Case Name: Fred Tuke, a Taxpayer, v. J. H. Sundmaker (Dir)
Court: Ohio Circuit Court
Jurisdiction: Ohio
Decision Date: 1910-11-01
Citations: 22 Ohio C.C. Dec. 554
Docket Number: 
Parties: Fred Tuke, a Taxpayer, v. J. H. Sundmaker (Dir).
Judges: Giffen, Smith and Swing, JJ.
Reporter: Ohio Circuit Court Decisions
Volume: 22
Pages: 554–554

Head Matter:
INJUNCTION — MUNICIPAL CORPORATIONS.
[Hamilton (1st) Circuit Court,
November 1, 1910.]
Giffen, Smith and Swing, JJ.
Fred Tuke, a Taxpayer, v. J. H. Sundmaker (Dir).
Award of Contract Enjoined for Irreconcilabiditt pF Proposals.
Injunction lies against award of contract for a municipal improvement .under Gen. Code 4328, where the specifications were impossible of enforcement and the bidders were not made aware of the construction which would be placed upon the specifications in determining which was the lowest and best bid.
Maxwell & Ramsey, for plaintiff.
R. M. Ballard, and F. F. Dinsmore, for defendant.
Affirming Tuke v. Sundmaker, 21 Dec. 615.

Opinion:
GIFFEN, P. J.
The plaintiff seeks to enjoin the execution of a contract for paving Eastern avenue with wood block treated with a heavy or dead oil of coal tar.
The specifications provided that the oil shall be free- from carbon, and it is admitted that a strict compliance with this provision is impossible. It is admitted also that the prior inters pretation of this provision allowed two and one-half per cent of free carbon. The construction applied in awarding this contract was not more than three-fourths of one per cent. It is plain, therefore, that the impossibility of' complying with the specifications was evidenced by each and every sample of oil submitted with the bids, and left to speculation by the bidders the maximum amount of free carbon permitted. While the director of public service had the per cent fixed in his own mind, it was not known to all the bidders nor to all who might desire to bid. Their information must come from the specifications, unless the construction adopted by the director of public service was known to all. The court will not do a vain thing by undertaking the enforcement of that which is impossible or to-reconcile proposals that were confessedly not in compliance with the specifications. We are of the opinion that the director of public service could not legally award a contract to any bidder, because all the proposals as evidenced by the samples of oil submitted failed to comply with the specification as to that material. The execution of the contract will be enjoined.
Smith and Swing, JJ., concur.