City of Andalusia v. Alabama Utilities Co.

133 So. 899, 222 Ala. 689, 1931 Ala. LEXIS 329
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJanuary 22, 1931
Docket4 Div. 520.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 133 So. 899 (City of Andalusia v. Alabama Utilities Co.) 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
City of Andalusia v. Alabama Utilities Co., 133 So. 899, 222 Ala. 689, 1931 Ala. LEXIS 329 (Ala. 1931).

Opinions

BOULDIN, J.

By the bill the city of Andalusia seeks the specific performance of an option contract to purchase the waterworks and electric light plant serving the city and now owned by the respondents.

The option is embodied in an ordinance of April 30, 1904, entitled:

“An Ordinance.

“To provide for a public and private supply of water, electric light and power, in and near thé town of Andalusia, in the State of Alabama, and granting unto Frank Sutter and his associates, successors and assigns, the right to construct, operate, maintain and own, a water works and electric light and power plant in' said town and contracting with them for water for fire protection and other purposes, and for electric light and power for public purposes, for a period of 25 years and for the purchase of said water works and electric light and power plant, by the town.”

The option provision is this: “Section 21. The town of Andalusia shall have the right and option to purchase the said water works and electric light and power plant with all its properties, rights, income, emoluments and hereditaments, after twenty-five yeai;s from the date of this ordinance, and if the town does not desire to purchase said works, plant and properties immediately after the lapse of twenty-five years, then its right to purchase shall be continuous, with one year’s prior notice of intention. The price to be paid by the town may be fixed by mutual agreement, but in case of failure to agree, the price shall be fixed by arbitration as follows: three disinterested persons, none of whom shall be residents of Andalusia or pecuniarily interested in the said water works and electric light and power plant, shall be selected, orie by the town, one by grantees, and one by the two so selected and the three shall under oath, appraise and fix the price to be paid by the town for the said property.”

On the threshold of the case the question of chief concern is whether such an option is the subject of specific performance.

*691 In Montgomery Gas-Light Co. v. City Council of Montgomery, 87 Ala. 245, 6 So. 113, 115, 4 L. R. A. 616, decided in 1889, and dealing with a like option incorporated in a franchise ordinance, this court declared: “There is no principle better settled in reason and by authority than that an executory contract for the sale of property, by the terms of which the price to. be paid for the whole subject-matter is to be determined by appraisers to be selected directly or indirectly by the parties, cannot be specifically enforced in equity, so long as there is a failure from any cause to appoint referees, or a failure of such referees, after appointment, to assess the value. Vickers v. Vickers, L. R. 4 Eq. 532; Milnes v. Gery, 14 Ves. 400; Cooth v. Jackson, 6 Ves. 34; Thurnell v. Balbirnie, 2 Mees. & W. 786; 1 Benj. Sales, 54; 2 Benj. Sales, 755.”

The case of Milnes v. Gery, 14 Vesey Jr. 399, cited as authority in the above excerpt, and recognized as a leading case in the authorities generally, including our own case of Howison v. Bartlett et al., 147 Ala. 408, 40 So. 757, dealt with an indenture authorizing a future sale of one-third interest in certain properties “for one third part or share of such price as the entirety of the same hereditaments shall be valued at by two different persons,” one to be named by each of the parties interested, and in. case of disagreement, the two to name a third, whose determination should be final. We quote from that decision the following:

“The more I have considered this case, the more I am satisfied, that, independently of all other objections, there is no such agreement between the parties, as can be carried into execution. The only agreement, into which the Defendant entered, was to purchase at a price to be ascertained in a specified mode. No price having ever been fixed in that mode, the parties have not agreed upon any price. Where then is the complete and concluded contract, which this Court is called upon to execute? The price is of the essence of a contract of sale. In this instance the parties have agreed upon a particular mode of ascertaining the price. The agreement, that the price shall be fixed in one specific manner, certainly does not afford an inference, that it is wholly indifferent, in what manner it is to be fixed. The Court, declaring, that the one shall take, and the other shall give, a price, fixed in any other manner, does not execute any agreement of their’s; but makes an agreement for them; upon a notion, that it may be as advantageous as that, which they made for themselves. How can a man be forced to transfer to a stranger that confidence, which upon a subject, materially interesting to him, he has reposed in an individual of his own selection? No substantial difference arises from the circumstance, that in this ease the decision may ultimately fall to an umpire, not directly nominated by the parties; as through the medium of the original nominees they had an influence upon the choice. No one could be chosen without the concurrence of the persons, in whose judgment they reciprocally confided.

“The case of an agreement to sell at a fair valuation is essentially different. In that case no particular means of ascertaining the value are pointed out: there is nothing therefore, precluding the Court from adopting any means adapted to that purpose. The ease, in which the Court has modified particular, subordinate parts of an agreement, falls far short of the decree, that is now demanded. Perhaps some of those cases may be thought rather to require defence for the length to which they have gone, than to furnish a justification for still farther extending the discretionary power, of which they are instances. The Court never professes to bind a man to any agreement, except that, which he has made; but sometimes holds the agreement, which it executes, and that, which he has made, to be substantially the same; when to common understandings there is a very perceptible difference between them. The Court however, has never gone the length of compelling a party to buy or sell the whole subject of his agreement at a price, that he has never fixed, and that was never fixed in any mode to which he has given his consent.”

In City of Anniston v. Alabama Water Co., 207 Ala. 497, 93 So. 409, the authority of Montgomery Gas-Light Co. v. Montgomery, supra, was recognized, and the general rule restated in substantially the words above quoted.

The Anniston Case involved a waterworks plant already in existence, the price whereof was fixed in the option agreement, and the arbitration feature related to valuation of betterments and extensions. The decision differentiates that from the Montgomery Case, holding the valuation of the improvements and extensions subsidiary, bringing it within the different rule recognized in the Montgomery Case “where the thing which is to be appraised by such valuers constitutes only a minor part of the subject-matter of the contract.” See, also, Caldwell v. Caldwell, 157 Ala. 119; 47 So. 268.

Howison v. Bartlett, supra, related to the sale of a tract of land for an agreed price per acre. The only matter left open was a survey to ascertain the acreage, and the arbitration feature was the selection of a surveyor by agreement of parties to run the lines and determine the acreage. The court, in opinion by Mr. Justice Denson, reviews the decision in Milnes v. Gery, supra, and proceeds:

*692

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Bluebook (online)
133 So. 899, 222 Ala. 689, 1931 Ala. LEXIS 329, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-andalusia-v-alabama-utilities-co-ala-1931.