Title: COLCLAZIER v. STATE ex rel. OKLAHOMA INDIGENT DEFENSE SYSTEM BOARD

State: oklahoma

Issuer: Oklahoma Supreme Court

Document:

COLCLAZIER v. STATE ex rel. OKLAHOMA INDIGENT DEFENSE SYSTEM BOARD  COLCLAZIER v. STATE ex rel. OKLAHOMA INDIGENT DEFENSE SYSTEM BOARD 1997 OK 161 951 P.2d 622 69 OBJ 57 Case Number: 85926 Decided: 12/23/1997 Mandate Issued: 01/14/1998 Supreme Court of Oklahoma JERRY L. COLCLAZIER, AMIE R. ROSE, COLCLAZIER, ROSE & ASSOCIATES, P.C., an Oklahoma professional corporation; GEORGE W. BUTNER, d/b/a BUTNER AND BUTNER, a partnership; and WILLIAMS D. HUSER and JOHN E. LIVELY, d/b/a HUSER, HUSER AND LIVELY, a partnership, Appellants, vs. STATE OF OKLAHOMA, ex rel. OKLAHOMA INDIGENT DEFENSE SYSTEM BOARD; and OKLAHOMA INDIGENT DEFENSE SYSTEM, Appellees. ON CERTIORARI TO THE COURT OF CIVIL APPEALS DIVISION I ¶0 The appellants petitioned the district court for a writ of mandamus and an award of damages for failure of the Oklahoma Indigent Defense System Board to follow its statutory mandate in awarding the indigent defense contract for fiscal year 1994 to the appellants. The trial court granted [951 P.2d 623] judgment to the appellants and awarded $1.00 plus costs, and denied attorney fees. Upon appeal, the Court of Civil Appeals remanded to the trial court with directions to enter judgment for damages in favor of the appellants in the amount of $47,259.67 plus prejudgment interest. CERTIORARI PREVIOUSLY GRANTED; OPINION OF THE COURT OF CIVIL APPEALS IS VACATED; JUDGMENT OF THE TRIAL COURT IS REVERSED AND REMANDED. Amie Rose Colclzier COLCLAZIER & ASSOCIATES, P.C. Seminole, Oklahoma For Appellants, W.A. DREW EDMONDSON Attorney General of Oklahoma YASODHARA MOHANTY Assistant Attorney General Oklahoma City, Oklahoma ALMA WILSON, Justice: ¶1 The dispositive issue presented to this Court is whether a writ of mandamus is proper to correct abuse of discretion by a governmental agency in awarding a contract, where the contractual period has expired, and the services that were the subject of the contract have been performed. We hold that a writ of mandamus is improper under such facts. ¶2 The Oklahoma Indigent Defense System Board is composed of five members appointed by the Governor with the advice and consent of the Senate. ¶3 At the June 13, 1993, Board meeting, the Board first voted on the appellants' bid, which ended in a 2-2 tie vote. The Board then voted on the other in-county bid, Pyron and Phelps, and the same result occurred. The Board informed the attorneys that the matter would be taken up at its next regularly scheduled meeting, on June 18. The appellants left the meeting, and the Board then voted 4-0 to award the contract to Pyron and Phelps. Upon learning of the Board's actions, the appellants protested the award and the Board rescinded the contract and published a second "Notice of Invitation to Bid" in the Oklahoma Bar Journal on June 26, 1993, to be considered at a special meeting on June 30. Two of the appellants, Colclazier and Rose, filed a petition for writ of mandamus in the District Court of Oklahoma [951 P.2d 624] County, and obtained an alternative writ and order from the district court directing the Board to produce certain records by July 5, 1993. Before the June 30 ¶4 The appellants then filed this lawsuit in the Oklahoma County District Court seeking a writ of mandamus, money damages, costs, and attorneys' fees. After hearing evidence, Judge Leamon Freeman found that there was no legal authority to permit the Board to solicit new bids, that the contract awarded was therefore void, and restrained the Board from implementing the contract. No attempt was made to reimplement the contract, and pursuant to statute, the indigent defense for fiscal year 1994 for Seminole County was done on a rotating basis from an approved list of attorneys. ¶5 The lawsuit was transferred by agreement of the parties to the District Court of Cleveland County. Although the trial in Cleveland County ended one month before the end of the 1994 fiscal year, judgment was not entered until after the fiscal year. In the Judgment and Decree, the trial court issued a writ of mandamus directing the Board to award the contract to the second-lowest bidder, the appellants, for the year 1994 in the amount of $97,200.00, but stayed enforcement of the writ holding that the relief sought "had been mooted by the expiration of the contractual period." The court awarded the appellants nominal damages of $1.00; and denied all parties attorneys' fees. The appellants appealed and the Court of Civil Appeals affirmed the issuance of the writ of mandamus and the denial of attorney's fees, but reversed the trial court's award of nominal damages and held that the attorneys were entitled to the actual damages sustained in the amount of $47,259.67. We have previously granted certiorari. ¶6 The general rule for a writ of mandamus to issue is that the party seeking the writ must have a clear legal right to the relief sought; the respondent must have a plain legal duty in which the exercise of discretion is not implicated; and it may be issued only in situations where there is no plain and adequate remedy in the ordinary course of the law. Oklahoma Gas & Electric v. District Court, 1989 OK 158, ¶8, 784 P.2d 61 . In pursuing a writ of mandamus ordering the Oklahoma Indigent Defense System to award the contract to the appellants, the appellants also sought an award of damages, and attorneys' fees. We find that the appellants have not shown a clear legal right to the relief sought. ¶ ¶8 After Judge Leamon Freeman found that the Board had no legal authority to solicit new bids, had voided the contract and restrained the Board from implementing the contract, the Board fell back on the rotation system pursuant to 22 O.S.Supp.1992, § 1355.8(G)(2). The appellants then freely and voluntarily participated in the rotation system, provided services throughout the time period involved in this lawsuit and received payment in the amount of $49,940.33. By that conduct they abandoned any claim to the fruits of a contract-based controversy and acquiesced in the defense regime to the rotation system. Neither the district court nor this Court can now grant the relief sought to enforce the contract as originally bid by the appellants. Such would pay the appellants for services already completely performed by other lawyers and fully paid for by the Oklahoma Indigent Defense System. Statutory bidding procedures serve the public interest and are not for the benefit or enrichment of bidders. Rollings Construction Inc. v. Tulsa Metropolitan Water Authority, 1987 OK 95, 745 P.2d 1176 . ¶9 Accordingly, the opinion of the Court of Appeals is VACATED, the judgment of the trial court is REVERSED, and the trial court is directed to dissolve the writ it issued and which it subsequently stayed as moot. ¶10 SUMMERS, V.C.J., HODGES, SIMMS, OPALA, and WILSON, JJ., concur. ¶11 KAUGER, C.J., and WATT, J., concur in result. ¶12 LAVENDER, J., dissents. ¶13 HARGRAVE, J., disqualified. FOOT