Judges: JOHN CORNYN, Attorney General of Texas
Filed Date: 11/3/1999
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 7/6/2016
Office of the Attorney General — State of Texas John Cornyn The Honorable Steven B. Payson Dawson County Attorney P.O. Box 1268 Lamesa, Texas 79331
Re: Whether a contract for ambulance service may be exempt from competitive-purchasing requirements in the County Purchasing Act, chapter 262, subchapter C of the Local Government Code, and related questions (RQ-0042-JC)
Dear Mr. Payson:
You ask whether the Commissioners Court of Dawson County may contract for ambulance service pursuant to the County Purchasing Act (the "Act"), Tex. Loc. Gov't Code Ann. ch. 262, subch. C (Vernon 1999), without engaging in competitive bidding. Because the contract for ambulance service is necessary to preserve or protect the public health or safety of residents of the county, the commissioners court may by order exempt it from the Act's competitive bidding requirements.
You also ask whether the county may seek bids on the ambulance contract, open and reject all bids, and decide to exempt the contract from the Act's competitive-purchasing requirements. See Letter from Honorable Steven B. Payson, Dawson County Attorney, to Opinion Committee, Office of the Attorney General (Mar. 12, 1999) (on file with Opinion Committee) [hereinafter "Request Letter"]. After seeking competitive bids for ambulance services and rejecting all of them, the county may not immediately proceed to award the contract to a bidder who is not the lowest dollar bidder meeting specifications. However, once the Commissioners Court has decided in good faith to end the bidding process and to begin again the process of contracting for ambulance services, it may decide to exempt the ambulance service from the competitive bidding requirements of the Act.
You inform us that Dawson County has bid out the ambulance service for ten years. The last two times have been for four-year contracts with a county subsidy, which consisted of $55,000 a year under the second four-year contract. The contract ended on January 1, 1999, and the present ambulance service provider asked for a subsidy of $72,000. The ambulance service was submitted to public bidding and four bids were received and opened on January 25, 1999. The current provider requested a $72,000 subsidy, while other bidders sought lesser subsidies. The Commissioners Court rejected all bids at a special called meeting on February 8, 1999, and sought advice from this office. See Request Letter,supra. Pending the issuance of this opinion, we understand that the county has retained on a month-to-month basis the previous provider, who was the highest bidder, at the subsidy requested in his bid. See id.
A commissioners court may contract with a private entity to provide ambulance service for the county. Tex. Health Safety Code Ann. §
(1) an item that must be purchased in a case of public calamity . . .;
(2) an item necessary to preserve or protect the public health or safety of the residents of the county;
. . . .
(4) a personal or professional service;
. . . .
Tex. Loc. Gov't Code Ann. §
You suggest that a contract for ambulance service may be exempt from competitive-purchasing requirements either as a matter affecting the public health or safety, see id. § 262.024(a)(2), or as personal or professional services, id. § 262.024(a)(4). Attorney General Opinion M-806 of this office construed a prior version of the County Purchasing Act, see Act of May 25, 1967, 60th Leg., R.S., ch. 376, § 1, 1967 Tex. Gen. Laws 870 (formerly codified as Tex. Rev. Civ. Stat. Ann. art.
We conclude that a contract for ambulance service is an item necessary to preserve or protect the public health or safety of county residents, and that a commissioners court consequently may exempt the contract from the Act's competitive-purchasing requirements under section
In Hoffman the Texas Supreme Court held that a county need not competitively bid a contract for the purchase of items necessary to protect or preserve the public health, regardless of whether the purchase was necessitated by a public calamity. See Hoffman,
We find no change in the law that warrants a reversal of the conclusion in Attorney General Opinion M-806 that ambulance service is an item affecting the public health. "The institution of an emergency ambulance service is . . . incident to the police power of the state: i.e.[,] to protect the health, safety, and general welfare of its citizens." Brantley v. City of Dallas,
You suggest that because the county has competitively bid the contract for ambulance service for the past ten years, and because other counties similarly competitively bid contracts for ambulance service, a custom has developed that prevails over the statute exempting a contract of public-health items from the competitive-bidding requirement. A statute is not repealed by nonuse, but remains in full force and effect until it is amended or repealed by the legislature, or impliedly repealed by an irreconcilable statute. Interstate Forwarding Co. v. Vineyard,
You also ask whether the ambulance service is excepted from the competitive purchasing requirements of the Act by the exception in that Act for personal or professional services. See Tex. Loc. Gov't Code Ann. §
Someone who claims to have rendered "personal services" must have performed the services himself. . . . If the contract you ask about requires a specific person to perform janitorial services, it is a contract for personal services. If the contract merely requires a person or a corporation to provide persons who will perform janitorial services, it is not a contract for personal services.
Tex. Att'y Gen. Op. No.
This office has recognized in previous opinions that the term "professional services" in the Act may encompass more than the services of physicians, attorneys, or others traditionally regarded as "professionals." See Tex. Att'y Gen. Op. No.
We turn to your second question: whether a county that accepts and opens bids may reject the bids, claim that the contract is exempt from the County Purchasing Act's competitive-purchasing requirements, and award the bid to a bidder other than the lowest bidder?
Once a county determines that it will competitively bid a particular contract, it must publish notice of the proposed purchase and open bids on the date specified in the notice. See
Tex. Loc. Gov't Code Ann. §§
(a) The officer in charge of opening the bids shall present them to the commissioners court in session. Except as provided by (e) [pertaining to contracts for the purchase of road construction material], the court shall:
(1) award the contract to the responsible bidder who submits the lowest and best bid; or
(2) reject all bids and publish a new notice.
The commissioners court may award the contract to a bidder other than the lowest dollar bidder if (1) the bidder is a responsible bidder, and (2) the commissioners court complies with the following procedure:
(c) A contract may not be awarded to a bidder who is not the lowest dollar bidder meeting specifications unless, before the award, each lower bidder is given notice of the proposed award and is given an opportunity to appear before the commissioners court and present evidence concerning the lower bidder's responsibility.
Instead of complying with subsection (c), Dawson County Commissioners Court rejected all bids and attempted to exempt the contract from competitive bids and award it to a bidder other than the lowest bidder.
You argue that, once the commissioners court decides to use the competitive bidding process to purchase an item that it may exempt from competitive bidding, it must award a contract by competitive bidding. Request Letter, supra. If the commissioners court rejects all bids, you believe that its only option is to reissue the bid notice, changing the specifications if it deems this necessary, and begin a new round of competitive bidding. We disagree.
Your argument is based on the mandatory language of section
We disagree with you, however, as to the nature of the duty imposed by subsection 262.027(a). We read this provision as requiring the commissioners court to publish a new notice if it continues to seek a contract through competitive bidding. Subsection
The commissioners court has the authority under common law to rescind or modify purchasing decisions it has made under the County Purchasing Act, and nothing in the express language of section 262.027(a) repeals this power. After it has rejected all bids, and before it publishes a new notice, it may modify or rescind its prior decision to seek competitive bids. Thus, it may change the specifications for an item before publishing a new notice, or rescind entirely its decision to seek an item through competitive bidding and decide to contract with another political subdivision for ambulance service or to provide this service itself. See Tex. Health Safety Code Ann. §
We conclude that, after the Dawson County Commissioners Court rejected all bids for the ambulance service, it was not limited to seeking new bids. It could decide to rescind its decision to seek ambulance services through competitive bidding and begin the procurement process anew, exercising its authority under section
While the Commissioners Court may decide, after rejecting all bids, to exempt the ambulance service from the requirements of the Act, it may not do so in a way that violates section
If the commissioners court has sought competitive bids on a contract for ambulance service and rejected them all, it is not thereafter required to continue using the competitive bidding process until it awards a contract. Section
Yours very truly,
JOHN CORNYN Attorney General of Texas
ANDY TAYLOR First Assistant Attorney General
CLARK KENT ERVIN Deputy Attorney General — General Counsel
ELIZABETH ROBINSON Chair, Opinion Committee
Susan L. Garrison Assistant Attorney General — Opinion Committee
Interstate Forwarding Co. v. Vinyard , 121 Tex. 289 ( 1932 )
Hoffman v. City of Mt. Pleasant , 126 Tex. 632 ( 1936 )
Brantley v. City of Dallas , 545 S.W.2d 284 ( 1976 )
Maryland Casualty Co. v. Crazy Water Co. , 160 S.W.2d 102 ( 1942 )
August A. Busch Co. v. Caufield , 135 S.W. 244 ( 1911 )
Ayala v. City of Corpus Christi , 507 S.W.2d 324 ( 1974 )
Interstate Forwarding Co. v. Vineyard , 3 S.W.2d 947 ( 1928 )
Head v. Scurr , 8 S.W.2d 819 ( 1928 )
Gulf Refining Co. v. City of Dallas , 10 S.W.2d 151 ( 1928 )