Meyers v. City of New York

32 Misc. 522
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 32 Misc. 522 (Meyers 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
Meyers v. City of New York, 32 Misc. 522 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1900).

Opinion

Gildersleeve, J.

The plaintiff moves for an injunction pendente lite, enjoining the defendants from entering into any contract for the work of building the approaches on the Manhattan and Brooklyn sides of the new East River bridge, and from paying out any money under any contract, in pursuance of the defendants’ advertisement for bids. The complaint avers, in substance, apart from formal allegations reciting certain acts of the Legislature, that the plaintiff is a taxpayer of the city of New York; that in July and August last the defendants advertised for sealed bids and estimates for furnishing materials for and constructing the steel and masonry approaches on the Brooklyn and Manhattan sides of the bridge, in accordance with a proposed form of contract and drawings and specifications therefor; that one of the provisions in the advertisement was that bids would be received only from such parties as have the requisite plants and facilities which have been in successful operation on work of similar character for at least one year; that the form of contract. proposed by the defendants contained a provision that the contractor should agree to comply with the provisions of the Labor Law, and that in default thereof the contract should be void. The complaint further alleges that it was also provided that said proposed contract should contain a provision that the “ finished steel ” shall not contain certain chemical elements to exceed specified limits. The complaint also states, upon information and belief, that the proposed contract, specifications and advertisements for bids were fraudulently prepared and issued, and, that the requirements of the advertisement, that bids would be received only from such parties as had the requisite plant and facilities, which had been in successful operation on work of similar character for at least one year, and of the specifications, relating to the “ finished steel,” above mentioned, were unreasonable and unfair, and fraudulently prepared and issued, with the purpose and intent of limiting competition and confining it to a small class of bidders, as, by said requirements, competent and reliable bidders, with the requisite plant and facilities, desiring to submit bids for the doing of said work, were prevented from doing so; that the requirements as to the elements of finished steel prohibited the furnishing of steel of any other company than the Carbon Steel Company, whose steel alone meets those requirements; that the provision, [524]*524requiring the contractor to conform to the Labor Law, would oblige him to pay more for labor employed by him than he would have to pay, if allowed to make his own wages for labor only by the law of supply and demand, and if he were not restricted to employing citizens of this State. The complaint further avers, on information and belief, that the commissioners are about to enter into contracts with the successful bidders in the form prescribed in the advertisement. The plaintiff charges that the award of any contract by the defendants for the work advertised would be illegal official acts; that the interests of the taxpayers of the city of New York, including the plaintiff, would be injured thereby, and the city be compelled to pay for work under illegal contracts, greatly to the damage of the city and its taxpayers. The plaintiff prays judgment, permanently restraining the defendants from entering into any contract for the work mentioned in the complaint, and directing that the work called for in the advertisements be readvertised and relet; and that the defendants be enjoined from paying out any moneys of the city of New York, under the advertisement, or under any contract entered into in pursuance thereof.

On the part of the defendants the affidavits of the commissioners and of their chief engineer and principal assistant engineer were read in opposition to the motion. They deny the principal charges of the complaint; in technical phraseology they deny the “ equity of the bill.” Mr. Buck, the chief engineer, denies that the Carbon Steel Company is the only company which manufactures steel which meets the requirements and conditions of the specifications, and says there are at least six other companies which manufacture such steel, and that any manufacturer of open hearth steel can readily fit his works for producing steel of the kind required by the specifications; and he "specifies twenty manufacturers of steel who, he is informed and believes, are prepared to manufacture steel of the kind and quality called for by the specifications.

Mr. Nichols, the principal assistant engineer to the commissioners, states that he believes that the requirement, that bids should only be received from parties who have the requisite plant and facilities, and which have been in successful operation on work of similar character for at least one year, was not an unreasonable nor unfair requirement, and that it was necessary [525]*525in order to secure the highest degree of excellence and material used in the work. He also states that the provision, relating to the quality of “ finished steel,” is reasonable and fair; and he denies that the requirements as to “ finished steel ” prohibit the ‘furnishing of steel by any other than the Carbon Steel Company, or that that company is the only one which manufactures steel meeting the requirements of the specifications. He also states that more than ninety-nine and one-half per cent, of the steel called for by the specifications is rolled steel, to which those requirements do not apply, and that the elements mentioned in the complaint, required for “ finished steel,” are for castings, and that those castings do not constitute more than one-half of one per cent, of the 18,000 tons required for the work; and that that class of work is not now, and never has been, made by the Carbon Steel Company, but is now being made for the steel towers of the bridge, under similar requirements, by the Benjamin Atha & Illingworth Company, of Newark, M. J., and the American Steel Castings Company, of Pennsylvania. He also says that steel castings, of the character required by the specifications, can he readily made by any responsible steel castings company in this country, and that other companies, besides those before mentioned by him, are prepared to make such material; also, that in addition to the Carbon Steel Company, steel fully complying with the specifications can be made at the works of six other concerns.

The first confronting question touches the status of the plaintiff. A taxpayer’s right to maintain a suit against municipal officers is confined to cases in which waste or injury are likely to result from “ Illegal, wrongful or dishonest official acts.” It was not intended to subject the official action of boards * * * and municipal bodies, acting within the limits of their jurisdiction and discretion, but which some taxpayer might conceive to be unwise, improvident or based on errors of judgment, to the supervision of the judicial tribunals.” Talcott v. City of Buffalo, 125 N. Y. 286. So, also, the Court of Appeals, in a subsequent case, says: “ It is absurd to suppose that the legislature, by the statute, intended to draw into the preventive jurisdiction in equity, at the instance of any taxpayer, any proposed illegal official act, irrespective of the fact whether the act sought to be restrained involves a waste of public property,” etc. Rogers v. [526]*526O’Brien; 153 N. Y. 362. Evidently, the waste spoken of in the statute is one which is the consequence of a palpable violation of law, or of corrupt designs, not of innocent mistake or error of judgment.

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Related

Knowles v. . City of New York
68 N.E. 860 (New York Court of Appeals, 1903)
Meyers v. Pennsylvania Steel Co.
77 A.D. 307 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1902)

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Bluebook (online)
32 Misc. 522, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/meyers-v-city-of-new-york-nysupct-1900.