PUBLISHED OPINION
Case No.: 94-3193
Complete
Title
of
Case:SHIRLEY KRUG, FRED
RISSER, ERVIN NOWAK,
JAMES PALMER, ROBERT & BETTY GLOUDEMAN,
DELENE HANSEN, FAY AMERSON, REBECCA YOUNG,
TAMMY BALDWIN AND SPENCER BLACK,
Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
CATHY S. ZEUSKE, JAMES R. KLAUSER,
AND CHARLES H. THOMPSON,
Defendants-Respondents,
HOFFMAN CONSTRUCTION COMPANY,
KAISER CONSTRUCTION, INC.,
MASHUDA CONSTRUCTION, INC.,
PAGEL CONSTRUCTION, AND
JAMES PETERSON SONS, INC.,
Intervening Defendants- Respondents.
Submitted
on Briefs: July 27, 1995
Oral
Argument:
COURT COURT OF
APPEALS OF WISCONSIN
Opinion
Released: January 18, 1996
Opinion
Filed: January
18, 1996
Source
of APPEAL Appeal from an order
Full
Name JUDGE COURT: Circuit
Lower
Court. COUNTY: Dane
(If
"Special" JUDGE: George
W. Northrup
so
indicate)
JUDGES: Eich,
C.J., Gartzke, P.J., Dykman, J.
Concurred:
Dissented: Dykman,
J.
Appellant
ATTORNEYSFor the plaintiffs-appellants the
cause was submitted on the briefs of Lynn Adelman of Adelman,
Adelman, & Murray, S.C., of Milwaukee.
Respondent
ATTORNEYSFor the defendants-respondents the
cause was submitted on the brief of James E. Doyle, attorney general,
with Gerald S. Wilcox, assistant attorney general.
For the intervening defendants-respondents
the cause was submitted on the brief of Robert J. Smith, Carl A.
Sinderbrand, and Hugh N. Anderson, of Wickwire Gavin, P.C.,
of Madison.
COURT OF
APPEALS DECISION DATED AND
RELEASED January
18, 1996 |
NOTICE |
A party may file with the Supreme Court a petition to review an
adverse decision by the Court of Appeals.
See § 808.10 and Rule
809.62(1), Stats. |
This opinion is subject to further editing. If published, the official version will appear in the bound
volume of the Official Reports. |
No. 94-3193
STATE OF WISCONSIN IN
COURT OF APPEALS
SHIRLEY
KRUG, FRED RISSER, ERVIN NOWAK,
JAMES
PALMER, ROBERT & BETTY GLOUDEMAN,
DELENE
HANSEN, FAY AMERSON, REBECCA YOUNG,
TAMMY
BALDWIN AND SPENCER BLACK,
Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
CATHY
S. ZEUSKE, JAMES R. KLAUSER,
AND
CHARLES H. THOMPSON,
Defendants-Respondents,
HOFFMAN CONSTRUCTION COMPANY,
KAISER CONSTRUCTION, INC.,
MASHUDA CONSTRUCTION, INC.,
PAGEL CONSTRUCTION, AND
JAMES PETERSON SONS, INC.,
Intervening Defendants-Respondents.
APPEAL
from an order of the circuit court for Dane County: GEORGE W. NORTHRUP, Judge.
Reversed.
Before
Eich, C.J., Gartzke, P.J., and Dykman, J.
EICH,
C.J. We hold in this case that several 1994 laws authorizing payment
of approximately $300,000 to state highway contractors to cover increased fuel
costs incurred by them in performing the contracts is unconstitutional.
The
law was challenged by a group of state legislators, taxpayers and local elected
officials, on grounds that the payments constituted "extra
compensation" to the contractors in violation of article IV, section 26,
of the Wisconsin Constitution, which prohibits the legislature from granting
"any extra compensation to a ... contractor after the services have been
rendered or the contract has been entered into." The trial court granted summary judgment, declared the law
constitutional, and dismissed the plaintiffs' action. We reverse the order.
The
facts are not in dispute. Prior to
August 1990, the Wisconsin Department of Transportation entered contracts with
several road grading contractors for various highway improvement projects. As a result of the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait
in the summer of 1990, gasoline and other fuel prices increased significantly. After the contracts were performed, five
contractors submitted claims to the department to recoup their increased fuel
costs. In support of their claims, the
contractors argued that a 1982 interdepartmental memorandum, which stated that
the department would provide "fuel adjustments on select grading
projects," obligated the state to pay their claims. The department denied the claims, pointing
out that the contracts did not provide for fuel cost adjustments and that the
memo was extraneous to the bidding and contracting process. The department also believed the payments
would violate article IV, section 26.
The
contractors took their case to the state claims board.[1] The board overturned the department's decision
and recommended that the legislature pay the claims. The legislature did so.
Bills appropriating a total of $305,049.32 to be paid to the five
contractors as "reimbursement for unanticipated fuel cost increases"
were passed and signed into law by the governor in 1994. 1993 Wis. Acts 431-435.
The
plaintiffs sued the state treasurer and the secretaries of the departments of
administration and transportation in circuit court, seeking to enjoin the
payments as unconstitutional. The
contractors intervened and all parties moved for summary judgment. The defendants sought dismissal of the
action. The trial court granted the
defendants' motions and dismissed the plaintiffs' complaint, holding that the
laws were constitutional or, alternatively, that fuel adjustment provisions
could be read into the several contracts as a result of the 1982
interdepartmental memorandum.
Our
review of summary judgments is de novo; we apply the same methodology as the
trial court and consider the legal issues independently, without deference to
the trial court's decision. Hake
v. Zimmerlee, 178 Wis.2d 417, 420-21, 504 N.W.2d 411, 412 (Ct. App.
1993). Summary judgment is appropriate
if there is no genuine issue of material fact and the moving party has
established its entitlement to judgment as a matter of law. Germanotta v. National Indem. Co.,
119 Wis.2d 293, 296, 349 N.W.2d 733, 735 (Ct. App. 1984). And where, as here, both sides move for
summary judgment "we generally consider the facts to be stipulated,
leaving only questions of law for resolution." Rock Lake Estates Unit Owners Ass'n v. Township of Lake
Mills, 195 Wis.2d 348, 356 n.2, 536 N.W.2d 415, 418 (Ct. App. 1995).
As
a general rule, "[s]tatutes carry a heavy presumption of constitutionality
and the challenger has the burden of proving unconstitutionality beyond a
reasonable doubt." Employers
Health Ins. Co. v. Tesmer, 161 Wis.2d 733, 737, 469 N.W.2d 203, 205
(Ct. App. 1991). It follows that
"[e]very presumption must be indulged to sustain the law if at all
possible and, wherever doubt exists as to a legislative enactment's
constitutionality, it must be resolved in favor of
constitutionality." State ex
rel. Hammermill Paper Co. v. La Plante, 58 Wis.2d 32, 46, 205 N.W.2d
784, 792 (1973). We are not concerned
with the wisdom or appropriateness of the legislation but only with its
validity in light of specific provisions of the constitution. Id. at 47, 205 N.W.2d at 793.
The
plaintiffs argue, however, that the laws in question should not enjoy the
presumption of constitutionality because they concern matters of legislative
procedure, not substantive law. They
refer us to City of Brookfield v. Milwaukee Metro. Sewerage Dist.,
144 Wis.2d 896, 912 n.5, 426 N.W.2d 591, 599 (1988), where the supreme court
held that the presumption of constitutionality does not apply where the
constitutional provision sought to be enforced relates only to the "form
in which bills must pass" and not to the substance of the
legislation. The constitutional
provision under consideration in City of Brookfield and similar
cases, however, was not article IV, section 26, but rather the "private
bill" section of article IV, section 18, which states that "[n]o
private or local bill which may be passed by the legislature shall embrace more
than one subject, and that shall be expressed in the title." Because that section "assess[es] the
constitutionality of the process in which the legislation was enacted"
instead of "the constitutionality of the substance of [the]
legislation," the presumption of constitutionality does not apply. Davis v. Grover, 166 Wis.2d
501, 520, 480 N.W.2d 460, 466 (1992).
We
reject the plaintiffs' argument that article IV, section 26, like article IV,
section 18, is procedural only: that its sole concern is "the manner in
which legislation is to be adopted."
Article IV, section 26, does not simply set forth procedure for the passage
of bills; it affirmatively and plainly prohibits the payment of compensation to
state contractors over and above the contract price. And while we have found no case addressing the precise issue, we
do note that the supreme court has applied the presumption to the extra
compensation clause of section 26 in at least one case, State ex rel.
Thomson v. Giessel, 265 Wis. 558, 565, 61 N.W.2d 903, 907 (1953).
We
conclude, therefore, that the presumption of constitutionality applies to our
consideration of the plaintiffs' challenge.
The
defendants argue that the plaintiffs have not met their burden of proving
unconstitutionality beyond a reasonable doubt.
Relying principally on Milwaukee County v. Halsey, 149
Wis. 82, 136 N.W. 139 (1912), they argue that because the payments authorized
by the challenged laws are limited to reimbursement for the contractors'
"actual expenses,"[2]
they do not constitute "compensation" within the meaning of article
IV, section 26. We disagree.
In
Halsey, the legislature authorized the payment of $400 per year
to circuit court judges "`for ... necessary expenses'" incurred in
the performance of their duties over and above their statutory salaries.[3] Id. at 85, 136 N.W. at 141
(quoting Laws of 1889, ch. 263). The
law was challenged under a separate provision in article IV, section 26,
prohibiting increases in judges' "compensation" during their terms of
office. Id. at 85, 136 N.W.
at 141. The supreme court upheld the
constitutionality of the law, concluding, in essence, that
"compensation" means "salary," and that because the law
"expressly distinguished the sum so awarded [to the judges] from
salary," there was no constitutional violation. Id. at 87, 136 N.W. at 141.
Halsey is plainly distinguishable. Halsey deals with not only a different
constitutional provision but also a different factual situation.[4] The contractors in this case are not public
officials who have been allocated an "allowance for expenses," as
were the judges in Halsey, id. at 87, 136 N.W.2d at
141, or who receive a "fixed salary payable out of the public treasury of
the state," see Board of Supervisors v. Hackett, 21 Wis.
613, 617 (1867), or for costs incurred during the performance of official
duties. They are private contractors,
and the constitutional provisions at issue bar the legislature from granting
them extra compensation over and above that established in their contracts.[5]
We
consider Carpenter v. State, 39 Wis. 271 (1876), despite its
age, to be far more instructive on the
"extra compensation" language of article IV, section 26. In Carpenter, the secretary of
state had apparently promised to pay a state printing contractor not according
to the terms of the contract but for the actual cost of materials and the value
of his labor. When the legislature declined
to consider the contractor's claim for increased payment based on his actual
costs, he sued. The supreme court held
that payment of the claim, even if ratified by the legislature, would be
unconstitutional.
Such compensation
of a public contractor is prohibited by [section 26]. Whether the prices of the contract were high or low, reasonable
or unreasonable, the plaintiff has or had a right to recover them against the
state; and neither secretary nor legislature could abridge that right. But he had and has no right to recover for
his work and material at different prices, and neither secretary nor
legislature could or can, by any agreement or legislation, give him such a
right. The exact measure of his right
is determined absolutely by his contract, under the constitution; and there exists
nowhere a discretion to vary it.
Id. at 282-83. The court also
noted that the purpose of the excess contract compensation language of section
26 was "to save the legislature from the importunity of public contractors
and servants, and the treasury from the discretion of the legislature in their
favor; to limit contractors with the state, beyond pretense and device, to the
precise compensation fixed by their contracts," and it concluded,
"Where there is no fraud or mistake ... the contract itself must
govern." Id. at
284-85.
The
highway contractors in this case, like the printing contractor in Carpenter,
contracted to provide "work and material" to the state at an agreed
price, and they now seek to vary the terms of payment. As in Carpenter, if their bids
turned out to be low, the contractors would be bound by the contract, just as
the state would be required to pay the contract rate if the accepted bids
turned out to be high. A similar result is compelled here. Giving 1993 Wis. Acts 431-435 every presumption
of constitutionality, we are satisfied beyond a reasonable doubt that they are
unconstitutional as providing extra compensation to the contractors within the
meaning of article IV, section 26.[6]
Finally, we address the
alternative holding of the trial court: that even if the additional payments
are considered "compensation," they do not constitute
"extra" compensation under section 26 because the 1982
interdepartmental memorandum had the legal effect of incorporating a fuel
adjustment clause into the 1990 highway contracts.
The
memorandum begins by discussing an earlier practice of the department of
"implement[ing] cost adjustment provisions (escalators) for cement,
asphalt and fuel on appropriate contracts." The practice had been adopted in 1979 because of "the
contractor's inability to procure price quotes at the bidding stage for
critical materials which were subject to extreme market fluctuations" at
that time. And although the department
stated in the 1982 memo that a change in the earlier practice was appropriate
because "there no longer exists support for continuing the price
adjustment provisions as initiated in 1979," it proposed
"insert[ing]" fuel adjustments on "select grading projects"
in order to "continue to receive the most competitive and favorable
grading prices."[7]
We
do not consider the 1982 interdepartmental memorandum, as the contractors would
have us do, as an agreement or "commitment" by the department
"to provide fuel cost adjustments" on all future grading projects. At best, the memorandum expressed the department's
intention, in 1982, to provide for such adjustments on "select grading
projects" and to implement the policy by "insert[ing]" such
adjustment provisions in the specifications for "appropriate ...
projects." There is nothing in the
record to indicate that the department determined any of the 1990 contracts to
be either eligible or "appropriate" for the inclusion of fuel
adjustment clauses in the job specifications, or that any such provisions were
included in the contract documents or specifications.
We
agree with the plaintiffs that the most that may be gleaned from the 1982
memorandum is that fuel adjustment clauses would be placed in select contracts
when the department deemed it appropriate to do so and that none were placed in
the contracts at issue here.[8]
Because
we hold that 1993 Wis. Acts 431-435 are unconstitutional and reject the
defendants' "contract" arguments, we reverse the decision and order
of the circuit court holding to the contrary.
By
the Court.—Order reversed.
No. 94-3193(D)
DYKMAN,
J. (dissenting). I
agree with the majority's interpretation of article IV, § 26 of the
Wisconsin Constitution. Thus, the
question for me is whether the State contracted in advance to pay road grading
contractors for increased fuel costs or whether the fuel cost adjustment
payments were after-the-fact payments made to the contractors because of
escalating fuel prices caused by the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait.
This
is a mine-run contract case, once the constitutional issue is resolved. I view the question for review as whether
the materials submitted on summary judgment demonstrate that the State directed
construction and design engineers to include contractual fuel cost adjustment
clauses in contracts for some or all of the projects.
Because
this case is here on summary judgment, I agree that we follow the methodology
explained by the majority. A party is
entitled to summary judgment if there are no disputed issues of material
fact. Germanotta v. National
Indem. Co., 119 Wis.2d 293, 296, 349 N.W.2d 733, 735 (Ct. App.
1984). After examining the affidavits
submitted by the parties, we may reach one of the following three results:
(1) the affidavits unambiguously demonstrate that the State intended to
include fuel cost adjustment clauses on select projects but only after an
individualized inquiry into the facts of a particular contract; (2) the
affidavits unambiguously demonstrate that the State intended that all grading
contracts have fuel cost adjustment clauses; or (3) the affidavits are
ambiguous because reasonable persons could interpret them either way. The trial court chose the second interpretation
while the majority chooses the first.
The
material submitted by the legislators in support of their motion for summary
judgment consists of 1993 Senate Bills 516 through 520, the memorandum written
by Michael E. Jaskaniec, a draft copy of the proposed fuel cost adjustment
clause, and a contract between the Wisconsin Department of Transportation (DOT)
and the Vinton Construction Company.
The defendants submitted an affidavit signed by David Hoffman, the
president of Hoffman Construction Company and a member of the Wisconsin Road
Builders Association.
Because
the Jaskaniec memorandum is critical to deciding this case, I quote it in its
entirety:
Date: February 3, 1982
To: District
Director, District # ___
Attn: Chief Construction Engineer
Chief
Design Engineer
From: Michael E. Jaskaniec, P.E.
Chief Construction Engineer
Subject: Cost Adjustment Provisions
By
memo of July 27, 1979, the Districts were provided background information and
guidelines for the implementation of cost adjustment provisions (escalators) for
cement, asphalt and fuel on appropriate contracts. The principal justification for price adjustments was the
contractor's inability to procure price quotes at the bidding stage for
critical materials which were subject to extreme market fluctuations. The very competitive and stable bids
received over the past three years supports the effectiveness of these
provisions.
In the
monitoring of market indicators we have reasonable confidence that adequate
supply and moderate price structuring has stabilized critical material
availability relating to contract bidding.
Accordingly, there no longer exists support for continuing the price
adjustment provisions as initiated in 1979.
This position has been reviewed with construction industry
representatives and concurred in with the exception of the grading
industry. The graders, representing the
highest unit users of fuel (20% - 40% of cost) continue to express substantial
concern regarding the potential for extreme impacts of fuel costs to work under
contract as a result of Mid-East instabilities. In order for the Department to continue to receive the most
competitive and favorable grading prices, we will continue to provide for fuel
adjustments on select grading projects.
This fuel provision is a new and simplified approach and completely
changed from our previously used fuel adjustment specification. For your information, we have attached a
draft copy of the proposed specification.
It will be inserted by the central office on appropriate major grading
projects taking into consideration the time of letting, anticipated progress of
the work and expected carry-over into subsequent calendar years. The cost adjustment will be based on changes
in the Department's index and applied to final quantities on the final
estimate. Hopefully, this new approach
will limit administrative problems, limit contractor's risk and continue to
provide a favorable bidding environment.
We encourage the districts to assess their major grading projects in
consideration of the foregoing and make a recommendation in their PS&E
letter as to the appropriateness of the fuel provision.
The
Department will continue to monitor and publish monthly material indexes for
asphalt, cement and fuel. Should future
market conditions change, we propose to reinitiate cost adjustments when and
where warranted.
Feel
free to forward any comments, questions or concerns you may have regarding this
transmittal.
By
Chief Construction Engineer
The
Hoffman affidavit states that DOT "agreed and committed to provide fuel
cost reimbursements when warranted due to major market fluctuations." Hoffman further averred:
Hoffman
Construction Company and other grading contractors have consistently relied on
this DOT agreement and commitment. We
have consistently bid on projects using then existing fuel prices without any
additional component to account for market fluctuations, and have relied in
good faith on DOT's representation that it would reimburse extraordinary fuel
expenses due to market fluctuations.
Pursuant
to summary judgment methodology, I must consider whether the Jaskaniec
memorandum, the fuel cost adjustment clause, and the Hoffman affidavit create
disputed issues of material fact. Germanotta,
119 Wis.2d at 296, 349 N.W.2d at 735. I
conclude that this material could reasonably be interpreted to support the
legislators' position. The use of the
term "select grading projects" can reasonably mean that if a fuel
cost adjustment clause is appropriate for a particular project, the fuel cost
adjustment clause would be inserted in the contract. Since the clause was not included in the defendants' contracts,
reimbursing the contractors for increased fuel costs would be after the fact
and, therefore, violate art. IV, § 26 of the Wisconsin Constitution.
But
the material could also be reasonably interpreted to support the defendants'
position. The Jaskaniec memorandum
refers to all cost adjustment provisions, not just those for fuel. A part of the memorandum specifically refers
to the grading industry and the prior practice of "price adjustment
provisions." It uses the word
"continuing" in reference to the prior practice. It concludes: "Should future market conditions change, we propose to reinitiate
cost adjustments when and where warranted." The memorandum was addressed to district directors, not to road
grading firms. In his affidavit,
Hoffman averred that he relied upon the Jaskaniec memorandum when submitting
bids containing no fuel cost adjustment clauses. He averred that DOT represented that it would reimburse
extraordinary fuel expenses.
A
reasonable interpretation of the same summary judgment material could be that
the road graders got their information about the new fuel cost adjustment
policy from the district directors, and that this information was sufficient to
permit the graders to reasonably conclude that the prior agreed practice would
continue. The Jaskaniec memorandum did
not inform the district directors that there would be no fuel cost adjustment
clause unless one was specifically inserted in the contract. The documents show that DOT's contract began
by acceptance of the contractor's bid.
Thus, the contractor's understanding of the State's position on fuel
cost adjustments would be crucial to determining what the State and the
contractors agreed. I conclude that a
reasonable interpretation of the summary judgment material would permit a
conclusion that a prior agreement existed between the grading contractors and
the State and that grading contracts would be subject to increased fuel cost
adjustment provisions.
Having
determined that the summary judgment documents could reasonably be interpreted
as both the legislators and the defendants contend, the only conclusion I may
draw is that summary judgment should be denied, and that a trial should be held
to determine the intent of the parties to the various contracts. Intent is not an issue that can be decided
on a motion for summary judgment. Lecus
v. American Mut. Ins. Co., 81 Wis.2d 183, 190, 260 N.W.2d 241, 244
(1977). At trial, testimony of the
district directors and others could be heard, and the trial court could assess
the credibility of the witnesses to determine the intent of the parties to the
contracts. Once that intent is
determined, the court could consider whether the constitutional prohibition
against after-the-fact contract adjustments is applicable and grant judgment
accordingly.
If
an examination of DOT's and the contractors' intent reveals that both intended
that the fuel cost adjustment clause would be a part of all DOT grading
contracts, it would be unfair not to interpret those contracts in that
way. But if DOT and the contractors had
differing beliefs as to the fuel cost adjustment provisions, it would be unfair
for the contractors to recover their additional fuel costs because ordinary
contract principles require a meeting of the minds for a contract to
exist. See Garvey v.
Buhler, 146 Wis.2d 281, 289, 430 N.W.2d 616, 619 (Ct. App. 1988). If no meeting of the minds occurred,
awarding the additional fuel costs would be after-the-fact payments prohibited
by art. IV, § 26 of the Wisconsin Constitution. We will never know which scenario is correct because the majority
has concluded that the contractors cannot win under any view of the facts. I cannot agree and, therefore, I
respectfully dissent.
[1] The claims board, comprised of two
legislators and representatives of the governor's office and the departments of
administration and justice, is empowered to receive and investigate claims
"presented against the state" as referred by the department of
administration, and to make recommendations to the legislature for payment or
non-payment. Sections 15.105(2) and
16.007(1), Stats. The statute provides, "No claim or bill
relating to such a claim shall be considered by the legislature until a
recommendation thereon has been made by the claims board." Section 16.007(1).
[2] The plaintiffs do not dispute the defendants'
assertion that the contractors' claims for payment do not include any sums for
"salary, labor, profit or other mark-up."
[3] In 1912 there were only five judicial
circuits in Wisconsin, and the judges were required to travel to and from
several counties to hold court. The
judges' annual salaries were set at $3,600, and the legislation provided that
each judge was to receive an additional $400 per year "`as and for his
necessary expenses while in the discharge of his duties as such
judge.'" Milwaukee County v.
Halsey, 149 Wis. 82, 85, 136 N.W. 139, 141 (1912) (quoting Laws of
1889, ch. 263).
[4] The same may be said with respect to another
case cited by the defendants, Geyso v. City of Cudahy, 34 Wis.2d
476, 149 N.W.2d 611 (1967), where the court considered whether a municipal
ordinance similarly barring increases or decreases in the salaries of local
officials during their terms of office prohibited the municipality from
increasing the officials' expense allowances in mid-term. The court upheld the increases, holding that
"[t]he words salary and expense are separate and distinct terms which
connote entirely different concepts."
Id. at 483, 149 N.W.2d at 614. Geyso, like Halsey, is
distinguishable on both the facts and the law.
[5] Two other cases, cited by the defendants as
limiting the term "compensation" to salary or wages, are also
inapposite. In the first, Board
of Supervisors v. Hackett, 21 Wis. 613 (1867), the supreme court
defined compensation as "signif[ying] the return for the services of such
officers as receive a fixed salary," id. at 617; the court
did not address article IV, section 26, in the context of private persons or
entities, such as the contractors in this case, who do not receive a salary,
public or otherwise.
The second case, Gename v.
Benson, 36 Wis.2d 370, 153 N.W.2d 571 (1967), did not involve the
constitution at all. It was a private
contract action where a housekeeper sought to recover from her employers on a quantum
meruit theory, and the issue was whether she had already been
"compensated" for her services.
In the course of its discussions of that issue, the court noted, in dicta,
that "reimbursement for expenses is not compensation," and went on to
hold that the payments already received by the housekeeper had fully
compensated her for the services rendered.
Id. at 377, 153 N.W.2d at 574.
Neither
case advances the defendants' position.
[6] Both the state defendants and the contractors
argue cursorily that whether the payments to the contractors constitute
"extra compensation" is a question of legislative "fact"
and thus beyond our review. It is true
that courts, in assessing a law's constitutionality, may not "reweigh the
facts as found by the legislature."
State ex rel. Strykowski v. Wilkie, 81 Wis.2d 491, 506,
261 N.W.2d 434, 441 (1978). The
defendants do not explain, however, what those legislatively found facts are,
other than to suggest that the legislature, in passing the challenged laws,
must have concluded that it was not granting the contractors any extra
compensation in violation of article IV, section 26. We reject the notion that the legislature can find, as a matter
of legislative fact, that a statute is constitutional and thus preclude
judicial inquiry into that "fact."
It goes without saying that determining the constitutionality of
statutes is a function of the courts; it is not a matter of conclusive
self-declaration by the legislature.
[7] The memorandum stated in pertinent part:
In order for the Department [of Transportation] to
continue to receive the most competitive and favorable grading prices, we will
continue to provide for fuel adjustments on select grading projects. [A] ... fuel adjustment specification ...
will be inserted by the central office on appropriate major grading projects
taking into consideration the time of letting, anticipated progress of the work
and expected carry-over into subsequent calendar years.
... Should future
market conditions change, we propose to initiate cost adjustments when and
where warranted.
[8] The contractors also suggest that the
memorandum constituted an "offer" by the department to grant fuel
adjustments to contractors who submitted the most competitive and
"favorable grading prices," and that the state should be estopped
from denying fuel adjustments to those contractors submitting bids in reliance
on that "offer." An offer,
however, is not a promise, and the law distinguishes promises from statements
of intention or opinion, "`and from a mere prophecy.'" Goetz v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins.
Co., 31 Wis.2d 267, 273, 142 N.W.2d 804, 807 (1966) (quoted source
omitted). "`[A] mere expression of
intention or general willingness to do something on the happening of a
particular event or in return for something to be received does not amount to
an offer.'" Id.
(quoted source omitted).