State ex rel. Office Specialty Manufacturing Co. v. Betts

4 Ohio C.C. 86
CourtOhio Circuit Courts
DecidedMay 15, 1889
StatusPublished

This text of 4 Ohio C.C. 86 (State ex rel. Office Specialty Manufacturing Co. v. Betts) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Circuit Courts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Office Specialty Manufacturing Co. v. Betts, 4 Ohio C.C. 86 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1889).

Opinion

Clark, J.

Under a special act of the legislature, passed March 5, 1887 (Yol. 84, page 321), the commissioners of Pickaway county proceeded to remodel, and make additions to the court-house in that county.

They employed architects, and procured plans and specifications, and estimates to be made in remodeling, and in the various changes, alterations and additions to the court-house, [87]*87including the furniture for the county offices, and advertised, and received bids and made contracts for said work, and issued and sold bonds for the payment of the same.

On the 28th day of December, 1888, the commissioners caused the following notice to be given :

“Notice to Contractors.
Auditor’s Ofpice, Circleville, 0., Dec. 28th, 1888.
“ Sealed proposals will be received by the Board of County Commissioners of Pickaway County, Ohio, at the office of the Auditor, until 12 o’clock M., of Wednesday, Jan. 23d, 1889, for the furnishing of all furniture and fixtures (including vault furniture), for the new court-house now erecting, according to the plans, specifications and schedule prepared therefor by Weary & Kramer, Architects, and are now on file at the Auditor’s office.
“The right is reserved by the Commissioners to reject any or all, or to accept any bids. By order of the Commissioners of Pickaway County.
“ S. W. Miller, Auditor.”
Before said proposals were advertised for, estimates for said
furniture had been made as follows:
Furniture and fixtures complete..............$11,000 00
Vault furniture (made of wood)................ 4,500 00
Vault furniture (made of metal)............... 6,000 00
Six proposals were filed — four for wood and two for metal. The two proposals for metul furniture, were:
The Office Specialty Manufacturing Co......$3,976 50
and The Fenton Manufacturing Co............ 5,325 50

The proposal of The Office Specialty Co., included all the labor and material required under the plans and specifications for said furniture.

The Fenton Co.’s proposal was defective, in that it contained 200 roller shelves and nine drawers more than were required by the specifications, at an alleged cost of $384.30; and it was deficient in quantity, as to 21 drawers which were required by the specifications, at an alleged cost of $117.22.

[88]*88The commissioners, after opening the bids, and having decided to adopt the metallic vault furniture, accepted the bid of the Fenton Company, and awarded it the contract; and after correcting the foregoing mistakes in its bid, by deducting the materials not required by the specifications, and by adding the materials which were required by the specifications, entered into a contract with said company for the furnishing of said vault furniture, at the sum of $5,058.92.

The Office Specialty Company at once gave notice of its intention to apply to the court for a mandamus, claiming its right to the contract under its bid, and objecting to the execution of a contract with the Fenton Company, .

On the 81st day of January, 1889, The Office Specialty Co. filed its petition in the court of common pleas, setting forth in substance the foregoing facts, claiming its right to said contract, and charging that the award of said contract to the Fenton Co., under the circumstances, was not in the exercise of a proper and lawful discretion, and operated as a fraud upon its rights, and praying for a peremptory mandamus.

The commissioners answered, admitting substantially the foregoing facts as to the letting of said contract, the mistake in the Fenton Co.’s bid, but claiming that the contract was awarded to the Fenton Co. for the reason that they were authorized by law to let said contract in the éxercise of their judgment and discretion; that in their opinion,the furniture of the Fenton Company was the best in quality, the most suitable in design, and, all things considered, was the cheapest and most conducive to the best interests of the county, and also claiming that the requisite data for correcting the mistakes in the Fenton Co.’s bid, were apparent on the face of the same.

A reply was filed by the relator, The Office Specialty Company, denying the foregoing allegations of fact, and the case was heard on evidence in that court, Judge Pugh sitting. Judgment was given for the relator, awarding a peremptory mandamus against the commissioners. From this judgment the defendants appealed.

The writ of mandamus may be issued to compel the per-, formance of an act, which the law specially enjoins as a duty [89]*89resulting from an office, trust or station. It may require an inferior tribunal to exercise its judgment, or to proceed to the discharge of any of its functions, but cannot control judicial discretion. Rev. Stats., secs. 6741-2.

There is no question in this case, under the various decisions of the Supreme Court of the State, as to the right of parties to resort to the remedy in a case like the one at bar ; and no question is made as to the appropriateness of the remedy, if the relator has made a case entitling it to relief. It is incumbent on the relator, in order to succeed, to show that it has a clear legal right to have the contract awarded to it.

Before the contract can be awarded, therefore, the party or parties must show, that all the requirements of the law have been substantially complied with. State ex rel. v. Barnes, 35 Ohio St. 137; Ohio ex rel. etc. v. Yeatman, 22 Ohio St. 546; Cincinnati Colleqe v. La Rue, 22 Ohio St. 469 ; State v. Cappeller, 39 Ohio St. 460.

It is not enough to show defects in the title of another to whom the contract has been awarded. Ross v. Board of Education, 42 Ohio St. 374.

The alterations of, and additions to, the court-house, as has been stated, were authorized by special act of the legislature, and this court — Judge Bradbury and myself sitting — in a proceeding to enjoin the issuing of the county bonds authorized by the act on certain grounds, so held; yet, so far as this case is concerned and the acts of the commissioners are drawn in question, sec. 795 of the general act, Yol 85, Ohio Laws, page 219, applies. It so specifically provides, and Judge Owen in the case of Commissioners v. Board of Public Works, 39 Ohio St. 633, says: If the legislative intent that the general law shall supersede the local and special act is clear, it will of course prevail.”

The important question in this case, as we regard it, is whether the commissioners, in the exercise of a lawful discretion, were authorized to award the contract to the Fenton Company under the state of facts admitted and proven in this case; whether they had a right to accept the bid of the Fenton Company, which was admitted to be defective, and [90]*90whether there was sufficient data on the face of the Fenton Company’s proposal to enable the commissioners to correct the mistakes, from the proposal itself.

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Bluebook (online)
4 Ohio C.C. 86, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-office-specialty-manufacturing-co-v-betts-ohiocirct-1889.