This case has once before been heard in this court upon appeal. It was then against the water hoard of the city of Poughkeepsie, which board, under the then existing law, was the proper party defendant. At the Circuit it was held that a contract which specified that certain excavations should be made at certain' prices for rock excavations, and at certain prices for earth excavations, could not be varied by proof that, according to the custom and usage prevailing among contractors and builders, hard pan, was included in neither of these designations. This was held to he error under the concluding clause (paragraph s) of the agreement which provided that, for any work not classified or defined as to price, and which the contractors might be directed to do by the defendant’s engineer, in writing, should be paid for at the cost of the work ordered, with fifteen per cent added. This ruling must be accepted as final on this appeal. The defendant has been substituted according to existing law, and the case has been again tried.
The plaintiffs obtained a verdict, and the defendant appeals to this court.
*3The defendant interposes four defenses :
First. That.the contract was obtained by fraud practiced between the plaintiffs and the engineer of the water board.
Second. That the water board had no power to execute the contract and did not. in point of fact, execute it.
Third. That the work claimed had been paid for.
Fourth. That there was no such usage.
The first question is, was there a valid contract? This inquiry takes in the two first named defenses. The water board was created by chapter 333, of Laws of 1867. By section 6, subdivision 2, of that act, the water board could contract by publishing for proposals for the work for two weeks, and by giving the work to the lowest bidder. This board did publish the required time, and did issue proposals on which biddings could be made, and did, as part thereof, refer the bidders to a proposed contract. This contract did not contain the concluding clause (paragraph s). There were three bidders, Messrs. Leary & Co., the plaintiffs, and one Robert Nelson. Nelson’s bid ivas the lowest.
Evidence was given by the defendant tending to show that plaintiffs’ biddings were changed after the opening of the bids; that some items, not in the proposals, were added by plaintiffs and the engineer; that some were increased and some diminished; that some items were so stated in the form of proposals that no bidding could intelligibly be made; that the second and altered biddings were again changed by plaintiffs and the engineer, by adding work which the water board had expressly refused to award to plaintiffs, amounting to some thousands of dollars. The form of the contract itself was altered so as to require the plaintiffs to keep the work in good order for five months instead of six, as called for by the proposed contract, and paragraph s was added under which the claim in question is made.
It was competent for the jury, under this evidence, to find that the contract was obtained by fraud. The engineer reported to the board that the plaintiffs’ proposal was the lowest bidding.. If it was true that he had, in collusion with the plaintiffs, so framed the contract and proposal as to deter bidding; if he, with like collusion, had changed the plaintiffs’ bidding so as to make it appear the lowest, while in fact it was not so ; if he, until like collusion, had *4altered the proposed contract so as to benefit the plaintiffs after the biddings had been received, and had added paragraph s without the knowledge of the water board, it was a good defense.
The water board proposed a contract to the bidders. The proposal for bids, the proposed contract, and the bidding under it accepted by the water board, made the contract. If there was a dispute as to the facts about paragraph s being added, it should have gone to the jury under proper instructions. The court disposed of these two defenses in a single sentence, so far as the jury were concerned.
“Now I charge;you, in that respect,'the law to be this : If the commissioners have' substantially complied with the law, and have made this contract in good faith with these plaintiffs, the defendant is bound'thereby, and the liability of the defendant is established upon this contract.”
It was not claimed that the water commissioners had acted in bad faith. The charge of fraud was made against the plaintiffs and the engineer, and that the water board was deceived thereby in awarding the contract to plaintiffs. '
“ If,” says the court, “ on the other hand, the plaintiffs were guilty of no fraudulent practices in dealing with the commissioners, if the changes were made in good faith, then you have nothing under that head [fraud] to consider.”
“If there be no contract the plaintiffs may recover upon quantum meruit / a valid existing contract governs all parties.”
“ And therefore the plaintiffs can hold the commissioners to the performance of the contract, and the plaintiffs, on the trial, say that they relied upon this contract; and even if it be invalid or informal the plaintiffs claim to recover for these services, and the law says they may.”
There is no authority given, and the board possessed no power to authorize or add paragraph s. The biddings were called for under a proposed contract, adopted by the board, which did not contain this provision.
The object of the law is plain : bidders were invited to compete with each other on equal terms.
The other bidders had no notice of this paragraph s. With it the plaintiffs are clearly not the lowest bidders. An item of nearly *5§15,000 is added to the contract. ch no public biddings. The added clause is of evil effect, am. ,vas not authorized by the law. (Bonesteel v. The Mayor, 22 N. Y., 162; Brady v. The Mayor, 20 id., 312.)
The added clause was never adopted by the board beyond the signature of its officers.
I think the judgment should be reversed.
Talcott and Pratt, JJ., concur.Judgment and order denying new trial reversed, and new trial granted, costs to abide event.