West v. City of Oakland

159 P. 202, 30 Cal. App. 556, 1916 Cal. App. LEXIS 132
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 25, 1916
DocketCiv. No. 1824.
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 159 P. 202 (West v. City of Oakland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
West v. City of Oakland, 159 P. 202, 30 Cal. App. 556, 1916 Cal. App. LEXIS 132 (Cal. Ct. App. 1916).

Opinion

RICHARDS, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment in favor of the defendants, and from an order denying a new trial.

The facts of the case are these: The city of Oakland being about to construct a jail in the upper stories of its city hall, advertised for bids for furnishing and installing said jail. It is conceded that in all respects the legal steps leading up to the award of the contract for such jail construction were duly *558 and regularly taken. In the call for bids the council directed the attention of prospective bidders to the plans and specifications of the proposed work, and required that all bids should be prepared and submitted in accordance therewith. A very material element in the mechanical construction of a modem jail is the locking device; and with reference to this portion of the furnishings to be bid upon, the plans and specifications provided that “The locking device should be simple in construction and operation and entirely free from complicated parts liable to unusual wear. The device shall have positive lever action; shall have indexes indicating the number of each cell so that the operator can set with the lever each door or the entire bank of cells, which shall then with a single movement of the main operating levers open or close any one door or all.” With respect to locking devices for jails the record sufficiently shows that there are several kinds, or rather, designs of these devices differing in mechanical construction, and either patented or controlled by different companies, who are competitors for the installation each of its own particular form or design of locking device. There were four competitors who responded to the defendant’s call for bids — the M. G. West Company, the Pauly Jail Building Company, the Waterhouse & Price Company, and the Ralston Iron Works, Inc. The M. G. West Company submitted with its bid a design of locking device known as the Stewart locking device, which it offered to install in connection with the rest of the work bid upon for the sum of $24,528.50. The Pauly Jail Building Company submitted its own pattern of locking device with its bid for the entire work in the sum of $30,127. The other two bidders were still higher in their bids by several thousand dollars. When the bids were opened the officials of the city council held several sessions for the purpose of investigating the merits of the several locking devices presented, and even sent experts in jail construction to the city of Sacramento, and also to the city of Portland, Oregon, where the M. G. West Company had installed the Stewart design of locking device identical with that which it was proposed by said company to install in Oakland under its bid; but the city council, after quite a careful and exhaustive investigation, found that the Stewart locking device was unsatisfactory in both design and operation, and that it did not meet in these respects the requirements of the plans and specifications; while on the *559 other hand, the locking device of the Pauly Jail Building Company did measure up to those requirements. The city council therefore rejected the bid of the M. G. West Company, although it was the lowest in price, and accepted the higher bid of the Pauly Jail Building Company, whereupon this plaintiff, as a citizen and taxpayer of the city of Oakland, instituted this proceeding to have set aside and canceled the award of the contract for the work to the Pauly Jail Building Company, and the contract made in accordance therewith, and to enjoin the other officials of the city from the payment of any money due or to become due in the course of its execution.

The court rendered its judgment upon the trial of the cause in favor of the defendants, and denied a motion for a new trial, whereupon the plaintiff prosecutes this appeal.

It was not averred by the plaintiff in his pleadings, nor sought to be proven upon the trial of the cause, that the city council of Oakland, or any of the members thereof, acted fraudulently or corruptly in making the award of the work in question to another than the lowest bidder for such work; but the appellant relies for his success upon this appeal upon his construction of certain provisions of the city charter of Oakland with respect to the award of contracts after competitive bidding for public work. ' The sections of the city charter thus relied upon by the appellant are sections 126 and 130 thereof. Section 126 is entitled “Bequirements for bids,” and after providing with much of detail for the form and method of bidding, and for the opening and examination of bids, goes on to declare that the city council “shall award the contract to the lowest bidder except as otherwise in this charter provided.” It also provides that “The council or board, as the case may be, may reject any arid all bids, and must reject the bid of any party who has been delinquent or unfaithful in any former contract with the city, and all bids other than the lowest regular bid.”

Section 130 of the charter is entitled “Public Work to be done by contract,” and provides in part as follows: “In the erection, improvement and repair of all public buildings and works, in all streets and sewer work, and in all work in and about streams, bays or water-fronts, or in or about embankments or other works for protection against overflow or erosion, and in furnishing any supplies and material for the same, or for any other use, by the city, or in the purchasing *560 of any supplies to be used by the city, when the expenditure required for the same exceeds the sum of $500, it shall be done by contract, and shall be let to the lowest responsible bidder after advertising for five consecutive days in the official newspaper for sealed proposals for the work contemplated or supplies to be furnished.”

It is the contention of the appellant that these two sections of the city charter of Oakland are to be read and construed together, and that when so construed the term “lowest responsible bidder” as used in the body of section 130 thereof, and which has reference specially to the construction and equipment of public buildings, is to be held to mean only that the lowest responsible bidder shall be the lowest bidder who has not been delinquent or unfaithful in any former contract with the city; and that otherwise, in every case of contracts awarded by competitive bidding, the council must either award the contract to the lowest bidder or must reject all bids.

We are of the opinion, however, that this is altogether too narrow and binding a construction to place upon these provisions of the Oakland city charter. There are many occasions in the experiences of municipal government when the quality of the thing to be supplied in the course of the public service depends upon conditions which differentiate bidders, and require the exercise of a sound discretion on the part of city officials in determining whether the wares or device which each individual bidder offers in the form of his own exclusive design are such as will meet the particular requirements of the intended work. In order to cover such eases it is quite usual in the provisions of city charters to find such terms as “lowest and best bidder,” or as “lowest responsible bidder,” and the like; and these phrases have been given by the courts a particular meaning, in which it must be presumed they are used by the framers of city charters in the absence of other limiting clauses.

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Bluebook (online)
159 P. 202, 30 Cal. App. 556, 1916 Cal. App. LEXIS 132, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/west-v-city-of-oakland-calctapp-1916.