for in the contract under consideration obviously was to be done in connection with the construction of a public building... and was a necessary phase of the construction.” Gil-Bern Constr. Corp. v. Brockton, 353 Mass. 503, 505 (1968). Accordingly, we conclude that the carpeting subcontract was subject to the competitive bidding statute.4 Cf. Sears, Roebuck & Co. v. School Comm. of Burlington, ante, 399, 401-402 (1975), in which a carpeting contract was awarded separately from any other contract in a program for the rehabilitation of a school, and we nevertheless held that it could not be said as matter of law that the installation was so insignificant that the contract was one merely for the supply of goods, in which case it would not be subject to G. L. c. 149, §§ 44A-44L. In the instant case, as in the Sears, Roebuck & Co. case, the detailed specifications for installation of the carpeting suggest that the contract calls for “construction” rather than merely for the purchase of goods. But we need not dwell on this matter since Higgins concedes that in the circumstances of this case “carpeting could be included by the awarding authority under the catch-all in [§ 44C (18) ] ”, a concession which implies that the installation in this case was of sufficient significance so that the contract was one for “construction” and thus subject to the competitive bidding statute by virtue of the mandate of § 17 of St. 1964, c. 703 (see fn. 3).

To be sure, the competitive bidding statute contemplates the procedure outlined in § 44H before the Authority goes to the procedure in § 441, but none of the parties has objected to the bypass of § 44H in this case or to the resort, [585]*585in substance, to § 441 in the first instance. Indeed, Higgins mentions in his brief that the Authority made the bidding procedures subject to the competitive bidding statute, but Higgins apparently did not think it sufficiently significant to mention the failure to follow § 44H. Higgins does point to various other deviations from the competitive bidding statute but only as indications that the Authority did not intend to apply the statute in its entirety. On our analysis, that is not material since the Authority was bound to do so.

In any event, whatever other deviations may or may not be tolerated5, we are not inclined to compound the error (if error there be). It seems to us that the clear language of St. 1964, c.

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Bluebook (online)
337 N.E.2d 921, 3 Mass. App. Ct. 580, 1975 Mass. App. LEXIS 682, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mari-sons-flooring-co-v-southeastern-massachusetts-university-building-massappct-1975.