Citation Numbers: 84 Misc. 157, 145 N.Y.S. 910
Judges: Laughlin
Filed Date: 12/15/1913
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/12/2024
In the month of June, 1913, the commissioner of public works of the city of Buffalo, pursuant to authority duly conferred upon him by the charter of the city, and by resolution of the common council, caused plans and specifications for furnishing and installing a system of mechanical refrigeration at the Washington market to be prepared and
It was evidently deemed advisable and decided to prepare plans and' specifications containing material general provisions, with which all proposals were required to conform, affording, however, an opportunity for bidders to submit proposals for furnishing any make or design of refrigerating machines which would conform to all the general requirements of such plans and specifications. Said section of the charter is as follows:
“ Sec. 283. No expenditure dr contract exceeding or involving the sum of five hundred dollars shall be made by the Commissioner of Public Works without the consent of the Common Council. Before the Commissioner of Public Works shall enter into a contract for the performance of any work, the expense of which shall exceed the sum of Five hundred dollars, he shall cause a notice to be published in the official paper, and two other daily papers in the city, twice a week for two weeks, inviting proposals for the same, according to the plans and specifications to be filed in his office, and the contract shall be let to the lowest responsible bidder, who shall furnish security for its performance satisfactory to the Commissioner of Public Works.”
That section was designed to give the taxpayers the full benefit of competitive bidding; and both the law and public policy require that the plans and specifications must be plain and definite and without alternative provisions reserving to the representative of the municipality discretion as to what may be required, to the end that unless a patented article be involved, in which case a somewhat different rule
If the plans and specifications do not conform to that rule they are illegal, and a contract based thereon cannot withstand attack by a taxpayer, even though, as in the case at bar, there be no evidence of fraud, collusion or favoritism. Gage v. City of New York, supra, 415.
There is here no evidence of fraud, collusion or favoritism, but the plans and specifications are ambiguous and indefinite, so much so that bidders were confused and could not know, unless by special inquiry, whether a vertical or horizontal pump was required; and it has been shown conclusively and stands uncontradicted, and, after an adjournment to enable the defendants to controvert it if they could, they came into court and conceded that it cannot be controverted that the proposal of the defendant company to which the contract has been awarded does not, and the refrigerating machine it is required to furnish under the contract as made does not, conform to the requirements of the specifications in that such machine has not the displacement capacity of five cubic feet per ton minute with one hundred revolutions per minute.
The preparation of plans and specifications for this work required special skill and training, and for that reason one representing himself, and supposed to be,
It seems quite clear to me, in the circumstances, that the contract should be canceled and annulled, leaving the city at liberty to revise the specifications and readvertise for proposals. Let judgment be entered accordingly.
Judgment accordingly.