Oglesby v. City of Indianapolis

149 N.E. 82, 89 Ind. App. 69, 1925 Ind. App. LEXIS 215
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 6, 1925
DocketNo. 12,111.
StatusPublished

This text of 149 N.E. 82 (Oglesby v. City of Indianapolis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Oglesby v. City of Indianapolis, 149 N.E. 82, 89 Ind. App. 69, 1925 Ind. App. LEXIS 215 (Ind. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

McMahan, J.

Appellee city of Indianapolis, by its board of public works, proceeded in the way provided by statute to improve a certain street. A preliminary resolution was adopted, together with specifications for the work. These included general specifications, specifications for the foundation of the pavement, and also detailed specifications for five different kinds of wearing surface—wooden block, asphalt, asphaltic concrete, concrete and brick. After due notice and hearing thereon, the resolution was confirmed. Notice was given to contractors inviting bids. Appellee Marion County Construction Company, hereafter referred to as “con *71 straction company,” a company of known experience and responsibility, made two bids for the constructon of the pavement with an asphalt wearing surface. One of these bids, in which appellee proposed to use “oil asphalt,” was for a total price of $5,866.10. Its other bid, in which it proposed to use “Trinidad lake asphalt,” was for a total price of $6,329.30. The difference in cost of the pavement under these bids was forty cents per lineal foot.

Upon the statutory lapse of time after opening the bids, no petition having been filed by a majority of the property owners for any other kind of pavement, the board entered a final order for the improvement with “asphalt.” No other contractor having made a bid for the improvement with asphalt, the board properly awarded the contract to the construction company, but, instead of awarding such contract upon its lowest bid, which was for a wearing surface made with oil asphalt, made the award and executed a contract upon its higher bid, which was for a wearing surface made with Trinidad lake asphalt.

Appellants, being property owners subject to assessment for cost of the work, within ten days after the execution of such contract, brought this action to enjoin performance of the contract upon the ground that, as the construction company was an equally satisfactory and responsible contractor as to each of its bids, and as each bid proposed to improve1 the street according to the plans and specifications therefor and according to said improvement resolution, the board of public works had no authority or power under the statute to let a contract for the higher price. A demurrer to this complaint hiving been sustained, the plaintiffs appeal.

Appellees contend that the determination of who was the “lowest and best bidder” was within the honest discretion of the board of public works; that, in making this *72 choice, the board had the right to take a great many things into consideration, including the quality of materials offered in connection with the respective bids; that, as fraud or. bad faith is not alleged, it must be presumed that the board concluded in good faith that Trinidad lake asphalt was a more desirable material for the improvement in question than oil asphalt, and hence that the contractor’s higher bid for Trinidad lake asphalt was a better bid than the lower bid for oil asphalt; and that such determination is final and conclusive.

Appellants, in support of their contention, say that both bids for the construction of the pavement with asphalt being made by the same contractor, the experience, record for efficiency, and general responsibility of this contractor were, of course, the same as to both of its bids; that the element of responsibility of the contractor, and all facts entering therein, were eliminated; that, in balancing the question as to which of the two bids was better, the qualifications of the contractor did not enter, so that the question of which was the lower bid-was a mere matter of figures; that the bid in which the contractor proposed to use oil asphalt was the lower; that, since the contractor proposed in both bids fully to comply with the plans, specifications and drawings for the work and all requirements thereof, it was certain that, if let on the bid proposing to use oil asphalt, the work would be done by a responsible contractor at the lowest bid price, and completed in strict accordance with the plans and specifications; that the only possible question which the board of public works could and did take into consideration in letting the contract on the higher bid was the supposed difference in quality between oil asphalt and Trinidad lake asphalt as a paving material, and, to hold that the board had a right to do this is to hold that although particular and detailed specifications are adopted, which will insure the completion of a pave *73 ment of a certain standard quality, the board may nevertheless, in the face of a lower bid by a responsible contractor, let the work on a higher bid because of a fancied idea that the contractor to whom the work is let is to use a material that will produce a pavement better than the specifications called for; that such an interpretation of the statute and policy of the law in this state on the subject of street improvements will destroy all true competition, open the way to favoritism, and constitute a menace to the public, the consequences of which cannot be measured.

Boyd v. Murphy (1891), 127 Ind. 174, 25 N. E. 702, cited by appellants, gives no support to their contentions. The question in that case related to the action of a city in letting a contract to one bidder in preference to another.

In Zorn v. Warren Scharf, etc., Paving Co. (1907), 42 Ind. App. 213, 84 N. E. 509, the bid of a certain contractor had been accepted. This contractor, however, failed to comply with the provisions of the statute and the city, for sufficient reasons, refused to enter into a contract with that contractor, and without readvertising for bids as required by the statute, let the contract to another and higher bidder on condition that this bidder would use Trinidad lake asphalt, which was supposed to be of a better quality and more expensive than that proposed1 to be used by the other contractor. It was there held that the provision of the statute requiring readvertising before reletting was mandatory. After holding that the matter of accepting or rejecting bids, and of the letting of the contract was purely administrative in character, depending entirely upon the discretion of the common council, and that the matter of giving notice inviting bids was jurisdictional, the court said: “The fact must be kept in view that the council was exercising a power affecting strictly individual rights, and that statutes of *74 this kind for competitive bidding are for the benefit- of the property owner who must bear the expense of the improvement. In such cases, when a statute directs the performance of an act, which is for the benefit of the citizens or the public, it is to be construed as mandatory and not directory.” The act of the city in that case was not only not in compliance with any statutory provision, but was in disregard of the mandatory provisions of the statute.

In Board, etc., v. Pashong (1908), 41 Ind. App. 69, 83 N. E. 383, the commissioners had advertised for proposals for the furnishing of the furniture and fixtures for a new courthouse. The plans and specifications had been prepared by the bidder to whom the commissioners had awarded the contract, its bid being the lowest of the bids submitted.

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Related

Boyd v. Murphy
25 N.E. 702 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1890)
Tousey v. City of Indianapolis
94 N.E. 225 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1911)
McGuire v. City of Indianapolis
135 N.E. 257 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1922)
Lane v. Board of Commissioners
35 N.E. 28 (Indiana Court of Appeals, 1893)
City of Connersville v. Merrill
42 N.E. 1112 (Indiana Court of Appeals, 1896)
City of Bluffton v. Miller
70 N.E. 989 (Indiana Court of Appeals, 1904)
Board of Commissioners v. Pashong
83 N.E. 383 (Indiana Court of Appeals, 1908)
Zorn v. Warren-Scharf Asphalt Paving Co.
84 N.E. 509 (Indiana Court of Appeals, 1907)
Indiana Truck Farm Co. v. Town of Schneider
128 N.E. 617 (Indiana Court of Appeals, 1920)

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Bluebook (online)
149 N.E. 82, 89 Ind. App. 69, 1925 Ind. App. LEXIS 215, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oglesby-v-city-of-indianapolis-indctapp-1925.