Alabama Water Co. v. City of Anniston

110 So. 36, 215 Ala. 120, 1926 Ala. LEXIS 371
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedOctober 28, 1926
Docket7 Div. 647.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 110 So. 36 (Alabama Water Co. v. City of Anniston) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alabama Water Co. v. City of Anniston, 110 So. 36, 215 Ala. 120, 1926 Ala. LEXIS 371 (Ala. 1926).

Opinion

SAYRE, J.

June 20, 1910, the city of Anniston and the Anniston Water Supply Company entered into a contract in writing whereby, to state its effect roughly, but *121 sufficiently for the purposes of this case, the parties agreed that the supply company should furnish water to the city and its inhabitants, and, in connection therewith, should enjoy certain rights and privileges, among others the right to be paid for its services at specified rates. Purther, to quote from the contract:

“It is agreed that this contract shall continue for a space or term of twenty (20) years from July 1, 1010, and the city promises to pay for the use of each hydrant which may be furnished by the party of the first part [the Water Supply Company], or its assigns, at the rate aforesaid, payments for each and all hydrants furnished by it to begin thirty (30) days from July 1, 1910.”

At that time the plant of the Water Supply Company was incumbered by two mortgages, ■viz., a first mortgage securing bonds in the sum of $300,000, and a second mortgage in the sum of $100,000, all maturing October 1, 1919.

The contract concluded with a provision in the following language:

“It is further expressly agreed and understood that the party of the second part may purchase the waterworks, including the real estate, water rights, pipe lines, reservoir, etc., of the party of the first part, but not including its accounts receivable and its personal property having no physical connection with the plant, by July 1, 1910, in accordance with the proposition submitted to the city by the party of the first part on the 25th day of May, 1910, on the terms named in said proposition, or in case the city fails to exercise the said right of purchase in accordance with said proposition, it may purchase the same at the end of any 5-year period during the life of this contract, subject only to the following- alterations, namely:

“Valuation of the plant shall be four hundred thousand ($400,000) dollars, plus the cost of all extensions of pipe lines, improvements on pumping station and reservoir, and the cost of replacing present equipment with new equipment of greater capacity, such cost to be estimated by the difference between the equipment of the same capacity now in use and the equipment of the larger capacity which may have been installed, and a further increase of twenty thousand ($20,000) dollars, in case the population of the city at the time of the pur-■ehase shall have increased as much as 50 per cent, over the census figures of 1910; the price to be diminished, however, by a depreciation of 1 per cent, per annum from this date to the date of exercising the right of purchase.”

. January 3, 1917, the Anniston Water Supply Company sold and conveyed its plant and property to the Alabama Water Company, ■and the conveyance shows that the water company took the same subject to existing indebtedness and subject to the right of the city of Anniston to purchase the same under the terms of its contract with the supply company of June 20, 1910, but did not assume “any direct obligation with reference to said bonds,” nor did it assume or agree to pay the same, but- simply, as the conveyance recites, purchased the property “subject to said indebtedness with the right to pay said bonds and retire the same if it deem it proper to do so.” The consideration of this conveyance is recited as “the payment by the Alabama Water Company of the entire bonded indebtedness of the Anniston Water Supply Company, or the cancellation and retirement of its bonds,” and on February 1, 1917, ' the water company — so to speak of the Alabama Water Company — to secure an issue of bonds, executed and delivered to the defendant Equitable Trust Company of New York a deed of trust conveying, among other properties, the plant in controversy, but recognizing the right of the city to purchase, and providing for the contingency of its exercise. However, we infer from the record that by these conveyances the bonded indebtedness of $400,000, to which the agreement between the city and the supply company referred, was canceled and the bonds retired by the conveyance to the trust company.

Further, the bill avers that on February 12, 1920, the city council of the city of Annis-ton adopted a resolution as follows:

“The city council hereby resolves to exercise the option given to the city of Anniston under the contract between the Anniston Water Supply Company and the city of Anniston, made and entered into on the 20th day of June, 1910, to purchase the waterworks and all property, real, personal "and mixed, mentioned in said contract, and the mayor of said city is requested to notify the Alabama Water Company, the present owner of said property, of this resolution, and to do all things necessary to acquire said property mentioned in said contract.”

And thereupon the city demanded of the defendant Alabama Water Company that it perform its contract to convey the water plant, but the company has failed and refused to perform the same, contending that it was not bound thereby.

Paragraph B of the amended bill avers that it is necessary to file the bill in order to have determined the amount to be paid under the contract of June 20, 1910, and that the city has at all times been ready, able, and willing to do and perform the agreement on its part. The prayer is for the specific performance of the contract alleged.

To the bill in its final form defendants demurred, and their demurrer was overruled. Hence this appeal. ,

Starting with the premise that time is of the essence of option contracts (27 R. C. L. 343), and referring to that clause of the contract in question which provides that the city might purchase by July 1, 1910, or at the end of any 5-year period during the life of the contract, appellants deduce the proposition that the option to purchase might have been exercised on — to speak of the option date next after the passage of the resolution by the city council — July 1, 1920, and that the *122 resolution, dated February 12, 1920, was of no consequence as an exercise of the option because not adopted on July 1, 1920.

It is conceded in the, brief that on February 12th the city might have sufficiently expressed its election to purchase on July 1st. next thereafter, or on any other subsequent option date during the life of the contract. We see no necessity for an extended argument of the proposition. Any reasonable interpretation of the resolution in connection with the contract, to which in terms it refers, informed appellants that on July 1st, next thereafter, the city would exercise its option, and gave appellants', or appellant water company, notice that in the meantime the water company might prepare for a consummation in that respect of the contract between the parties.

In the next place it is contended that, since the purchase price, in case of an election to purchase, was made payable only by the assumption of the supply company’s first mortgage bonds, $300,009, and an exchange of bonds of the city to the amount of $100,000 for the second mortgage bonds, all maturing October 1, 1919, the cancellation and retirement of the bonds effected by the sale to appellant water company and the mortgage deed of trust to the trust company worked a cancellation of the option contract and left the city shorn of its right to purchase.

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Related

Alabama Water Co. v. City of Anniston
135 So. 585 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1930)
Blum v. City of Rochester
136 Misc. 287 (New York Supreme Court, 1930)
Alabama Water Service Co. v. City of Anniston
116 So. 124 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1928)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
110 So. 36, 215 Ala. 120, 1926 Ala. LEXIS 371, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alabama-water-co-v-city-of-anniston-ala-1926.