Court:APPEALS COURT OF MASSACHUSETTS
Citation: 28 Mass. App. Ct. 100
Parties: PEABODY CONSTRUCTION CO., INC. vs. CITY OF BOSTON &
another.1
Docket No.: No. 89-P-866.
County: Suffolk
Hearing Date: September 18, 1989
Decision Date: November 27, 1989
Judges: KASS, CUTTER, & SMITH, JJ.
The city of Boston had discretion under G. L. c. 149, Sections 44A-44J, to
reject a construction contract bid that did not comply with nonstatutory
requirements imposed by the city's bidding documents, with the result that a
Superior Court judge could properly have concluded, in denying a request for a
preliminary injunction, that the rejected bidder had not demonstrated either a
likelihood of success on the merits or a substantial risk of irreparable harm.
[103-106] CUTTER, J., concurring. KASS. J., concurring.
CIVIL ACTION commenced in the Superior Court Department on June 12, 1989.
A motion for a preliminary injunction was heard by Barbara A. Dortch, J.
Sally A. Corwin (Joseph M. Corwin with her) for the plaintiff.
Patrick J. Costello, Assistant Corporation Counsel, for the city of Boston.
John J. Spignesi for Sciaba Construction Corp.
SMITH, J. Peabody Construction Co., Inc. (Peabody), brought an action in the
Superior Court against the city of Boston (city) and Sciaba Construction
Corporation (Sciaba). The verified complaint alleged that the city improperly
rejected its general bid on renovations to Boston Latin Academy
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1 Sciaba Construction Corporation.
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(the project). The complaint sought both declaratory and injunctive relief.
On June 20, 1989, a hearing was held before a Superior Court judge upon
Peabody's application for a preliminary injunction to enjoin the city and
Sciaba from proceeding with a contract awarded to Sciaba for the project. The
judge denied the application, and Peabody sought relief in this court pursuant
to the first paragraph of G. L. c. 231, Section 118. A single justice denied
the petition but directed that the appeal be expedited pursuant to the second
paragraph of G. L. c. 231, Section 118. We find no error.
The facts are not in dispute. The city requires successful general bidders for
its projects to demonstrate, at the time of the bid, that they have set aside
specified portions of the contract work for performance by qualified minority
and women business enterprises. The city's office of minority/women business
reviews the qualifications of potential minority and women businesses and is
solely responsible for certifying those firms before they become eligible for
participation. The names of the certified minority and women-owned firms are
included in a city directory and made available to all prospective bidders. If
a general bidder intends to use a minority or women-owned business not
certified by the city, then a copy of the most recent letter of certification
from the State Office of Minority and Women Business Assistance (SOMWBA) (if
the business is so certified) and an application for certification completed by
the noncertified business must accompany the general bid form at the time of
the bid.
On April 14, 1989, the city invited sealed bids for the project. All the bids
were subject to G. L. c. 149, Sections 44A-44J. The city provided each
interested general bidder with a set of bid documents. The documents included
the following language:
"No bid for the award of this project will be considered acceptable
unless the general contractor complies fully with the following
requirements for Minority/Women Business Enterprise Utilization."
. . . .
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"In the event that the bidder selects a minority/or women business that is
not included in the . . . Directory . . ., then a
certification Application completed by the non-certified business must be filed
with the bid proposal. . . ."
. . . . "If the [city] . . . finds that . . . these procedures require
the submission of special data to accompany the bid, and the bidder
failed to submit such data, then the [city] reserves the right to rule the . .
. failure to submit such data an informality and to
receive said data from the bidder or the [minority business] within a period of
five [5] days from the date of selection of the general contractor . . .
."
Peabody's bid, the lowest, was $10,879,000 followed by Suffolk Construction
Corporation (Suffolk) at $11,243,200, and Sciaba at $11,582,200. Peabody's
general bid listed K & R Construction, Inc. (K & R), a minority
business, as a subcontractor to provide earthwork, demolition, site
improvements, concrete forms, and carpentry on the project. K & R was
certified as a minority business by SOMWBA but not so certified by the city,
and, therefore, its name did not appear in the directory. Peabody's bid was not
accompanied by either a letter of certification of K & R by SOMWBA, or by
an application, completed by K & R, for certification by the city. Sciaba
filed a protest with the city contesting the validity of Peabody's bid. On May
26, 1989, the day after the bid opening, the city notified Peabody that it was
rejecting its bid because K & R was not certified by the city and no
certification application had been filed with the bid.2 On the same day, the city received from Peabody a
completed application for certification of K & R by the city. On June 12,
1989, the city and Sciaba executed a contract for the project.3 The
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2 The city had rejected a general bid by
Sciaba in connection with another project for the same reason it rejected
Peabody's bid.
3 K & R was also listed as a minority
subcontractor under Suffolk's general bid. Suffolk, like Peabody, failed to
include with its bid a letter of certification from SOMWBA for K & R and a
completed application for K & R's certification by the city. Sciaba
protested Suffolk's bid on the same grounds that it protested Peabody's bid.
The city rejected Suffolk's bid. Suffolk did not contest the city's action.
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contract called for completion of the project by September 1990.
The granting or denying of an application for a preliminary injunction
"generally rests within the sound discretion of the judge . . . , after a
combined evaluation of the moving party's likelihood of success on the merits,
its claim of injury, and finally, a balancing of the competing harms to each
party." General Acc. Ins. Co. v. Bank of New England-West, N.A., 403 Mass.
473, 475 (1988). See also Packaging Indus. Group, Inc. v. Cheney, 380 Mass.
609, 615 (1980). "[I]n assessing whether a judge erred in granting or
denying a request for preliminary injunctive relief, we must look to the same
factors properly considered by the judge in the first instance." Cheney,
supra at 615-616.
Peabody argues that the city was compelled to exercise its right to treat
Peabody's omission to accompany its low bid with a completed application for
certification by K & R as an informality unless there was a solid reason
not to do so. None, Peabody contends, has been advanced. Therefore, according
to Peabody, it follows that the failure of the motion judge to grant a
preliminary injunction was an abuse of discretion.
The role of an awarding authority in considering bids filed pursuant to G. L.
c. 149, Sections 44A-44J, is clear. If a bid violates a statutory requirement
in matters of substance the bid must be rejected by the authority. Gil-Bern
Constr. Corp. v. Brockton, 353 Mass. 503, 505-506 (1968). Phipps Prod. Corp. v.
Massachusetts Bay Transp. Authy., 387 Mass. 687, 692 (1982). In such
circumstances the authority lacks discretion in the matter and must reject the
bid "even where no harm to the public authority was shown (Bowditch v.
Superintendent of Sts. of Boston, [168 Mass. 239,] 244 [1897]); where the
violation benefited the public (Grande & Son v. School Hous. Comm. of N.
Reading, 334 Mass. 252, 258 [1956]; East Side Constr. Co. v. Adams, 329 Mass.
347, 352
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[1952]); and where there was no showing of bad faith or corruption (Gifford v.
Commissioner of Pub. Health, 328 Mass. 608, 617 [1952])." Phipps Prods.
Corp., supra. If, however, the deviation from the statutory requirements is
minor or trivial, the authority has discretion and may either accept or reject
the bid. Gil-Bern Constr. Corp. v. Brockton, supra at 506.
In this case, the deviation was not from a statutory requisite but rather from
a requirement imposed by the authority. In such instances, the authority has
the discretion to accept or reject the bid. In J.J. & V. Constr. Corp. v.
Commissioner of Pub. Works of Fall River, 5 Mass. App. Ct. 391 (1977), the
awarding authority required bidders to include a "Certification of Bidder
Regarding Equal Employment Opportunity" with their bids. The invitation
for bids also stated that the authority could waive "any
informalities." The low bidder failed to include the certificate but was
awarded the contract by the authority. This court upheld the authority's
decision as being within its discretion because there had not been a violation
of any statute and this requirement was an informality which the authority had
reserved the right to waive. Also see Builders Realty Corp. of Mass. v. Newton,
348 Mass. 64, 67 (1964), where the court recognized the right of an awarding
authority to exercise its discretion to reject a low bidder because it failed
to comply with a nonstatutory requirement.
Peabody claims that the city in its bidding documents made compliance with its
minority business submission procedures, permissive rather than mandatory. It
points to language, previously quoted, where the city reserved the right to
rule a failure to submit "special data" an informality and to receive
such data from a bidder within a period of five days from the selection of a
general contractor. Peabody contends that a completed application for
certification by a minority business was "special data" and that it
filed such application within the time period specified by the city.
Assuming without deciding that Peabody's interpretation of the term
"special data" is correct, the city retained the
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right in the bidding documents to reject as nonresponsive a bid which did not
comply with requirements set forth in the bidding documents. There does not
appear to be any language in the cases which compels a city to treat an
omission as an informality. The fact that Peabody was the lowest bidder by
hundreds of thousands of dollars does not divest the city of its discretion in
the matter.
Peabody also claims that the city's failure to include a "specific
space" in its bid form for minority certification data precludes it from
rejecting a bid based on the omission of a completed application form. It bases
its argument on G. L. c. 149, Section 44E(3), as appearing in St. 1980, c. 579,
Section 55, which provides that no general bidder "shall be rejected
because of the failure to submit prices for, or information relating to, any
item or items for which no specific space is provided in the bid form furnished
by the awarding authority . . . ." There was no specific space in the bid
form for minority certification data.
Peabody's interpretation of the word "item" to include data
pertaining to minority or women business enterprises is incorrect. The word
"item" as used in the statute refers to more technical matters such
as costs, alternates, materials, supplies, and other matters common to the
construction industry.
Based on the record the motion judge could properly have concluded that Peabody
not only did not demonstrate a likelihood of success on the underlying merits,
but also did not demonstrate a sufficient showing of irreparable harm. In
regard to the latter, we note that in its brief, Peabody maintains that the
city's action raises "a serious question . . . about fair dealing and good
faith on [the city's part] . . . ." It has been held that, in the absence
of bad faith, a bidder wrongfully deprived of a contract may recover only his
bid preparation costs. Paul Sardella Constr. Co. v. Braintree Housing Authy., 3
Mass. App. Ct. 326, 333-335 (1975), S.C., 371 Mass. 235, 243 (1976). However,
if a bidder has complied with all requirements but is deprived of the contract
through some conduct of the awarding authority tantamount
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to bad faith, then the recovery of lost profits is the measure of damages.
Bradford & Bigelow, Inc. v. Commonwealth, 24 Mass. App. Ct. 349, 359
(1987). It appears that Peabody is charging the city with bad faith in
rejecting its bid. If proved at a trial on the merits, Peabody would be able to
recover its lost profits. In the circumstances, therefore, the failure to grant
the injunction would not subject Peabody to a substantial risk of irreparable
harm.
For the above reasons we conclude that the motion judge did not abuse her
discretion in denying Peabody's request for a preliminary injunction.
The order denying preliminary injunctive relief is affirmed.
So ordered.
CUTTER, J. (concurring). I agree with the foregoing decision of the precise
question before us. It is premature now to decide, prior to a trial of the
present case on the merits, whether, on the part of the city, there has been
(a) a lack of good faith, or (b) an abuse of discretion, or (c) merely a
difference of honest judgment in the award of the contract. After a trial, we
will be in a better position to appraise the circumstances mentioned in the
concurrence by Justice Kass, particularly the failure of the city (for what may
prove to have been insubstantial reasons) to save the taxpayers a significant
sum of money by awarding the contract to Peabody.
KASS, J. (concurring). One of the well worn cliches of judicial opinions is:
"we are constrained." It fits here. Adherence to precedent and
judicial restraint, sound orthodoxies both, compel the conclusion we have
reached. The cases line up persuasively that public bidding authorities have
discretion to waive or to count as disqualifying minor defects in bid
responses. Courts, in general, should not second-guess the honest exercise of
discretion by bidding authorities for the excellent reason that a bidding
authority, which has access to trained personnel (e.g., its architect), is in a
better position to
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evaluate the significance of an apparently minor deviation than a judge is.
Nevertheless, in hope that it may provide guidance to bidding authorities about
how they ought to exercise their discretion, I give voice to my concern that
the city of Boston has acted with undue rigidity and perhaps without sufficient
regard to the public interest -- $703,200 worth of public interest (the
difference between Peabody's bid and Sciaba's bid). If the minority contractor
had never been certified as such, the deviation might have been regarded
seriously as in some fashion undercutting the city's minority hiring program.
Here, the contractor in question, K & R, had been certified as a minority
contractor by the responsible State agency, SOMWBA. What needed to be done by K
& R with the city of Boston was, at most, administrative routine. The
missing piece of paper was filed with the city within twenty-four hours of the
bid opening. There is no whisper that K & R was not certifiable by the city
as a minority contractor. The absence of a readily available bit of backup
information has not been shown to have any bearing on the integrity of the bid,
its economic value, the soundness of the building to be done, or the social
objectives of the city. We appreciate the city's concern that it had rejected
(some months earlier) a low bid by Sciaba because of the same sort of bid
defect; but it is questionable whether mere consistency -- of which Emerson had
harsh things to say 150 years ago -- is a sound reason for so costly an
exercise of judgment.
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End of Decision.