Hemphill Construction Company, Inc. v. City of Clarksdale, Mississippi , 250 So. 3d 1258 ( 2018 )


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  •                    IN THE SUPREME COURT OF MISSISSIPPI
    NO. 2017-CA-00008-SCT
    HEMPHILL CONSTRUCTION COMPANY, INC.
    v.
    CITY OF CLARKSDALE, MISSISSIPPI
    DATE OF JUDGMENT:                          11/28/2016
    TRIAL JUDGE:                               HON. LINDA F. COLEMAN
    TRIAL COURT ATTORNEYS:                     CHRISTOPHER SOLOP
    CURTIS D. BOSCHERT
    LYNN PATTON THOMPSON
    KIMBERLY TAFT PURDIE
    COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED:                 COAHOMA COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT
    ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANT:                   CHRISTOPHER SOLOP
    LYNN PATTON THOMPSON
    ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEE:                     CURTIS D. BOSCHERT
    NATURE OF THE CASE:                        CIVIL - OTHER
    DISPOSITION:                               REVERSED AND REMANDED - 08/16/2018
    MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED:
    MANDATE ISSUED:
    EN BANC.
    RANDOLPH, PRESIDING JUSTICE, FOR THE COURT:
    ¶1.   The City of Clarksdale (“City”) solicited sealed bids for a public construction project.
    The City received sealed bids from Landmark Construction Company, GCI (“Landmark”),
    and Hemphill Construction Company, Inc. (“Hemphill”). When unsealed, both bids
    exceeded the project’s allocated funds by more than ten percent. Rather than rebidding the
    contract, the City conditionally awarded a contract to Landmark, dependent upon the City’s
    obtaining additional public funds to match Landmark’s bid. The City’s actions were not
    provided for in the public bidding laws. Accordingly, we reverse the judgment of the
    Coahoma County Circuit Court and remand the case to the trial court.
    FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
    ¶2.    In February 2015, the City issued an Advertisement for Bids for the 2014 Community
    Development Block Grant (“CDBG”) Wastewater Improvements – Contract #1 (Equipment
    and Controls). The Advertisement called for the City to receive written, sealed bids at the
    Clarksdale Public Utilities Commission (“CPU”) up to and until 1:30 p.m. on May 27, 2015,
    at which time any bids would be opened publicly and would be considered by the City at the
    next meeting of the Board of Mayor and Commissioners of the City.
    ¶3.    The sealed bids were opened on May 27, 2015, and the Certified Tabulation of Bids
    revealed Landmark’s lump-sum bid was $924,527 and Hemphill’s lump-sum bid was
    $953,800.
    ¶4.    Twelve days later, the City held a meeting. The June 8, 2015, minutes of the City
    reflect that Bill Coker, the City’s grant consultant on the project, presented the Certified
    Tabulation of Bids, which showed that Landmark’s bid, combined with the lowest bid on
    Contract 2: Solid Waste–Denali Water Solutions, LLC– exceeded the project budget by more
    than ten percent, specifically, $216,182.1 Coker advised the City that the Mississippi
    Development Authority would consider increasing CDBG funds by $75,000, and that the
    Clarksdale Public Utilities Commission (“CPU”) would increase its matching funds by an
    1
    The CDBG Wastewater Treatment Improvements Project was broken into two
    contracts: Contract # 1: Equipment and Controls, and Contract # 2: Solid Waste. This
    appeal concerns Contract # 1 only.
    2
    additional $141,182. Coker recommended that the City accept the lowest bids for each
    Contract, contingent upon the funding increase.          The City then accepted Coker’s
    recommendation and decided to award Contract # 1 conditionally to Landmark, dependent
    upon the aforementioned increased funding. The minutes of the City reflect that there had
    been no consideration of the City’s statutory authority to accept either bid.
    ¶5.    On June 19, Hemphill protested the award to Landmark. The City responded to
    Hemphill on July 9, stating that the City disputed Hemphill’s claims, and advised that the
    contract had been awarded to Landmark.
    ¶6.    On July 13, Coker informed the City that the additional CDBG and CPU funding had
    been acquired.   The City then granted the Mayor permission to execute the Mississippi
    Development Authority Modification on Wastewater Treatment Plant Contract, which
    modified the budget by increasing it to $216,182. That same day, the City authorized the
    Mayor to execute a Notice of Award to Landmark.
    ¶7.    Hemphill filed a Bill of Exceptions in the Circuit Court of Coahoma County pursuant
    to Mississippi Code Section 11-51-75 (Rev. 2012), appealing the City’s July 13 decision to
    award the contract to Landmark. Hemphill argued, inter alia,2 that the City had violated
    Mississippi Code Section 31-7-13 by awarding the contract to Landmark, because the bids
    submitted exceeded the allocated funds by more than ten percent. Mississippi Code Section
    31-7-13(d)(iv) provides that:
    2
    Hemphill also argued that it met the requirements for preference under Section 3 of
    the Housing and Urban Development Act of 1968; therefore, the City was required to award
    Hemphill the contract. The circuit court found that Hemphill was not entitled to Section 3
    preference. Hemphill does not appeal that determination.
    3
    if the lowest and best bid is not more than ten percent (10%) above the amount
    of funds allocated for a public construction or renovation project, then the
    agency or governing authority shall be permitted to negotiate with the lowest
    bidder in order to enter into a contract for an amount not to exceed the funds
    allocated.
    Miss. Code Ann. § 31-7-13(d)(iv) (Supp. 2017) (emphasis added). Hemphill argued that the
    City had violated this statute by securing additional funding after the bids were opened
    because the bids were more than ten percent of the total budget, and, therefore, the City could
    not negotiate or enter into a contract with Landmark. Hemphill also argued that, even though
    there is no precise caselaw addressing Section 31-7-13, there are Attorney General public-
    bidding opinions advising municipalities that they are prohibited from securing additional
    funds after bids have been opened to negotiate or enter into a contract with a bidder whose
    bid exceeds the project funds by more than ten percent. See Op. Miss. Att’y Gen. 2012-
    00195 (April 20, 2012); Op. Miss. Att’y Gen. 98-0764 (Dec. 23, 1998). Finally, Hemphill
    argued that the City’s decision to award the contract to Landmark was arbitrary and
    capricious.
    ¶8.    After a hearing, the circuit court held that the City’s award of the project to Landmark
    did not violate state law, finding that:
    [t]he purpose of [Mississippi Code Section] 31-7-13(d)(iv) is to allow a
    governmental entity to negotiate with the lowest bidder to bring the bid within
    the amount of funds allocated. In this case Clarksdale did not negotiate with
    Landmark. Clarksdale obtained additional funds from the MDA and the
    CPUC to meet the lowest bid. The bid laws do not prohibit this, accordingly,
    Clarksdale’s actions were not improper.
    ...
    4
    From a policy perspective, the State Legislature has left the decision on when
    to rebid construction projects with the local governing authorities. [Mississippi
    Code Section] 31-7-13 does not prohibit Clarksdale from obtaining or
    allocating additional funds to meet the lowest bid and since it does not,
    Clarksdale’s award of the Contract to Landmark was not improper.
    ¶9.    It is from this Order that Hemphill appeals. Hemphill requests that this Court reverse
    and remand for a trial on damages.
    ISSUES
    ¶10.   Hemphill frames the issue on appeal as follows:
    Whether the circuit court erred in not finding that Clarksdale violated
    Mississippi Code Annotated Section 31-7-13 when the bids submitted by
    Landmark and Hemphill in response to its Advertisement for Bids exceeded
    the allocated/budgeted funds by more than ten percent (10%) and rather than
    rejecting these bids and re-advertising, Clarksdale elected to secure additional
    funding and awarded the contract to Landmark.
    ¶11.   Hemphill also argues that the City’s decision to award the contract to Landmark was
    arbitrary and capricious. The first issue is case-dispositive.
    STANDARD OF REVIEW
    ¶12.   “Our analysis begins with a determination of the scope of review. Municipalities have
    only such powers as are expressly granted or necessarily implied by statutes. Such powers
    are to be construed most strongly against an asserted right, if the right is not clearly given.”
    Hemphill Constr. Co., Inc. v. City of Laurel, 
    760 So. 2d 720
    , 723 (Miss. 2000) (citing City
    of Jackson v. McMurry, 
    288 So. 2d 23
    (Miss. 1974)). When the public bid laws do not
    expressly provide for the action taken by the municipality, the question becomes whether
    such action is “necessarily implied.” 
    Id. Only if
    the municipality’s action was necessarily
    implied by the statute is the municipality’s action entitled to deference. 
    Id. 5 ¶13.
      For questions of law, a municipal board’s decision is reviewed de novo. Nelson v.
    City of Horn Lake ex rel. Bd. of Aldermen, 
    968 So. 2d 938
    , 942 (Miss. 2007) (citing A &
    F Props., LLC v. Madison Cty. Bd. of Supervisors, 
    933 So. 2d 296
    , 300 (Miss. 2006)).
    “Likewise, this Court applies a de novo standard of review to matters regarding statutory
    interpretation.” Weiner v. Meredith, 
    943 So. 2d 692
    , 694 (Miss. 2006).
    DISCUSSION
    ¶14.   The public-purchase laws concerning bidding requirements neither expressly grant,
    nor clearly give, any municipality the power to award a contract, post-bid-opening, to a
    bidder whose bid exceeded the allocated3 project funds by more than ten percent, nor the
    power to procure additional public funds, post-bid-opening, to award the contract to such
    bidder. Since there is no express grant or clearly given authority, the City is left only with
    the dubious argument that its ultra vires acts were necessarily implied by statute.
    The term “necessarily implied” is somewhat restrictive. “Necessarily implied”
    refers to a logical necessity and means that no other interpretation is permitted
    by the words of the instrument construed, and it has been defined as an
    implication which yields so strong a probability of intent that any intention to
    the contrary cannot be supposed leaving no room for doubt.
    Miss. Pub. Serv. Comm’n v. Columbus & Greenville Ry. Co., 
    573 So. 2d 1343
    , 1346 (Miss.
    1990) (citing Strong v. Bostick, 
    420 So. 2d 1356
    , 1361 (Miss. 1982)). Such an argument is
    untenable, for it cannot be argued fairly that its acts necessarily were implied by statute.
    ¶15.   The City allocated public funds to finance a public construction project. The City then
    solicited sealed bids for the project. Landmark and Hemphill submitted sealed bids. It is
    3
    Allocate: “1. To set aside for a special purpose. 2. To distribute according to plan:
    ALLOT.” Webster’s II New College Dictionary 30 (2001).
    6
    undisputed that, after the bids were unsealed, both bids exceeded the original allocated funds
    by more than ten percent. Therefore, the City was without statutory authority under Section
    31-7-13 to award either bid. Notwithstanding, the City sought and procured additional public
    funds for the project, requiring Landmark to hold its bid open, contingent upon the City’s
    receipt of additional funding. The City then allotted the original allocated funds, plus the
    newly procured public funds, to the project and accepted Landmark’s bid. These steps, taken
    after the bids were opened, frustrate the powers expressly granted, clearly given, or
    necessarily implied in the public-purchasing laws and render the ten-percent limitation not
    only superfluous, but meaningless. “A construction which will render any part of a statute
    inoperative, superfluous, or meaningless is to be avoided.” McCaffrey’s Food Market, Inc.
    v. Miss. Milk Comm’n, 
    227 So. 2d 459
    , 463 (Miss. 1969).
    ¶16.   Mississippi Code Section 31-7-13(d)(iv) specifically provides that, if the lowest and
    best bid is not more than ten percent above the amount of funds allocated for a public
    construction project, then governing authority shall be permitted to negotiate with the lowest
    bidder in order to enter into a contract for an amount not to exceed the funds allocated.
    ¶17.   In considering a statute passed by the Legislature,
    the first question a court should decide is whether the statute is ambiguous. If
    it is not ambiguous, the court should simply apply the statute according to its
    plain meaning and should not use principles of statutory construction.
    Whether the statute is ambiguous or not, the ultimate goal of this Court is to
    discern and give effect to the legislative intent.
    7
    Miss. Ins. Guar. Ass’n v. Cole ex rel. Dillon, 
    954 So. 2d 407
    , 412-13 (Miss. 2007) (quoting
    Miss. Dep’t of Transp. v. Allred, 
    928 So. 2d 152
    , 154 (Miss. 2006)) (internal alterations
    omitted).
    ¶18.   Mississippi Code Section 31-7-13 (d)(iv) is unambiguous. In its plainest terms, the
    statute provides that an agency or governing authority (here, the City) shall be permitted to
    “negotiate . . . to enter into a contract” if the “bid is not more than ten percent (10%) above
    the amount of funds allocated” for the project. (Emphasis added.) Three words/phrases in
    this statute are examined: (1) “funds allocated,” (2) “negotiate,” and (3) “enter into a
    contract.” Each word and phrase must be read together and given effect. See Morgan v.
    State ex rel. Dist. Attorney, 
    44 So. 2d 45
    , 49 (Miss. 1950) (“[E]very word, sentence, phrase,
    or clause in a statute must be given a meaning, if possible, and this rule is not avoided by the
    use of the aid to statutory construction, ‘ejusdem generis.’”). See also McCaffrey’s Food
    Market, 
    Inc., 227 So. 2d at 463
    (statutes “must be viewed or read as an integrated whole, and
    the task of the court is to fit, if possible, all parts of a statute into a harmonious whole.”)
    ¶19.   The first phrase, “funds allocated,” is included twice in the statute. The term “funds
    allocated” is in the past tense and can only refer to funds that already have been allocated,
    not funds to allot in the future. The City’s authority to “negotiate . . . to enter into a contract”
    was limited by the amounts originally allocated for the project, i.e., before the bids were
    opened. Based on the plain and precise language of the statute, the City was without
    statutory authority to negotiate, conditionally accept, or enter into a contract with either
    Landmark or Hemphill based on the amount of funds that the City had allocated when the
    8
    bids were opened. Both bids exceeded the funds allocated for the project by more than ten
    percent, both when the bids were made and later opened.
    ¶20.   Hemphill submitted to the trial court an Attorney General public-bidding opinion that
    recognized this principle. While Attorney General opinions are not binding on this Court,
    “they certainly are useful in offering guidance to the Court.” Jones Cty. Sch. Dist. v. Dep’t
    of Revenue, 
    111 So. 3d 588
    , 602 (Miss. 2013) (citing Shelter Mut. Ins. Co. v. Dale, 
    914 So. 2d
    698, 703 (Miss. 2005)) (citations omitted). In 2012, the Attorney General was asked
    whether the amount of funds allocated for a project may be determined after bids have been
    received. The Attorney General opined that:
    a determination as to the amount of the funds allocated, as contemplated in
    Section 31-7-13(d)(iv), is a factual determination to be made by the public
    entity seeking to procure the construction contract. While there is no specific
    statutory provision directing a public entity as to whether the determination is
    to be made prior to the solicitation of bids or may be made after bids are
    received, such determination as to the amount of funds available for the
    procurement of the proposed construction contract should be made prior to the
    solicitation of bids. In fact, the term “allocated” is in the past tense and
    presumes that the allocation has already been completed.
    Op. Miss. Att’y Gen. 2012-00195 (April 20, 2012) (emphasis added). The Attorney General
    further opined that only the funds that the public entity contemplated using for the
    procurement of the construction contract may be considered to trigger its authority to
    negotiate with the lowest and best bidder under Mississippi Code Section 31-7-13(d)(iv).
    ¶21.   The City unconvincingly counters that Mississippi Code Section 31-7-13 applies only
    when the governing authority “negotiates” with the lowest bidder. The City argues that
    Mississippi Code Section 31-7-13(d)(iv) does not apply in this case because it “did not
    9
    negotiate with Landmark nor did it change the plans and specifications set forth in the
    Advertisement to allow for negotiations.” The City’s actions belie its words.
    ¶22.   Clarksdale conditionally accepted Landmark’s bid before awarding Landmark the
    contract. Clarksdale’s action required Landmark to keep its bid open if and until (1)
    Clarksdale could acquire additional CDBG match funds, (2) Clarksdale could acquire
    additional CPU match funds, (3) approval was given by the Mississippi Development
    Authority, and (4) the City attorney reviewed and approved the transaction. Despite the delay
    created by the City’s conditional acceptance, Landmark reciprocated by leaving its bid open
    for an uncertain time. While the City argues that it did not negotiate with Landmark, one
    need not modify a construction plan or change advertisement specifications to “negotiate.”
    Indeed, “negotiate” is defined as follows: “to transact business,” “to confer with another so
    as to come to terms or reach an agreement,” or “to settle or arrange by conferring or
    discussing.” Negotiate, Webster’s II New College Dictionary 732 (2001).
    ¶23.   Assuming arguendo that the City did not negotiate with Landmark, the applicable
    statute states that a governing authority “shall be permitted to negotiate with the lowest
    bidder in order to enter into a contract for an amount not to exceed the funds allocated.”
    Miss. Code Ann. § 31-7-13(d)(iv) (emphasis added). In reading the statute “as an integrated
    whole,”4 as we must, it is abundantly clear that the statute does not apply exclusively to
    negotiation authority, for the authority to “negotiate” is predicated on the authority also to
    “enter into a contract.” Miss. Code Ann. § 31-17-3(d)(iv). Because both bids exceeded ten
    4
    McCaffrey’s Food Market, 
    Inc., 227 So. 2d at 463
    .
    10
    percent of the funds allocated, the City had no authority to “negotiate . . . to enter into a
    contract” with either bidder.
    ¶24.   Next, the City argues that, “if the Legislature did not want a municipality to have the
    option to obtain additional funding, it would have prohibited it.” The City then asserts that
    “it is reasonable to infer” that it had such statutory authority. Such an argument exposes the
    invalidity of the actions taken by the City. The City did not have authority to procure
    additional funds post-bid-opening, for municipal powers “are to be construed most strongly
    against an asserted right, if the right is not clearly given.” Hemphill Constr. Co., 
    Inc, 760 So. 2d at 723
    . The City unconvincingly urges this Court to hold the opposite, arguing that,
    because the right to procure additional funds post-bid-opening was not clearly given, it is
    reasonable to infer it had such authority. Such a conclusion directly conflicts with this
    Court’s precedent and the body of statutory law that grants municipal entities their public-
    purchasing authority.
    ¶25.   Finally, the City argues that its ultra vires acts were consistent with the principles
    behind the public-purchasing laws because it awarded the public contract “to the lowest and
    best bidder.” This Court previously has rejected this very same argument. In Hemphill
    Construction Co. Inc., Harold West Contractors, Inc., (“West”) submitted the lowest bid for
    a construction project and later was allowed to amend its bid price after the bids already had
    been opened. 
    Hemphill, 760 So. 2d at 722
    . West was the lowest bidder before and after the
    bid amendment, so the City of Laurel chose to award the contract to West. 
    Id. at 723.
    The
    losing bidder (Hemphill) appealed, arguing that Laurel was not authorized by statute to allow
    11
    a bid to be amended post-opening. 
    Id. Laurel responded
    that, because the contract recipient
    ultimately was the lowest bidder both before and after the bid correction, the overall purpose
    (i.e., “spirit”) of the public-bidding laws was met in those circumstances. 
    Id. at 724.
    This
    Court rejected Laurel’s argument, holding that its “decision [was] not intended to impute any
    culpable wrongdoing by the City of Laurel or West.” 
    Id. “While the
    City may be
    comfortable with its decision in this instance, however, the broader public will lose in the
    long run if the public purchase laws are circumvented.” 
    Id. ¶26. The
    foundational principles underlying the statutory requirements of competitive
    bidding negate any inference that the City could obtain additional public funds post-bid
    opening. Such a concocted procedure does not “protect the public from collusive contracts,”
    or “prevent favoritism, fraud, extravagance, and improvidence.” 
    Id. Furthermore, it
    does
    not “promote actual, honest, and effective competition” and it certainly does not allow
    contracts to “be secured at the lowest cost to taxpayers.” 
    Id. Indeed, the
    City increased the
    expenditure of public funds by more than $200,000. The City’s argument that “the public’s
    interests were protected because the contract was awarded to the lowest bidder,” is
    unavailing. As this Court stated in Hemphill Construction Co., Inc., “the broader public
    will lose in the long run if the public purchase laws are circumvented.” 
    Id. at 724.
    CONCLUSION
    ¶27.   The City was without statutory authority to procure additional public funds post-bid-
    opening to award the contract to Landmark, for its bid exceeded ten percent of the public
    funds allocated for the project. We hold that the circuit court erred in affirming the City’s
    12
    decision to award the contract to Landmark. Accordingly, the Court reverses the judgment
    of the Coahoma County Circuit Court and remands the case for proceedings consistent with
    this opinion.
    ¶28.   REVERSED AND REMANDED.
    WALLER, C.J., COLEMAN, MAXWELL, BEAM AND CHAMBERLIN, JJ.,
    CONCUR. ISHEE, J., DISSENTS WITH SEPARATE WRITTEN OPINION JOINED
    BY KITCHENS, P.J., AND KING, J.
    ISHEE, JUSTICE, DISSENTING:
    ¶29.   The majority holds that Mississippi Code Section 31-7-13(d)(iv) precludes a
    governing authority from procuring additional funding for a public-construction project after
    the opening of sealed bids. (Maj. Op. ¶ 27). I would find there to be no such preclusion.
    Accordingly, I must respectfully dissent.
    ¶30.   Section 31-7-13, Hemphill argues (and the majority agrees) required the City to reject
    both bids because they both were ten percent more than the original amount allocated for the
    project. But Clarksdale argues that, while the text of Section 31-7-13(d)(iv) grants a
    municipality the discretion to negotiate under certain circumstances, it does nothing to
    prevent a governing authority from securing additional funding. After examining the text of
    the statute, I agree.
    ¶31.   My agreement with Clarksdale’s position is based on the text of the provision, which
    provides that if the bid is not more than ten percent higher than the amount (originally)
    allocated, a governing authority “shall be permitted to negotiate with the lowest bidder in
    order to enter into a contract for an amount not to exceed the funds allocated.” Miss. Code
    13
    Ann. § 31-7-13(d)(iv) (Supp. 2017) (emphasis added). A plain reading of the text confirms
    that this statute applies only when the governing authority negotiates with the lowest bidder.
    To negotiate means “[t]o communicate with another party for the purpose of reaching an
    understanding[,]” or “[t]o bring about by discussion or bargaining[.]” Negotiate, Black’s
    Law Dictionary (10th ed. 2014). Here, nothing in the record indicates that the governing
    authority (the City) undertook any action which resembled “negotiations” with Hemphill or
    Landmark. Neither discussions nor bargaining took place with either party post-bid; the City
    simply obtained funding to meet the lowest bid.
    ¶32.   Absent from the text of the statute, however, is any language which prohibits a
    governing authority from obtaining additional funding to pay for a public project. To be
    sure, when reading the text of Section 31-7-13(d)(iv), it is reasonable to infer that if all of the
    submitted bids exceed the funding a governing authority possesses for a project, the
    governing authority in that instance has no choice but to reject all bids, as it simply could not
    pay the price of the bid. However, if all bids exceed the budgeted amount for a project, but
    the governing authority can procure additional funding, there is simply nothing in the text of
    the statute that prohibits it from doing so.
    ¶33.    In support of its finding that Section 31-7-13(d)(iv) precluded Clarksdale from
    obtaining additional funding, the majority reasons that the allocated amount is to be
    determined before bid solicitation. (Maj. Op. ¶ 20). In doing so, the majority cites an
    opinion of the Attorney General that—ironically enough—states that, while the funding
    determination should be made before bids are solicited, “there is no specific statutory
    14
    provision directing a public entity as to whether the determination is to be made prior to the
    solicitation of bids or may be made after bids are received.” Op. Miss. Att’y Gen. 2012-
    00195 (April 20, 2012) (emphasis added). So, while that Attorney General’s opinion
    suggests that it may be a wise and preferable policy to require such determination before
    solicitation, it also simultaneously reinforces my position that no statute demands such.
    ¶34.   For the reasons stated above, in the end, I would affirm the City’s award of the
    contract to Landmark. I respectfully dissent.
    KITCHENS, P.J., AND KING, J., JOIN THIS OPINION.
    15