Court Opinion

ID: 8508861
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-11-23 08:34:32.314203+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:51:01.424637
License: Public Domain

WILDMAN, J.
This cause was brought to this court by appeal from the court ■of common pleas. It was a suit by a taxpayer in behalf of himself •and other taxpayers to enjoin the board of education, director of the public schools and the A. G. Blair Company from entering into a 'certain contract for the purchase and sale of six thousand tons of Jackson coal for the use of the schools in the city of Toledo. It is •claimed in behalf of the plaintiff that although the board of education had accepted the bid of the A. G. Blair Company to furnish such coal they were not authorized to do so; that the acceptance of the bid and any contemplated contract in accordance with such acceptance were *504invalid, as no<, authorized by the statutory provisions relating thereto; and, also, that' the members of the board, in the acceptance of the bid, acted arbitrarily, and not in view of the welfare of the schools.
As to the first claim, it becomes essential to examine to some extent the sections of the Revised Statutes authorizing the purchase of fuel for public schools. The three sections which have some perti-nency are Rev. Stat. 3987, 3988 and 4017 (Lan. 6466, 6468, 6577). The first mentioned section, Rev. Stat. 3987 (Lan. 6466), empowers the board of education of any district first to “build, enlarge, repair and furnish the necessary schoolhouses, purchase or lease sites therefor, or rights of way thereto, or rent suitable schoolrooms, provide all the necessary apparatus and make all other necessary provisions for the schools under its control;” and, second, to provide fuel for the schools and to do certain other things with regard to the fences and shade and ornamental trees of schoolhouse grounds; and to “make all other provisions necessary for the convenience and prosperity of the schools within the subdistriets. ”
It is to be noted that this authority relates to two classes of acts or proceedings, the one the making of permanent improvements or repairs of schoolhouses and furnishing the same, and the other the making provision for supplies, especially the furnishing of fuel for the schools. Revised Statutes 3988 (Lan. 6468) provides that:
“When a board of education determines to build, repair, enlarge or furnish a schoolhouse or schoolhouses” — using substantially the phraseology in Rev. Stat. 3987 (Lan. 6466) as to the first of the two-classes comprised therein — “or make any improvement or repair provided for in this chapter, the cost of which will exceed in city districts, fifteen hundred dollars, and in other districts, five hundred dollars, except in cases of urgent necessity, or for the security and protection of school property, it shall proceed as follows: 1. The board shall advertise for bids” and after the bids are opened and examined shall accept none but the lowest responsible one. Nothing is said in this section about the purchase of fuel. The provision stops short of any' requirement that advertisements shall be made for bids for the supply of coal or other fuel for the schools, and our judgment is that for this reason Rev. Stat. 3988 (Lan. ’6468) does not apply to the proceeding adopted by the board of education in the present case. Nothing in Rev. Stat. 3987 or 3988 (Lan. 6466 or 6468) requires the purchase of coal from the lowest responsible bidder.
By Rev. Stat. 4017 (Lan. 6577), the management ajLd control of public schools of whatever name or character in the district are given *505to the board of education, with provisions for the appointing of certain subordinate officers or employes. The act provides that “A board' of education in a city district may, at its discretion, elect a director-of schools, who shall serve as such for the term of-two years, unless, earlier removed’, '* * * and any vacancy in this office shall be filled for the unexpired term of such director of schools.” Following this; authority for the election of a director of schools are specific provisions, as to his powers and duties, and a careful examination of the section-discloses that he is given quite broad discretion and large power in-the carrying out of the purposes of this act. Among other things, he is charged with the care and custody of all the property of the-school district, real and personal, except moneys. He is required to-oversee the construction of buildings, in the process of erection, and the repairs of the same. Then comes the provision, which is claimed to relate to the transactions involved in this case:
“He shall advertise for bids and purchase all supplies and equipments authorized by the board. He shall report to the board monthly and oftener if required, as to all matters under his supervision, and' report to the board a statement of its accounts, exhibiting the revenues, receipts, disbursements, assets and liabilities of the board,” etc.
There is no provision in this section as to when or how advertisements for bids shall be made. We have only the general direction that he shall advertise for bids and purchase all supplies and equipments authorized by the board.
We are not inclined to think that the legislature contemplated' that for every trivial requirement in the way of supplies by the board, the director of schools should go to the expense of advertising forbids; because, in many cases, such expense would be greater than the-entire cost of the supplies needed. Taking this clause of the statute-in connection with Rev. Stat. 3988 (Lan. 6468), a construction not unreasonable would require that he should advertise for bids under-such circumstances as are contemplated by that section; in other words, that where bids are required by law, the director of schools is to do the-•advertising for them.
" There is, however, in this section no requirement as in Rev. Stat. 3988 (Lan. 6468), that the board shall accept none but the lowest ’-responsible bid. There is no provision fixing the duties of the direetor-"of schools, after the advertising for bids, except the duty that he-shall purchase all supplies and equipment authorized by the board. We take it that the-board may signify to the director of schools the- ' amount and kind of supplies required, whereupon it becomes the duty *506•of the director to make the proper purchases, and for this purpose he is empowered to close the contract with the seller. And if the con- • ditions of Rev. Stat. 3987 or 3988 (Lan. 6466 or 6468) would require •the board of education to advertise for bids, it is altogether likely that under the same circumstances, where there is no emergency and the .•amount and kind of property require a letting to a bidder, then the director of schools may likewise be required to advertise for bids. But, •.as already suggested, there is nothing in Rev. Stat. 3987 or 3988 (Lan. 6466 or 6468) that requires any advertising for bids for fuel; and we are unable to find anything in either of these sections in connection with Rev. Stat. 4017 (Lan. 6577) that requires anything of the kind.
But assuming for the moment that this construction may not be the correct one, we have no doubt that the board of education may select the kind of fuel which it desires; it may seek to purchase wood, or it may prefer coal; the heating apparatus in the schoolhouse may ■be adapted to either anthracite or bituminous coal. Surely a broad ..discretion is permitted to the board to determine what kind of fuel it ■will adopt. In the present ease the board of education seems to have ■ concluded that Jackson county coal was better adapted to the uses of •the schools than either of the other classes of coal, with regard to which testimony has been given and the furnishing of which was offered in bids.
It sometimes becomes an exceedingly nice question as to how far a discretion is preserved to public bodies or officers to avail them- : selves of the privileges possessed by individuals to buy the best that there is in the market, or on the other hand, as to how far that power 'is limited by the intent of the legislature to guard the public against improvidence and corruption. In the case of permanent structures ■or the repair thereof, it has apparently been deemed not a difficult matter to obtain definite plans and specifications so that the public body may avail itself of'the lowest offer made by a competent builder to construct according to such plans and specifications. But when it • comes to the furnishing of supplies like fuel for schools, a far more difficult question arises. There are so many gradations of quality or ■ convenience of adaptability to heating apparatus or to the experience of janitors or other persons who manage the furnaces, that to require a board of education or director of schools to buy only that which is .apparently the cheapest in price, would, in many eases, draw too narrowly the lines of discretion in enabling public officers to obtain that -which is best adapted to the uses of the schools.
In the case at bar we have had much discussion and considerable® *507•evidence as to what was best adapted to the use of these schools, and which kind of coal was the most economical, considering its heating ■capacity and the price at which it was offered. It seems that there was but one bid for Jackson coal, that of the A. G. Blair Company. There were other bids for Pocahontas and Coshocton coal and some •others; and after a consideration of all, and acting in the light of such experience as the board had had in the use of all these different •classes of bituminous coal, a majority of the board concluded that it was better to purchase the Jackson coal offered by the A. G. Blair Company, than to accept any one of the bids which had been offered for other qualities, kinds or grades. We think that they might legally do this, not losing sight, however, of that just requirement that they •should act in good faith and for the best good of the schools, according to their light and understanding.
And this brings us to the consideration of the second question here, whether the claim in the petition has been borne out by adequate proof that they acted arbitrarily, and without regard to the good of the schools. It has been held with almost complete uniformity by the courts, that there is no judicial power to interfere with that discretion which is given to public bodies like city councils and boards of education in the discharge of their duties, unless there is apparently an abuse of such discretion. In the present ease it appears that there was more or less discussion upon the question of the acceptance of one or another of the bids, and a majority of the members of the board decided in favor of the bid of the A. G. Blair .Company for Jackson coal. They had been furnished with a detailed statement made by the director of schools showing certain tests by experience with different kinds of coal, upon the basis of which he seems to have claimed that the Jackson coal was not the cheapest. Among the witnesses called here was Homer T. Yaryan, a gentleman who has had a very large experience in the use of fuels in the conduct of heating plants. He had used in many of these plants not only the Jackson coal but the other kinds of bituminous coal and he expresses his decided view that no reliable test can be made in the manner in which the tests were made by the director of schools, as is claimed to have been done and to be shown by the tabulated statement submitted to the board of comparisons one season with another of coal consumption. Mr. Yaryan says that a drop of ten degrees in the temperature may cause an increase of 50 per cent in the consumption of coal to produce a desired temperature; and, although less coal of one kind might be consumed in a long continued cold season in a particular school, that still the *508changes of temperature in the one .season or another might so decidedly affect the extent of the consumption of the coal as to. destroy the value of such comparison. It would also seem from'the testimony that the skill of the manipulator of the heating apparatus has some: thing to do with the problem. And Mr. Yaryan says that the use of Jackson coal is attended with less difficulty, requires less experience and skill than does the proper heating of a structure with Pocahontas, coal. The board of education might well take into account such matters a& this in making their choice of fuel.
I might elaborate very much more along this line, in considering the question of. whether the board of education acted in good faith. The party attacking their proceedings takes upon himself the burden of establishing his claim, and we think that the evidence here falls far short of establishing that the board of education acted in bad faith. Indeed, the petition does not quite charge in terms that there' was any corruption or- bad intent. It rather charges, somewhat vaguely, perhaps, that they were careless in the. discharge of their duties, regardless of the good of the schools; that they were arbitrary in the-selection of the bid that was not theGowest responsible one. The evidence,' however, does not lead our minds to the conclusion that they have been so regardless, so careless of the good of the schools as to-justify the finding that there has been an abuse of the discretion confided to them. They are not held to a knowledge of the heating capacity and economy of the Coshocton coal which they may have subsequently acquired in the use of that coal in the schools after their purchase of the Jackson coal offered by the A. G-. Blair Company had been prevented by injunction in the court below. They are held only to-such knowledge as they may fairly be supposed to have had or might reasonably have obtained at the time when they accepted the bid of the A. G. Blair Company; and holding them only to that knowledge, our view is that the burden resting upon the plaintiff to establish his. claim has not been sustained. Our judgment, then, is that the injunction should not have been allowed.
There is another reason why at the present time there should be no injunction. The evidence clearly disclosed that there is no longer any intention on the part of either the board or the director of schools to close any contract with the A. G. Blair Company. The court below rendered a permanent injunction against the entering into of any contract upon the basis of the acceptance of the Blair bid. Both the A. G. Blair Company and the board of education appealed to this court;, at least an official and attorney claiming to represent the board of edu*509cation filed an appeal bond; but the board of education has disavowed his act and upon its application its appeal has been dismissed. There is here offered in connection with the evidence in the case a very clear indication that the board of education does not intend to enter into any contract with the A. G. Blair Company, and, so far as we are advised, the A. G. Blair Company is not pressing its claim to a contract.
There is no reason to apprehend the doing of the things the preventing of which was the object of the suit; and the only aim of the inquiry before us is to determine whether a judgment for costs which has been rendered against the defendants, including the A. G. Blair Company should stand, and incidentally, whether the plaintiff as a taxpayer was entitled to an injunction at the time of the filing of the suit.
Our conclusion on an examination of the whole matter is, that he was not so entitled to an injunction; that his petition should be ■dismissed, and that the defendant now in court, who has come to this -court, by appeal, is entitled to a judgment for its costs. The judgment will be entered accordingly.
Kinkade, J., concurs.