State Ex Rel. Law & Credit Co. v. Thomas

220 S.W. 702, 203 Mo. App. 452, 1920 Mo. App. LEXIS 192
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 5, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 220 S.W. 702 (State Ex Rel. Law & Credit Co. v. Thomas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Law & Credit Co. v. Thomas, 220 S.W. 702, 203 Mo. App. 452, 1920 Mo. App. LEXIS 192 (Mo. Ct. App. 1920).

Opinion

BLAND, J.

This is an original proceeding in mandamus instituted in this court on February 14, 1920. The alternative writ was issued to which respondent made return. To the latter pleading relators filed their answer to which respondents replied. Thereupon relators filed a motion for judgment on the pleadings, which is now before us for determination.

*453 The relator, Law and Credit Company, is a corporation operating a daily newspaper in Kansas City, .Jackson County, Missouxi, styled “The Daily Record.” The relators, Elbert E. and Ernest E. Smith are residents and tax payers on said city! The respondents are the ten circuit judges composing the circuit court of Jackson County, Missouri, sitting in their capacity as a board for the publication of advertisements, judicial notices and orders of publication required by law to be made in said city. [Sec. 591, R. S. 1909, as amended (Laws of 1913, p. 97).] This statute reads as follows:

'“. . . In all cities having a population of more than one hundred thousand inhabitants, a board consisting of the judges of the circuit court of such cities, or of the judicial circuit in which such city is situated, or a majority of the same, shall, on or before the first day of January, 1914, and every two years thereafter, cause to be published in some daily newspaper of said city a notice of at least twenty days, designating when and where said board will receive sealed proposals from daily newspapers published in said city for the publication of all advertisements, judicial notices and orders of publication required by law to be made At the time and place so designated, said board, or a majority thereof, shall proceed publicly to open said bids, and shall award the printing of all said publications to the newspaper naming the lowest and best bid; Provided, however, first, that said bid shall be accompanied by a good and sufficient bond, in a sum to be fixed by said board, conditioned for the correct and faithful publication in said newspaper of all said advertisements, notices and orders, in manner and form as required by law, and accordng to the schedule of rates named n said proposal, and upon said bond suit may be instituted in the name of the State, to the use of any person aggrieved; second, that in cities having a population of more than six hundred thousand inhabitants, as shown by the last United States census, no paper shall be awarded the contract for said publication unless it have a bona-fide *454 daily circulation in number of copies equal to at least five per cent of • tbe total population of such cities as shown by the last United States census; third, that in case said board shall believe that said bids are not sufficiently definite or specific, or that in consequence of combinations, or from any cause, said bids are unreasonably high, it shall be at liberty to reject all proposals, in which case it shall proceed at once to readvertise for proposals, as hereinbefore provided.”

We gather from the admitted facts in the pleadings that pursuant to the directions of the statute said judges constituting said board advertised, on January 2, 1920, for sealed bids for the publication of advertisements, judicial notices and orders of publication required by law to be made in said city. Bids were submitted but were rejected. Whereupon another notice was published calling for bids to- be submitted on February 2, 1920, at which time bids were submitted by the relator, Law and Credit Company (which had been doing the work for the two previous years) and the Out West Publishing Company. The Law and Credit Company presented bids in two forms, one at 60 cents per 100 words for each insertion for notices published daily and $1.70 for each insertion for notices published weekly, and a flat rate of $7.50 for the publication of each notice of letters of administration granted by the probate court and of $4.50 for each notice of final settlement in said court. The Out West Publishing Company submitted a bid of 53 cents per 100 words for each daily insertion and of $2 per 100 words for each weekly insertion.

On opening the bids the board advised the ' Out West Publishing Company that “The Daily Record” had made a flat rate for the publication of probate court notices and stated that the former might have the privilege of meeting said rate, whereupon the Out West Publishing Company made a flat rate which was based upon its bid of ,53 cents per 100 words for a daily insertion. The board offered to permit the Law and Credit *455 Company to meet the flat rate hid of the Out West Publishing Company but the former refused to amend its bid. The flat rate offered by the Out West Publishing Company was as follows:

“We add to our tender and offer to publish notices of final settlement at $4.06; also grant of letters at $4.97. This makes a total of $9.03.
Our .general tender is at 53 cents per 100 words. This addition is arrived at by charging this same 53 cents per 100 words for the 50 words in the short notice, multiplied four insertions and charging 75 cents for each make-up. On the long notice there are 93 words, four times, with, four make-ups, ■ figuring up $4.97.”

Respondents’ allegation concerning the same is as follows:—

“Respondents further represent that said flat-rate bid in no way changed the bid made by the Out West' Publishing Company of February 2, 192(1 as the flat-rate bid was identical with the bid at 53 cents per 100 words, the bid accepted by the Board. That there was, in fact, no change in the bid of the Out West Publishing Company, a real bona-fide newspaper and competitive in every respect.”

On February 7, 1920, the board let the contract for such publications to the Out West Publishing Company. At that time and prior thereto the Out West Publishing Company was a weekly newspaper and not a daily one, but it became a daily newspaper on Monday, February 9, 1920, and was such as soon after the letting of the contract as the notices covered by said contract could be published, the contract being let on Saturday and the Out West Publishing Company having become a daily newspaper on Monday, the next business day. Ever since that time it has been publishing such notices.

The relators contend that the contract for publishing notices was not legally let for the reason that there was no competitive bidding and that the Out West Publishing Company, to which .the contract was let, was *456 not a daily newspaper either at the time of the advertising for bids or at the time of the letting of the contract, and relators pray the court for a peremptory writ of mandamus requiring said board to advertise and publish notice, as is required by law, for submission of bids.

. There is some question as to whether it is admitted in the pleadings that the proposal for bids called for a bid at a flat-rate as well as at so much per .100 words. For the purpose of this case we assume, as relators do, that the publication of the notice for bids contained this provision.

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Bluebook (online)
220 S.W. 702, 203 Mo. App. 452, 1920 Mo. App. LEXIS 192, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-law-credit-co-v-thomas-moctapp-1920.