White v. Moore

136 A. 218, 288 Pa. 411, 1927 Pa. LEXIS 474
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 11, 1927
DocketAppeal, 137
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 136 A. 218 (White v. Moore) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
White v. Moore, 136 A. 218, 288 Pa. 411, 1927 Pa. LEXIS 474 (Pa. 1927).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Frazer,

This proceeding is under section 217 of the School Code of May 18,1911, P. L. 309, for the removal of school directors for violation of the provisions of section 708 *413 of the code, relating to the purchase of supplies, and also section 617 relating to the letting of contracts for construction or repairs. After answer filed and testimony taken, the judge who heard the evidence died before adjudication was entered and the case was referred to another judge who filed an opinion in which he found, as a fact, that respondents had violated the provisions of section 708 in that they purchased coal in an amount in excess of $1,300 without publication in accordance with the provisions of that section. The court therefore made an order removing three of the directors from office, the term of office of the remaining two having expired in the meantime. Prom such order we have this appeal.

The provisions of the School Code which must be construed in disposing of this appeal are as follows: “Section 706. School supplies shall be divided into two classes. The first class shall include school desks, chairs, typewriters, and school apparatus. The second class shall include maps, globes, and all other supplies, except textbooks, necessary for school use, not included in the first class.

“Section 707. When it is deemed necessary to purchase desks or other supplies of the first class, costing one hundred dollars ($100) or more, the board of school directors shall solicit sealed quotations from two or more firms, manufacturers, or dealers in such supplies, and at regular meeting shall open such bids and quotations, and shall accept the lowest bid, when the kinds of supplies offered, and their kind, quality, and character of material, are the same, or are equal or satisfactory; Provided, that any school district may purchase school furniture and other equipment from another district, without asking for competitive bids.

“Section 708. All supplies of the second class, costing three hundred dollars or more, shall be awarded and purchased only after public notice has been given by advertisement, published once each week for three weeks in *414 not less than two newspapers of general circulation: Provided, That, in any district where no newspaper is published, said notice may, in lieu of such publication be posted in at least five public places. Such advertisement or notice shall give all necessary information, or give notice of convenient access thereto, in such manner that bidders can intelligently make bids for such contracts.”

The petition charged respondents failed to comply with the above provisions in purchasing school supplies of the first class, consisting of desks, piano, janitor’s supplies and a flag pole, and also failed to advertise for bids for coal and school supplies of the second class, consisting of pencils and tablets. The alleged violation of section 617, relating to the procuring of competitive bids for labor and materials in the construction or repairing of buildings, consisted of the failure to require contractors to give bond for the laying of sidewalks, grading and pointing. Many of these charges were not supported by proof, while others were satisfactorily explained by respondents, and the court below based its opinion solely on the admitted failure of respondents to advertise or post notices requesting bids for coal, saying: “We therefore experience no difficulty in finding the fact that the respondents have violated the requirements of the School Code in the respect referred to. It is therefore unnecessary to consider the other matters of the complaint.”

The court below based its conclusion on the assumption that the contract for the purchase of coal was within section 708 of the code specifying the method of advertising for the purchase of school supplies of the second class. After a careful examination of this and other sections of the act, we are unable to agree with the court below in its classification of coal. The sections which it is charged respondents violated are under article YII which bears the general heading “books, furniture and supplies,” and the first section (701) requires the board to “purchase all necessary furniture, equipment, text *415 books, school supplies and other appliances for the use of the public schools......and furnish the same free of cost for use in the schools. All furniture, equipment, books, school supplies......for the use of the public schools therein, shall be purchased in the manner provided in this act.” Section 708, quoted above, divides “school supplies” into two classes. Clearly coal is not a “school apparatus” within the first class, and it seems equally clear that it does not come within the phrase “other supplies......necessary for school use, not included in the first class.” The entire article VII indicates the “supplies” the legislature had in mind were such as are generally used by pupils or for their instruction, and not such materials as might be needed in connection with the maintenance of buildings, like fuel, light, water or repairs. These matters properly belong to the subject of “Grounds and Buildings” under article VI, the first section of which (section 601) provides that “The board of school directors of each district shall provide the necessary grounds and suitable school buildings to accommodate all the children between the ages of six and twenty-one years, in said district, who attend school. Such buildings shall be constructed, furnished, equipped, and maintained in a proper manner as herein provided, suitable provisions being made for the heating, ventilating and sanitary conditions thereof, so that every pupil in any such building may have proper and healthful accommodations.”

Section 630 of article VI provides that “The board of school directors in any school district may, in the manner herein provided, enter into any contract with any person, firm, association, or corporation for the furnishing of light, heat, or water to such school district, for any term not exceeding five years.” While the purchase of coal is not necessarily the “furnishing” of heat, it is necessary to the “maintenance” of the school buildings in a “proper manner” within section 601 of the act and the “manner herein provided” for letting the contract is *416 covered by section 617, as amended by the Act of July 10, 1919, P. L. 889, requiring contracts in excess of $300 to be entered into “with the lowest responsible bidder, upon proper terms, after due public notice has been given asking for competitive bids.”

The reason stated by respondents for failing to advertise or post notices is that no newspaper was published in the district and that past experience of the board had shown that posting did not result in the procuring of bids, and they had, accordingly, established the custom of sending letters to dealers in the community and elsewhere, asking for sealed bids. This course was pursued in the present case, letters having been mailed to ten different coal dealers and bids received from four of them, these bids having been opened and the contract awarded to the lowest bidder at a regular meeting of the board.

The above construction is further supported by other provisions of the act in which fuel is recognized as being distinct from school supplies.

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Bluebook (online)
136 A. 218, 288 Pa. 411, 1927 Pa. LEXIS 474, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/white-v-moore-pa-1927.