Vintage Constr., Inc. v. State, Department of Transportation & Public Facilities

713 P.2d 1213, 1986 Alas. LEXIS 293
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 31, 1986
DocketS-490
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 713 P.2d 1213 (Vintage Constr., Inc. v. State, Department of Transportation & Public Facilities) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vintage Constr., Inc. v. State, Department of Transportation & Public Facilities, 713 P.2d 1213, 1986 Alas. LEXIS 293 (Ala. 1986).

Opinions

OPINION

MATTHEWS, Justice.

The State of Alaska, Department of Transportation and Public Facilities, solicited bids for project No. F-064-3(3), involving grading and drainage work on a road from Dexter to Banner near Nome. Bids were opened and Vintage Construction Co. (Vintage) was the apparent low bidder, with a bid of $2,334,904.50. The apparent sixth lowest bidder was Alaska International Construction, Inc. (AIC), which submitted a bid of $2,536,607.

After the opening, State officials more closely examined all of the bids. They discovered a discrepancy in AIC’s bid: the “total amount bid” was $249,900 more than the sum of the extended unit prices. The State decided to honor the unit prices and ignore the total amount bid. AIC claims that it intended its bid to be in accordance [1214]*1214with the unit prices rather than the total. However, this intention was not necessarily evident from the bid it submitted. Over Vintage’s protest, the State awarded the contract to AIC.1

Vintage sued, seeking to set aside the award, and both parties moved for summary judgment. The court granted the State’s motion, and dismissed Vintage’s claims, indicating its reasons on the record at the end of the hearing on the summary judgment motions. Vintage appeals.

The court noted that no mistake had been made in either the unit price or the extension of the unit bid prices and that an addition error had been made in totalling the extensions of the unit bid prices. The court found that this error gave AIC no competitive advantage. The court also observed that certain standard specifications were applicable and had been properly followed. These specifications are:

Standard Specification 102-1.06:

The bidder shall submit his proposal upon the forms furnished by the Department. The bidder shall specify the unit price in words and figures, for each pay item for which a quantity is given and

shall also show the products of the respective unit prices and quantities written in figures in the column provided for that purpose and the total amount of the proposal obtained by adding the amounts of the several items. All the words and figures shall be in ink or typed. In case of a discrepancy between the prices written in words and those written in figures, the prices written in words shall govern.

Standard Specification 103-1.01:

After the proposals are opened and read, they will be compared on the basis of the summation of the products of the approximate quantities shown in the bid schedule by the unit bid prices. The results of such comparisons will be immediately available to the public. In the event of a discrepancy between unit bid prices and extensions, the unit bid price shall govern.

Vintage argues that these do not apply. It notes that there is no discrepancy between the unit prices written in words and unit prices written in figures, and argues that there is no discrepancy between unit prices and extensions. Instead, the mis[1215]*1215take is in the summing up of the extensions and, as such, is not covered by the specifications.

The state’s response is that the power to correct extension errors necessarily carries with it the power to correct the total price arrived at by summing the extensions. In this case the error was of less significance than that normally covered by the specifications because only one space in the form, the total, rather than two, the total and the mistaken extended item, had to be corrected. The main point made by the standards, according to the state, is that it is the unit price that controls. This point is especially important in this case because this contract is a unit price contract in which quantities have only been estimated. Thus, the total of the extensions of the unit prices is not the contract price.

We agree with the State’s argument. The specifications taken together clearly suggest that the total of the extensions of unit prices is to be used for informational and initial comparative purposes only, and that the critical items are the written unit prices.

As the contracting officer stated, in unit price contracts, “the unit prices are written in words, while the total price is written only in figures.” By contrast, “[i]n bids for lump sum contracts, the total is required to be written in words as well as figures.” The final sentence of Standard Specification 102-1.06 speaks only to discrepancies between prices written in words and figures, not between unit prices written in words and figures. In view of the differences between unit price and lump sum form contracts, the agency’s interpretation that this sentence means any discrepancy between prices in words and figures, rather than just unit price discrepancies, is reasonable and should control.2

Vintage’s other point on appeal is that AIC was given a competitive advantage by the State. If the lowest bidder, other than AIC, had submitted a total bid higher than AIC’s total, then AIC might have argued that its mistake was in the unit price of some item, and its extension, and that the total price was its intended bid. Such an argument, if it were to be accepted by the contracting authority, might give AIC the right to withdraw its bid, or to obtain the contract on the basis of its higher bid. Either would result in a competitive advantage over other bidders.

To test the argument we must determine the approach which should be taken by a contracting officer faced with such a contention. First, he should determine whether the bidder’s claimed actual intent is apparent from the bid as submitted.3 If the contracting officer is unable to say from the documents submitted that the bidder’s intent was apparently to bid the higher figure, no relief should be given and the unit prices bid should control. If the bidder’s intent to bid at the higher figure is apparent, the contracting officer must ask a second, but related, question: would it be unconscionable to hold the bidder to his bid using the rule of construction that unit prices control? If the answer to that question is “no,” relief will not be afforded.

In Alaska Int’l Const. Inc. v. Earth Movers of Fairbanks, Inc., 697 P.2d 626 (Alaska 1985) we assumed that the bidder intended to make a higher bid than that reflected in a written unit price bid. Nonetheless, we held that performance of the written bid could be required so long as it would not be unconscionable to do so. Whether one party’s mistaken intent is or should be known to the other party is a traditional inquiry in determining whether [1216]*1216a contract is voidable. Restatement (Second) of Contracts § 153(b). We rejected this as a sole determinant in public bid cases, AIC v. Earth Movers, supra, but we did not suggest that it was irrelevant. Requiring both apparent intent and uncon-scionability as a pre-requisite to relief is consistent with the goal of protecting the competitive bidding process from manipulation.

Using this approach, it can be seen that no competitive advantage was afforded in this case. The contracting officer could not say from reviewing the bid documents that the total bid figure, rather than the unit prices correctly added, was the bid apparently intended.

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713 P.2d 1213, 1986 Alas. LEXIS 293, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vintage-constr-inc-v-state-department-of-transportation-public-alaska-1986.