dissenting:
I dissent.
On September 11, 1959, the City of Reno and Mapes Enterprises, Inc., signed a lease agreement covering certain concessions at the Reno Municipal Airport. The parties later amended their agreement, both as to the length of the lease and as to the procedures to be followed if the lessee, Mapes, elected to renew the lease. Under the terms of the amendment, the period of the lease was adjusted to run from January 1, 1960, to December 31, 1970. The renewal clause specified that if Mapes wished to renew the lease, notice of intention to do so had to be given in writing to the City within 180 days following January 1, 1970. The renewal clause further provided that in the event the City and Mapes could not reach an agreement prior to October 1, 1970, regarding the new rent to be paid the City for the renewal of the lease, then the City had the right to advertise for and accept bids for the lease of the concessions. Mapes notified the City on January 12, 1970, that it elected to renew the lease. The City and Mapes could not, from January 12, 1970, to September 29, 1970, reach any agreement on the amount of rent to be paid by Mapes for the new term of the lease. On September 29, 1970, the City voted to grant Mapes an additional period to negotiate the rent, to and including October 12, 1970. The parties failed to reach an agreement within the extended period. On October 12, 1970, the City denied an additional request by Mapes to extend the negotiation period. The City then decided that it was necessary to go to open bidding.
On November 9, 1970, the City approved the specifications and bid documents to be made available to public bidders. The Notice to Bidders, which was published in the Reno newspapers, stated that the sealed proposals to be submitted would be opened and read publicly on December 10, 1970, and that the City would make a determination no later than December 14, 1970, as to the best bid submitted. The notice further stated that Mapes would have the right to meet the terms of that best bid, by making the same or a higher or better offer. In the event that Mapes did not meet the designated best offer, the City could award the lease agreement to the party who had submitted the best proposal, or could reject all bids.
On December 14, 1970, as provided in the Notice to Bidders, the City determined that the bid of Appellant Louis Wiener, Jr., was the best bid. Thereafter, on December 18, 1970, Mapes submitted to the City a bid that it designated a first offer. The first offer also contained an “alternate bid” that *132was to be considered by the City if Mapes’s first proposal was rejected.1
The Reno City Council met on December 21, 1970, pursuant to the terms set forth in the Notice to Bidders, to award the contract. The Mapes and Wiener bids were the only proposals under discussion. The City decided that Mapes’s first bid was not a better offer than the bid previously submitted by Wiener. The City then accepted Mapes’s alternate bid. The effect of this procedure was to give Mapes two bids, while all other bidders were limited to a single bid.
Wiener then sought in the district court a preliminary injunction to prevent the City and Mapes from finalizing the lease agreement. After a hearing on the motion, the district judge denied it. Hence, this appeal.
With regard to the propriety of judicial review, it is generally agreed that the courts will not interfere with the discretionary actions of city officials absent fraud, corruption, or abuse of discretion. 10 E. McQuillin, The Law of Municipal Corporations § 29.83 (3d ed. 1966). In my opinion, that principle is not applicable on the facts of this case, since the court is reviewing the actions of the City in an area where there is no room for discretion in the face of overriding public policy considerations.
When the City, of its own volition, decides to award a municipal contract or lease agreement after seeking public bids, the courts should not hesitate to intercede where it is apparent that the bidding process established by the governmental agency, albeit in good faith, destroys the very principles of public policy that form the underlying basis of competitive bidding. The courts should scrutinize the conduct of the bidding process by any governmental agency when it appears that a violation of the public trust may be involved.
The principal issue on this appeal is addressed to the propriety of allowing a right of first refusal in a competitive bidding situation, where that right allows one bidding party to obtain an unfair advantage over the remaining bidders. It is a *133generally recognized principle of law that the purpose of public bidding is to protect the public interest, i.e., to invite competition; to guard against possible favoritism, fraud, or extravagance; and to insure that the public is fully protected. McQuillin, supra, § 29.29.
On August 17, 1962, when the City and Mapes agreed upon the terms of the renewal procedure, the City was not required to invite public bids on the concession rights at the airport. See NRS 496.090 in the form in which it was in effect on August 17, 1962, and through April 3, 1967. Nor was the City required to invite public bids on such contracts under the current provisions of NRS 496.090, which became effective April 4, 1967. Nevertheless, the express terms of the lease renewal clause provided that such bidding would be required if the parties could not reach a new agreement within the time specified. Whether competitive bidding enters the picture by statutory requirement or by voluntary agreement, the bidding procedure used must be conducted reasonably and fairly and in such a way as to insure protection of the public interest. In my opinion, allowing Mapes to submit the same or a higher or better offer after publication of all bids and designation of the best bid rendered the competitive bidding process a sham.2
The right of first refusal is a valid and useful concept of contract law when it is applied in the appropriate context. But when such a right is given to a single party in competitive bidding for governmental contract awards, that procedure, in my opinion, should be held void, as being against the interests of the group to be protected — the public. When public bidding is deemed to be necessary, all prospective bidders must stand in the same position. Consequently, the bidding procedure in this case should be amended and then performed in a manner that conforms to the principles of public policy, as set forth herein.
No award should be given on the basis of the prior bidding procedure. To hold otherwise would result in the elimination of Mapes by judicial fiat. Strict adherence to the dictates of public policy requires that bids should be called for anew and the bidding process be completed in a proper manner, with all prospective bidders participating on an equal footing. I would therefore reverse and remand the case to the district court with *134instructions to enter an order directing the City to submit the lease agreement to open bidding in accordance with the views just expressed.
Zenoff, C. J., concurs.ALTERNATE BID
“In the event the above proposal is rejected by the City, Mapes Enterprises, Inc. offers to meet the percentages bid by Louis Wiener, Ir. and to increase the minimum annual guarantee to $251,000 per year.
“If the bid of Louis Wiener, Ir. is, for any reason, withdrawn or disqualified, this bid and alternate bid are withdrawn and Mapes Enterprises, Inc. reserves its contract rights in regard to any other bid the City might determine to be the best bid.”
What contractor bidding on a public project would spend the time, money, and effort to submit a valid, bona fide bid, knowing that another bidder would have the right to “outbid” him even after his bid was accepted as the “best bid”?