Wormser-Goodman Construction Co. v. Borough of Belmar

77 A. 466, 80 N.J.L. 240, 51 Vroom 240, 1910 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 68
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedAugust 29, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 77 A. 466 (Wormser-Goodman Construction Co. v. Borough of Belmar) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wormser-Goodman Construction Co. v. Borough of Belmar, 77 A. 466, 80 N.J.L. 240, 51 Vroom 240, 1910 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 68 (N.J. 1910).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Voorhees, J.

This is a rule to show cause why a certiorari should not be allowed to review the passage of two ordinances by the borough council, one on June 21st, 1910, and the other on July 5th, 1910.

The controversy arises out of the efforts on the part of-the borough to erect a sewage disposal plant or septic tank. The [241]*241borough had been at first urged to institute this work and then threatened with the prosecution by the state board of health for the pollution of the ocean by allowing the waste from the borough to be emptied into the ocean for lack of a proper disposal plant. Before the passage of the ordinances in question, another or other ordinances had been passed whereby certain plans for the construction of a disposal plant had been prepared hy Mr. Hill, one of the prosecutors, and accepted by the borough. These plans referred to in the earlier ordinances as the plans of the “City Waste .Disposal Company,” involved the pumping of the sewage.

The construction company had then submitted a bid founded upon these plans for the erection of the plant which it claims had been accepted and a contract concluded between it and the borough, hy reason of the fact that a committee of the borough had recommended the acceptance of a submitted contract upon the hid of the construction company, provided certain modifications of it were made regarding the time when the work under it should begin.

The construction company claims that when it was notified of this modified acceptance, it immediately submitted a contract to the borough embodying the change suggested, together with a bond for the faithful performance of the contract. The borough denies this, and says that no contract was actually concluded, hence the existence of a contract between the company and the borough is in dispute.

After the proceedings had reached this point, the borough alleges that it ascertained that pumping stations of the character of ¡lie one proposed hy the Hill plans had been unsuccessful at other places along the shore, emitting noxious odors and becoming in other ways nuisances; that the lot selected by Hill for the location of the proposed station was not available to the borough; the title thereof being in dispute, and for these, and perhaps additional reasons, the borough concluded not to proceed under the Hill plans, but to erect a different plant, eliminating the pumping feature under plans prepared hy another man, and thereupon adopted the ordinances under review.

[242]*242The ordinance of June 21st, 1910, recites the passage of the ordinance of August 17th, 1909, authorizing the construction of a sewage disposal plant and system for use in connection with the present sewer system under the plans of the City Waste Disposal Company and the making of contracts therefor; that that ordinance was passed under the belief that the land designated in the plans for the location of the pumping station could be obtained by the borough, but that litigation for that purpose had been decided adversely to the borough, and whereas after investigation, it appeared that a disposal plant could be established without a pumping station and at less cost, and that the state board of health had approved such change, acceding to plans designed by Clyde Potts, proceeds to amend the ordinance of August 17th, 1909, by substitution of the Potts’ plans for the Hill plans, and the repeal of all inconsistent ordinances. The ordinance of July 5th, 1910, is to the same effect, except that it is in form an original enactment and not an amendment.

The borough then advertised for bids, under the Potts’ plans, received a bid from one Heilman, which was the lowest bid, effecting a saving to the borough on the previous scheme of construction of several thousand dollars, and thereupon the borough by resolution withdrew from any negotiations or contracts which had previously existed between it and Hill and the construction company.

Meanwhile, the construction company, on the modified plans, had submitted a bid which, however, was not the lowest, Heilman being still lower. Before negotiating or concluding with Heilman, the borough endeavored to induce the construction company to take the modified contract at the same figure that Heilman had agreed to, having first obtained Heilman’s consent thereto; this the construction company refused to' do.

It is to be here remarked, however, that in submitting their bid on the new plans, the construction company did it with a reservation that it should not interfere with any rights which it had then acquired by reason of its bid and submitted contract with the borough upon the Hill plans or any rights [243]*243accruing to it therefrom. The rule granted restrained the borough from entering into any contract upon the bids received.

It will be noticed that two prosecutors have joined, Hill and the construction company. It may be doubtful whether this may be done. But for the purpose of the case, it may be assumed that such joinder is not objectionable.

It must also be observed that neither Hill nor the construction company are taxpayers or residents of the borough, and therefore their standing to prosecute must rest entirely upon the fact that they are holders of contracts with the borough which have been abrogated by the borough, by means of the passage of the ordinances under review, and therefore have rights which are taken away or interfered with adversely by the ordinances.

For the purposes then of this case, it may be assumed, without deciding, that contracts are held by each of the prosecutors with the borough which the borough has on its part refused to perform or permit the prosecutors to perform either directly or by necessary implication by the passage of the ordinances. Just here it must he further remarked that upon the refusal of the construction company to take the modified contract at the same bid as Heilman, the borough, although restrained from actually entering into a contract with Heilman, yet holds the bid of Heilman for acceptance. Heilman has not been made a party to this proceeding, and if the prosecutors prevail in this case, his rights under his lowest bid must necessarily be cut off without granting him an opportunity to be heard.

It will be seen therefore that the prosecutors are seeking by means of this writ not to enforce their alleged existing contracts with the borough, nor to recover damages for the breach of the contract by the borough, a breach arising because of the borough’s refusal longer to recognize the existence of the contract and its refusal to allow the contractors to perform, but the prosecutors are endeavoring to set aside certain ordinances which have displayed the intention of the borough to refuse performance by substitution of other and [244]*244different plans, and thus render the contracts incapable of performance and seek to stay the proceedings on the part of the borough, pending this controversy between it and the contractors.

The ordinary method for redress of injuries for the refusal to allow a contract to be carried out is either by a suit in equity for its specific performance or by a common law action to' recover damages, including profits, which would have accrued to the contractor had he been allowed to proceed. Neither of these objects can be obtained in this proceeding. The writ of certiorari

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
77 A. 466, 80 N.J.L. 240, 51 Vroom 240, 1910 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 68, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wormser-goodman-construction-co-v-borough-of-belmar-nj-1910.