Pennell v. The Mayor, Aldermen & Commonalty of the City of New York

17 A.D. 455, 45 N.Y.S. 229
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJuly 1, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 17 A.D. 455 (Pennell v. The Mayor, Aldermen & Commonalty of the City of New York) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pennell v. The Mayor, Aldermen & Commonalty of the City of New York, 17 A.D. 455, 45 N.Y.S. 229 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1897).

Opinion

Parker, J.:

The judgment awards to the plaintiffs $5,000 as damages, because of the refusal of the defendant to permit them to execute a contract [456]*456which the plaintiffs claim was awarded to them by the commissioner of public works.

• The undisputed facts are, that the common council of the city of New York, on the 20th of November, 1894, passed an. ordinance for the paving, of the roadway of Kingsbridge road, from One Hundred and Ninetieth street to the Harlem river, with Macadam pavement and Telford foundations. The advertisements for proposals for doing the work were duly published by or under the direction of the com- ■ missioner of public works, in pursuance of which the plaintiffs filed a bid to do the work, together with an agreement and affidavit of sureties as required by law, and deposited a certified check for $2,500, being five jDer cent of the security required for the faithful performance of the contract. There were several other bidders; but when the bids were opened by the commissioner of public works it was ascertained that. the plaintiffs were the lowest bidders, and it was so declared, Subsequently their bid was sent to the comptroller for his approval as to the adequacy and sufficiency of the sureties, and, on-the day following, June 5, 1895, notice was given to the plaintiffs by the .comptroller to present their sureties to him for examination. One of the plaintiffs’ proposed sureties was out of town, and the .comptroller was asked whether he would accept one of the surety companies in place of the absent surety, and the plaintiffs, receiving an affirmative answer, secured the necessary agreement and affidavits from the American Surety Company, paying it therefor; and thereafter these papers were transmitted by the comptroller to the commissioner of public works without his formal approval of the sureties. This was about June 18, 1895. Immediately afterwards .the plaintiffs, together with Senator Burns, called upon the commissioner of public works with reference to their bid.

As to what took place at' that interview and a subsequent one the parties are not in agreement. On the one side it is claimed that the commissioner of public works announced that he would execute the formal .contract in the course of two or three days, and invited the plaintiffs to come to his office for that purpose. On the other hand, the commissioner denies that he ever, at' any time, promised to execute the contract.

This difference we will refer to later, the questions to be immedi- . ately taken up being whether the commissioner, of public works was [457]*457at liberty to reject all bids as he did nearly six months after his alleged promise to execute the contract with the lowest bidder; and, second, whether the modifications required by the statute might be given orally.

The element of fraud or intentional wrongdoing on the part of the plaintiffs or the commissioner of public works is not involved. The bids were honestly made and the plaintiffs were the lowest bidders. But it seems that in the meantime the Third Avenue Railroad Company had made application for a franchise to extend its line over ■ this road or some part of it; and this fact came to the knowledge of the commissioner of public'works subsequently to the receipt of the bids by him and his determination that the plaintiffs were the lowest bidders. He offered to execute a contract with the plaintiffs with a modification which should relieve the city from the paving of one-third of the street in the event that the railroad company should get permission and should get possession and should build its road over and along the street. But this modification the plaintiffs refused to accept, for reasons which were apparently well considered. This situation led the commissioner of public works to put off the signing of the contract until the following January, when he rejected all bids.

. The city urges on this appeal that had the commissioner promised to execute the contract as contended by the plaintiffs, he yet had the right under the statute, at any time before its formal execution, to reject all bids. Because of the amendment of section 64 of the Consolidation Act (Laws of 1882, chap. 410) by chapter 327 of the Laws of 1893 that section now differs in substantial respects from the form in which it was before this court in the case of Lynch v. The Mayor (2 App. Div. 213). Because of these changes it is claimed that this case is distinguishable from that. The statute which controlled in that case gave to the commissioner of public works an opportunity to reject all bids, provided he deemed it for the best interests of the city to do so after the bids were opened. But if, instead of exercising the discretion thus conferred, notice was given to the successful bidder that the contract had been awarded to him, the commissioner no longer had the right either to reject the bids or to refuse to execute the contract; and it was held in Lynch’s [458]*458case ■ that for his refusal to execute the contract the plaintiff was entitled to recover his damages.

Section 64 of the Consolidation Act, as amended, extends the period within which the commissioner of public works may reject all bids. It provides thatimmediately after the opening of the bids the head of department, unless he shall deem it for the interest of the city to reject all bids, shall notify the lowest bidder to present the persons proposed as sureties to the comptroller for examination within five days after'the receipt of said notice.” . Subsequent provisions relate to the manner of presenting sureties and the effect of neglect or refusal to do so,- and the section then provides that the comptroller, after approval of the sureties, shall transmit the same to the head of the proper department, who immediately there- . after if he shall not deem it for the best interests of the city to reject all bids, shall notify said lowest bidder to execute the contract for said work within five days after the receipt of such notice.”

•It will thus be seen that the commissioner of public works, . instead of being required, as he was under this section prior to the recent amendment,* to determine ©rice for all whether the. best interests of the city required a rejection of all bids, before the lowest bidder was called upon to present his sureties, is now permitted to consider anew that question after all intermediate steps have been taken, including the approval of the sureties. But then the statute seems to contemplate that he must proceed immediately and must hot postpone action, for it provides in terms that he shall immediately thereafter notify the lowest bidder to execute the contract if he shall not deem it for the best. interests of the city to reject all bids.

A fair and. reasonable construction of that provision requires a prompt exercise of the right of the commissioner to reject all bids, and also that such right is gone after he has notified the lowest: bid- , der to execute the contract. The commissioner of .public works in this case did not reject the bid on. the eighteenth of June when the papers were transmitted to him and the plaintiffs appeared before him, nor did he attempt to do so until January following. But how promptly he must act is not of moment here, for it is plaintiffs’' contention that immediately after the eighteenth of June the' commis[459]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
17 A.D. 455, 45 N.Y.S. 229, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pennell-v-the-mayor-aldermen-commonalty-of-the-city-of-new-york-nyappdiv-1897.