DocketNumber: [No. 53, January Term, 1932.]
Judges: Adkins, Bond, Digges, Oeegtt, Parke, Pattison, Sloan, Urner
Filed Date: 4/13/1932
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
This is a suit for specific performance by the appellant against the appellee.
The bill of complaint was filed on the theory that the defendant had agreed to exercise the option, reserved in the franchise granted to the plaintiff's predecessors, to take over at cost the sewer system constructed under said franchise.
The case comes up on appeal from an order sustaining a demurrer to the bill of complaint. The bill alleges that on *Page 456
or about July 7th, 1902, the defendant passed an ordinance entitled, "An ordinance to permit sewer pipes to be laid on Camden Avenue and any of the streets or boulevards intersecting or crossing it," a copy of which ordinance is filed as an exhibit. That pursuant to said ordinance William J. Staton, L.E. Williams, N.T. Fitch, and A.A. Gillis, to whom was granted said franchise to lay sewer pipes on the streets under the conditions in said ordinance provided, were by virtue of chapter 12 of the Acts of 1904 created a body corporate under the name of the Camden Sewer Company, and the said company thereupon received by assignment and transfer from the said Staton, Williams, Fitch, and Gillis the franchise to them granted by said ordinance, and the plaintiff thereupon proceeded to exercise said franchise by laying sewer pipes on certain of the streets in said ordinance named, and has since continued to exercise and still exercises the right and franchises granted by said ordinance. That section 4 of said ordinance provides "that the Mayor and Council shall have the option and right at any time of buying from the said parties (herein called The Camden Sewer Company), their heirs, legal representatives and assigns, all their interest in the said pipes put down by them under the authority of this ordinance upon paying the cost thereof, and of the laying of the same, with interest to the time of such purchase, and thereupon to take and assume absolute control and ownership thereof." That, in the exercise of said option, the said defendant on the 2nd day of August, 1926, filed its bill of complaint, a certified copy of which is filed with the bill, praying that said ordinance and especially the said option clause therein be specifically enforced against said company, and that it be required to transfer and assign unto the defendant herein its said sewer system in accordance with said ordinance upon the payment of the costs thereof, with interest, as might be determined by this court. That plaintiff herein answered said bill, and testimony was taken, and, under order of court, plaintiff submitted to the court auditor its papers, books, accounts, vouchers, and receipts, and the auditor stated an account therefrom showing in detail the various items of *Page 457
cost, the dates of expenditures, and the interest thereon to March 1st, 1927. That thereafter, on June 22d 1928, and before final hearing and decree, the defendant herein filed an order to mark the said case dismissed, and on October 6th, 1928, the court passed an order permitting the defendant herein (the plaintiff in said suit) to dismiss its suit and ratifying said order of dismissal, since which time the defendant herein has made no effort to ascertain for itself or to permit the plaintiff to supply it the total cost of said sewerage pipes, together with the cost of laying the same and the interest thereon, and has refused to take over said sewerage system and pay therefor under the terms of said option, although said cost was and is easily ascertainable. That plaintiff herein (the defendant in said suit) appealed from said order of October 6th, 1928, permitting the dismissal of said suit, and the Court of Appeals on April 2d 1929, by its decision reported in
It has been deemed important to set out at some length the allegations of the bill, as their adequacy to sustain the relief prayed is the whole question before us.
Appellee urges the following reasons why the order of the chancellor should be affirmed:
(1) The granting of specific performance is a matter that rests within the sound equitable discretion of the trial court.
(2) The conduct of the appellant, as disclosed by the record of these proceedings, and the record of the proceedings in No. 46 January Term, 1929 (reported in
(3) The option has never been converted into such a contract as is susceptible of specific performance.
(4) The appellant has been guilty of laches.
It will be convenient to consider these contentions in their order:
1. While it is true that the granting or refusal of specific performance rests largely in the discretion of the chancellor, nevertheless, where the facts alleged and proved entitle the *Page 460
plaintiff to that relief, it is just as much the duty of a court of equity to grant it as to grant any other character of relief, or for a court of law to give damages for breach of contract.Shepherd v. Bevin, 9 Gill, 32, 40; Brewer v. Herbert,
2. In a careful examination of the records in this case and in the case of Camden Sewer Company v. Salisbury,
In considering this question, we cannot accept as facts the allegations of the bill in the former case, except as they are admitted by the answer therein or proved to the satisfaction of this court. A determination of the issues in that case by the chancellor was prevented by the dismissal of the proceedings, against the protest of the defendant therein, the plaintiff in present case. It is true the bill of complaint in the former case alleged that the sewer company had refused the request of the city that the company submit to the city the cost of the pipes and the laying thereof, together with the company's calculation of interest, and further alleged that it also refused the city permission to examine the books and records of the company; but the answer of the company, defendant in that case, denied the allegations of the bill in these respects, and explained that there were claims held by defendant against the plaintiff, which defendant wished to have disposed of when the matter of exercise of the option was considered. We do not find from the testimony in that case the plaintiff therein was unfairly obstructed in its efforts to obtain information. But, however that may be, the previous conduct of the company was known to the city at the *Page 461 time it filed its bill for specific performance in that case, and with that knowledge the city alleged that it had determined and was ready and willing to exercise its option, and asked and obtained the aid of the court in determining the amount it was required to pay in the exercise of its option. It is true that the answer of the defendant averred that its books did not show all the items of cost in constructing the sewer system, and the testimony verified this averment, and from this it is argued that the company neglected some duty which it owed the city, and thereby made it difficult for the city to ascertain the cost. But it appears from the record in that case that the only substantial item not charged on the books was the cost of the pipes. If this item had appeared on the company's books, it would not be conclusive as to either party, and surely the price of such an item was easily ascertainable. It would certainly be unreasonable to hold that the mere failure of the company to enter such item on its books excused the city from performing its contract to take over the system at cost, if there was such a contract, unless it were further shown that the cost price was not susceptible of ascertainment with reasonable certainty and with reasonable effort. That would be just as unreasonable as it would be to hold that, because such item did not appear on its books, the company would not be entitled to prove the cost of such item in determining how much the city should pay in the exercise of its option. If the absence of such items from the books was a material circumstance, the city should have dismissed its proceedings upon the discovery of such omission, and not after holding the company up for two years. And so we do not find anything in the conduct of the plaintiff herein, as disclosed by the record in the former case, which should have influenced the chancellor in passing on the demurrer to the bill in the present case, apart from the contents of the bill itself and the exhibits filed therewith.
3. The city, having filed its bill for specific performance and prayed that the company be required to transfer and assign to the city said sewerage system "upon the payment by the plaintiff to said defendant of the cost thereof plus *Page 462
interest as may be determined by this court," and, pending the determination of the case, having sought and obtained from the chancellor an injunction restraining the company from performing part of its ordinary functions, is now estopped to say that the option has not been converted into a contract susceptible of specific performance. It could have been on no other theory than that the city had made its election that the chancellor restrained the company for more than two years, and compelled it by injunction to submit to acts of trespass on the part of the city, declared to be such by this court in a suit between the same parties reported in Mayor and Council of Salisbury v.Camden Sewer Co.,
There is no indefiniteness in regard to the price to be paid, as in Schwanebeck v. Smith,
4. The fourth objection urged by appellees to the sufficiency of the bill is: Laches on the part of the appellant in enforcing its rights. The question of laches as affecting the sufficiency of a bill of complaint was considered in Kaliopulus v. Lumm,
As the substance of the bill of complaint is set out herein, we need not extend this opinion by further discussion. It is sufficient to say that in our opinion the bill sufficiently alleges an enforceable contract and the refusal of defendant to perform; that nothing appears in the bill or in the record of the earlier case that shows any ground on which the court could reasonably deny the plaintiff specific performance; and that it does not appear that plaintiff has been guilty of such delay as would justify such denial. The order appealed from must therefore be reversed.
Order reversed, and case remanded for further proceedings,with costs to appellant.
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Taussig v. Van Deusen ( 1944 )
State v. Northwest Magnesite Co. ( 1947 )
Carey v. Baltimore County ( 1971 )
Kent County Planning Inspector v. Abel ( 1967 )
Camden Sewer Co. v. Mayor of Salisbury ( 1936 )
Stinchcomb v. Realty Mortgage Co. ( 1937 )