Packard v. Hayes

2 Balt. C. Rep. 129
CourtBaltimore City Circuit Court
DecidedMarch 8, 1901
StatusPublished

This text of 2 Balt. C. Rep. 129 (Packard v. Hayes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Baltimore City Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Packard v. Hayes, 2 Balt. C. Rep. 129 (Md. Super. Ct. 1901).

Opinion

RITCHIE, J.—

The bill in this case is filed by the plaintiff as a taxpayer, and it prays for .an injunction to restrain the Board of Awards from awarding to Samuel A. Rice the contract for the collection and the disposal of city garbage, and to restrain the said Rice from accepting or entering upon the execution of said contract. The alleged grounds upon which -an injunction is asked are that, in several respects, the proposal of Rice was not in accordance with the specifications upon which bids were invited, and that therefore the board had no power to award the contract to him; the answer, besides setting up other defenses, insists that Rice’s proposal was in accordance with the specifications, and the ease is submitted on bill, answer and exhibits.

The letting of a contract for the proposed work comes, within Sections 14 and 15 of the New 'Charter, the provisions of which, so far as they relate to this case, are, that proposals shall first be advertised for; that the bids shall be opened by the Board of Awards and the contract awarded by it to the lowest responsible bidder. The Commissioner of Street Cleaning prepared specifications, which were appioved by the board, and then duly advertjsed for proposals based on the same. These specifications' prescribed the manner of collecting the garbage, but left an open field for competition between different schemes or systems for its disposal or reduction. The various bids were opened by the Board on November 21st, 1900, and referred to the commissioner for examination, and he reported to the Board on the 26th of that month.

Among the different forms of proposal which were admissible under the specifications, the commissioner recommended the acceptance of some bid which embraced every kind of garbage, and covered the period of ten years. Among the schemes submitted for the disposal of the garbage he recommended as the best the one in use at Syracuse, N. Y., which is known both as the “Improved Holthaus Sanitary System” and as the “Syracuse System.” Throwing out the bid of Michael T. Horner, which failed to propose any sanitary scheme of disposal, the lowest ten year bid which embraced all garbage, was that of Rice ($148,000 per annum,) and the next lowest was that of the American Contracting and Manufacturing Co. ($161,800 per annum,) and each proposed to use the Syracuse System of disposal or reduction. The other bidders were higher in amount and also proposed to use other systems.

The commissioner, however, advised the rejection of Rice’s proposal upon the ground that it was not in accordance with the specifications, and advised the acceptance of the proposal of the American Company, as being that of the lowest responsible bidder who complied with all requirements, but the board overruled his exceptions and awarded the contract to Rice. This report, of the Commissioner is the basis of the bill filed in this case, and the giounds upon which an injunction is asked are the same as were urged by the Commissioner for the rejection of Rice’s bid and passed on by the Board of Awards.

Among other defences set up it is alleged that the plaintiff is simply lending the use of his name in the interest of the American Company, an unsuccessful bidder, and that the bill is not filed by him in good faith as a taxpayer; that the burden of taxation wj.ll not be increased by letting the contract to Rice; that the contract had already been awarded when the bill was filed, and the award has been ratified by the Mayor and lOity Council; that the Board of Awards had the right to construe the specifications which had been approved by it, and that, even.if Rice failed to comply strictly with them, it was competent for the board, acting in good faith and in the interest of the public, to waive any non-compliance, unless such waiver contravened some ordinance or some provision of the. Charter. In the view, however, which I take of the merits of the case, that is, of the question whether Rice’s proposal was in .accordance with the specifications or not, it is not necessary to pass on any of these collateral grounds of defence.

The ground most strenuously urged by the plaintiff against the sufficiency [131]*131of Rice’s proposal, is that he failed to comply with the specification which provides, viz: “Each bidder must submit with his bid the scheme of garbage disposal which it is intended to accompany, and including such plan, specifications and other information as may be necessary to• enable the said Commissioner to determine the feasibility of it.”

Rice’s bid -was in proper form and he submitted with it the scheme of disposal which he proposed to establish, but he did not submit therewith any plan, and the failure to do this is the chief ground upon which the plaintiff relies in asking for an injunction.

This specification is construed by the plaintiff as requiring the bidder to submit a plan of the plant which he proposed to erect, and it is argued that such was the plan intended, because, under the construction of the plaintiff, the commissioner was to determine whether the plant to be erected would be adequate to the requirements of such a city as Baltimore, and the plan of the proposed plant was to be made part of the contract.

But a plan of the plant to be erected is not the plan here intended. The purpose of the city is to contract for the use of some scheme or method of garbage disposal, and not for the erection of a garbage crematory. The scheme a dopted will determine the character of the plant, and the contractor must see to it that its capacity is equal to the work he undertakes to do. All that the specifications require as to the plant is, that it shall be completed and ready for operation by June 1st, 1901; that the contractor shall establish such wharves, boats, buildings, furnaces, presses and other apparatus “as maq/ be necessary to enable him, to perform the worh specified in his contract," and that “the capacity” of the plant “must be sufficient to allow any necessary repairs to be made without interfering with the work of disposal.”

The plan referred to, therefore, means such model or drawings as may be necessary to illustrate and explain, for the information of the commissioner, the operation and practicability of the proposed scheme, and not a plan of the plant by which the scheme or method is to be carried into effect, and when the commissioner has thus been fully advised as to the scheme or method, the model or drawings have served their purpose.

Again, the plaintiff contends that the filing of the plan in question was essential to the validity of the bid. But the terms of this specification do not absolutely require the filing of a plan. It provides that each bidder must submit with his bid his scheme of disposal, including such plan, etc., “as may be necessary to enable the said commissioner to determine the feasibility of it.”

The manifest purpose, and the only purpose, of this provision was. to provide such information as might be necessary to enable the Commissioner to judge of the feasibility of the proposed scheme. But if the Commissioner was already familiar with the scheme and assured of its feasibility, and the bidder knew, as Rice did, that such was the fact, it was not necessary to file a plan showing what the Commissioner already knew. In other words It was not necessary to do what was unnecessary.

Now the Syracuse system of disposal proposed by Rice is a well defined and recognized system, and one with which the Commissioner was thoroughly acquainted.

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Bluebook (online)
2 Balt. C. Rep. 129, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/packard-v-hayes-mdcirctctbalt-1901.