Camden Sewer Co. v. Mayor of Salisbury

160 A. 4, 162 Md. 454, 1932 Md. LEXIS 138
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedApril 13, 1932
Docket[No. 53, January Term, 1932.]
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 160 A. 4 (Camden Sewer Co. v. Mayor of Salisbury) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Camden Sewer Co. v. Mayor of Salisbury, 160 A. 4, 162 Md. 454, 1932 Md. LEXIS 138 (Md. 1932).

Opinion

Adkins, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

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 *456 or about' July Ith, 1902, tbe 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. Fitcb, and A. A. Gillis, to whom was granted said franchise to lay sewer pipes on tbe streets under tbe conditions in said ordinance provided, were by virtue of chapter 12 of tbe Acts of 1904 created a body corporate under tbe name of tbe Camden Sewer Company, and tbe said company thereupon received by assignment and transfer from tbe said Staton, Williams, Fitcb, and Gillis tbe franchise to them granted by said ordinance, and tbe plaintiff thereupon proceeded to exercise said franchise by laying' sewer pipes on certain of tbe streets in said ordinance named, and has since continued to exercise and still exercises tbe right and franchises granted by said ordinance. That section 4 of said ordinance provides “that tbe Mayor and Council shall have tbe option and right at any time of buying from tbe said parties (herein called Tbe Camden Sewer Company), their heirs, legal representatives and assigns, all their interest in tbe said pipes put down by them under tbe authority of this ordinance upon paying tbe cost thereof, and of tbe laying of tbe same, with interest to tbe time of such purchase, and thereupon to take and assume absolute control and ownership thereof.” That, in tbe exercise of said option, tbe said defendant on tbe 2nd day of August, 1926, filed its bill of complaint, a certified copy of which is filed with tbe bill, praying that said ordinance and especially tbe said option clause therein be specifically enforced against said company, and that it be required to transfer and assign unto tbe defendant herein its said sewer system in accordance with said ordinance upon tbe payment of tbe 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 tbe court auditor its papers, books, accounts, vouchers, and receipts, and tbe auditor stated an account therefrom showing in detail tbe various items of *457 cost, the dates of expenditures, and the interest thereon to March 1st, 1927. That thereafter, on June 22nd, 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 2nd, 1929, by its decision reported in 157 Md. 175, 145 A. 497, affirmed said order, since which date plaintiff has been endeavoring to persuade defendant to comply with its contract and to avoid further litigation, and defendant has offered to purchase said sewerage system, but at a price grossly inadequate. That but for said negotiation for the purchase of said system the plaintiff would have filed the bill of complaint more promptly after said decision of the Court of Appeals. That plaintiff' charges that, by filing its bill of complaint in said suit, alleging that it had notified said company of its desire and purpose to purchase said system at the cost thereof, with interest, in pursuance of said ordinance, and alleging further that it was ready, able, and willing to pay the cost and interest as aforesaid, the defendant herein did thereby exercise on its part the option to purchase said sewer system reserved to it under section 4 of said ordinance, and thereby created and made effective a binding contract on the part of the defendant herein to purchase said sewer system under the terms of said option. That by the filing of said bill of complaint, showing the intention of the defendant herein to purchase said sewer system under the terms of said ordinance, plaintiff was hindered in the operation and development of its said sewer system, and dur *458 ing the pendency of said suit, on August 2nd, 1926, to October 6th, 1928, plaintiff was restrained and enjoined at the instance of defendant by writ of injunction from extending its said sewer system in the exercise of its franchise along' the streets and boulevard intersecting-; Camden Avenue or- convenient thereto (a copy of which writ is filed with the bill). That while said suit was pending, and while plaintiff was restrained as aforesaid, defendant, through its agent, the Salisbury sewer and water commission, laid down, built, and extended a competing sewer system along' and under certain of the streets upon which plaintiff was entitled to lay and construct its said sewers, and from the construction of which plaintiff was prevented by said injunction; that thereby plaintiff’s business and opportunity for growth and expansion has been greatly hindered, and it desires that defendant be required to perform its contract. That after defendant had filed said suit, it proceeded to open and enter the sewerage system of plaintiff herein on Hazel Avenue and Smith Street, and proceeded to drain into plaintiff’s sewerage system the surface water from said streets; and, when plaintiff protested and undertook to close its sewerage system on said streets against the drainage of said surface water, the defendant procured a writ of injunction requiring plaintiff’ to- open its sewerage pipes on said streets, so as to permit the drainage there-into of surface water from said streets and streets adjacent thereto (a copy of which writ is filed with the bill). That while the said suit by the defendant herein for specific performance was pending, plaintiff herein submitted to the court auditor its papers, books, accounts, records, vouchers, and receipts, and, while said records evidencing the cost of construction were in the possession of said auditor, the defendant herein, through its said agent, employed expert accountants who calculated and determined for the defendant from said records the total costs of the- sewer pipes and the cost of laying same, with interest to March 1st, 1927. That although said cost was determined by defendant in the manner aforesaid, nevertheless the defendant has failed and refused to take over said sewer system and to pay plaintiff the cost thereof as *459 determined by its said expert, accountant as aforesaid.

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Bluebook (online)
160 A. 4, 162 Md. 454, 1932 Md. LEXIS 138, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/camden-sewer-co-v-mayor-of-salisbury-md-1932.