State ex rel. McMahon v. McKenzie

9 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 105, 1907 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 196
CourtCuyahoga Circuit Court
DecidedJanuary 14, 1907
StatusPublished

This text of 9 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 105 (State ex rel. McMahon v. McKenzie) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Cuyahoga Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. McMahon v. McKenzie, 9 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 105, 1907 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 196 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1907).

Opinion

Bids and Bidding — Specifications for Construction of a Court House— Definiteness as to Material — Monopoly in Varieties of Material— Items which Preclude Competition — Reservations to Meet such Expenditures — Consiiiutiona'ity of the Court Howe Commission Act — Section 701.

2. In inviting bids for a public building the building commission are without authority to require bidders to include in the total amount of their bids an arbitrary sum, which the commission reserves the right to expend at its discretion for particular items that are not of such a nature as to render competition at all admissible. But items of a necessarily non-competitive character may be contracted for without this procedure, and it is competent for- the commission to reserve such items for further lawful action.

3. Before bids are invited for a public building, the commission having the matter in charge must make the specifications so definite and certain as to material as to leave no discretion with the commission in the acceptance of the lowest bid, and where the material is controlled by a patent or other monopoly, alternative varieties of material should be specified in order to open tho way for actual competition.

.In this appeal it is sought to enjoin the Cuyahoga court house commission from entering into a contract with Andrew Dali & Son, for the construction of a court house in said county.

The first ground alleged is, that the acts under which this eomsion is organized (97 O. L., Ill; 98 O. L., 53; Rev. Stat., 794-1) [106]*106are unconstitutional, because they attempt to confer legislative and executive powers upon judicial officers, in requiring a judge or judges of the common pleas court to appoint and fix the salaries of the four members of the commission other than the county commissioners. This contention was not strenuously urged in argument before us, and if it were, we should be content with the views expressed by the learned judge in the opin ion below, vindicating the constitutionality of these laws.

It is complained, secondly, that the commission’s invitation for bids is fatally defective, in that it undertook to suppress competition as to the items of statuary, hardware, etc., by requiring all bidders to include in their total bids, arbitrary sums aggregating some $98,000 to cover these items, which amount, more or less, the commission reserves the right to expend at discretion therefor.

If this is a means of getting $98,000 out of the county treasury and into the commission’s hands for future discretionary expenditure, it clearly has no warrant in law. If such is not its object, we see no reason for requiring this, or any other amount of money for these items to be included in the bids. The duties sought to be imposed upon the successful bidder, with respect to the items in question, ought not to require the cost thereof to be included in the bids of persons who in no event are to provide them. Such a procedure is both awkward and ambiguous.

There is nothing in Section 794, Revised Statutes, when properly interpreted, to prevent reserving these items for further lawful action by the commission in procuring them, in so far as their artistic character is such as to preclude their purchase by competitive bidding; for work of a necessarily non-competitive nature may, no doubt, be contracted for without that procedure. When, however, this characteristic inheres merely in the design, as distinguished from the final workmanship, the competitive principle applies to the latter, and must be followed. And this, we think, is peculiarly true of hardware to be specially designed for this structure, and perhaps also of certain other excepted items. In short, we hold, as hereinafter pointed out, that there must be competitive bidding in all cases when competition is at all admissible. And competition, [107]*107where it is admissible, can not, without plain necessity for postponement, be deferred to a date later than that upon the main contract in view of the provisions of Section 794, Revised Statutes. In construing, however, the specifications on which the proposed contract in this case must be founded, we are of the opinion that the sum of $98,000, to be included in the bids for these items, can not of itself operate as an appropriation of that amount, though in extending a new invitation for bids, the means employed for accomplishing the end in view, so far as that end is admissible, ought to be rid of any room for doubt or argument in this behalf.

It is further urged that the competition in this case was illusory and unlawful, because it reserved to the commission a discretion, after opening the bids, to determine which of the several kinds of material named in the specifications, to-wit, limestone, sandstone and granite, should, in fact, be used, and also because it impliedly reserved to the commission a further discretion after opening the bids and fixing upon one of these kinds of material, to select which of the several varieties of that material as specified by bidders, pursuant to requirement of the specifications, should likewise be used.

The commission, in the exercise of the discretion so reserved, has in fact, since the bids were opened, selected granite as the main material to be used, and, in undertaking to accept Andrew Dali & Sons’ bid, has likewise selected that variety of granite known as Pink Milford, as the particular sort of granite to be used. There were bids filed and opened for each of the three kinds of material, limestone, sandstone and granite, respectively, but the lowest bid was not for granite. There were several bids for granite; but Andrew Dali & Sons’ bid was not the lowest for that kind of material. There were several bids for Pink Milford granite, and Andrew Dali & Sons’ bid was the lowest for that variety of granite. But the selection of granite as the kind of material and the selection of Pink Milford granite as the particular variety thereof, were not made until after the bids were opened. Is this procedure warranted by law?

Section 799, Revised Statutes, provide^ that contracts relating to public buildings “shall be awarded to, and made [108]*108with, the person or persons who offer to perform the labor and furnish the material at the lowest price.” This section applies to aggregate bids of the sort here under consideration. Combinations of partial bids fall under the somewhat different provisions of Section 794, Revised Statutes.

It is objected, however, on behalf of the defendant, that Section 794, Revised Statutes, applies only to boards of county commissioners, and not to this building commission, composed, though it is, of four other members, in addition to the county commissioners.

With regard to Wood Co. (Gomrs.) v. PargUUs, supra, it is enough to say that the dictum therein, to the effect that certain of the sections of the Revised Statutes embraced in Chap. 1, title 6, entitled “public buildings,” being Sections 782 to 803, Revised Statutes, inclusive, are inapplicable to the proceedings of a special court house commission, was wholly unnecessary to the decision of that case, and no reason whatever .is set forth in the opinion to justify the dictum in question.

Section 794, Revised Statutes, of the same chapter is now, however, significant, as bearing upon the present scope and application of the subséquent sections. The last-named section opens with the words:

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Bluebook (online)
9 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 105, 1907 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 196, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-mcmahon-v-mckenzie-ohcirctcuyahoga-1907.