Cotton Belt Savings & Trust Co. v. Morrow

158 S.W. 489, 108 Ark. 542, 1913 Ark. LEXIS 71
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJune 16, 1913
StatusPublished

This text of 158 S.W. 489 (Cotton Belt Savings & Trust Co. v. Morrow) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cotton Belt Savings & Trust Co. v. Morrow, 158 S.W. 489, 108 Ark. 542, 1913 Ark. LEXIS 71 (Ark. 1913).

Opinions

Smith, J.

The General Assembly of 1909 passed an act creating Levee District No. 1, of Crawford County, Arkansas, which act described the boundaries of a district to be protected from overflow, by the construction of a levee therein provided for, and authorized the board of directors to borrow money, and issue bonds in payment of the work not to exceed $100,000. Later, at the same session of the General Assembly, this act was amended in several respects, and authorized a total bond issue of not exceeding $250,000. The board of directors, named in and provided for by the act, organized and advertised for bids for the construction of this improvement, and the contract was let to A. M. Morrow on the 7th day of July, 1909. Morrow commenced the actual construction of the levee in the latter part of July, and a formal contract was later entered into between him and the levee district.

It appears that Morrow had neither the individual means, nor the personal credit to perform this contract, ]but lie succeeded in enlisting the interest and support of the -Pine Bluff Trust Company, a banking institution located at Pine Bluff, and of which one D. C. Bell was the executive officer.' This trust company deposited with the officers of the levee district a certified check for $9,600, which accompanied Morrow’s bid, and the levee, officials were assured by Bell that Morrow would be amply able to comply with the contract, if it was let to him; that the trust company had the means to finance the enterprise, and could and would do so, by taking the bonds of the levee district, if no other disposition of them was made. Morrow entered into a written contract with the levee district under date of August 17,1909, whereby he agreed to build the levee, and to construct certain concrete work, embraced in the engineer’s specifications, and to accept in pay therefor the first mortgage bonds of said district at par, and it was provided in said contract that said bonds should be placed in trust in the hands of the Pine Bluff Trust Company, and by it sold at a price of not less than 90 per cent on ’ the dollar, and the proceeds from such sale to be held by the trust company, and paid out by it to the builder on monthly estimates of the district engineer on signed orders of the directors of the. district. It was further agreed that the proceeds of all bonds should be deposited with the said trust company, which should pay to the levee district 2 per cent per annum upon the monthly balances of the funds arising from the said sale until the same were expended, as per the terms and conditions of the contract, it being there expressed that the sum of $210,000 was but an approximation of the whole cost of the construction of the said lev.ee under the builder’s contract.

It was evidently contemplated by the parties in interest, that the levee district would soon be prepared to issue its bonds, and Morrow put a large force of men at work on the construction of the levee and entirely completed one part of the concrete work, which was embraced in the specifications, and -received pay therefor. At the time Morrow received his estimate from the engineer for his first month’s work, the district had made no sale of the bonds, and Morrow did not have funds with which to pay his subcontractors, and various complications arose which interfered with the bond issue; and the bonds were never issued under the act which .authorized the issuance of $250,000 of bonds, and under which the parties were then proceeding. Morrow continued the construction of the levee, and received from the engineer estimates for the work done both in September and in October, and borrowed from the trust company large sums of money, which he used to meet his obligations to his subcontractors. During all of this time the trust company and others were expecting the levee district to get in shape to issue its bonds.

On the 6th day of November, 1909, Morrow and the trust company entered into a written contract, which contained the following recitals, among others: That a verbal agreement had been entered into between Morrow and the district whereby the trust company had agreed to exert its influence to aid Morrow in procuring the contract for building the Crawford Oounty Levee, and put up the certified check called for by the instructions to bidders issued by said levee district in advertising for bids, and had acted as agent for Morrow in selling the bonds which, under his contract with the levee district, should be paid to him for the construction of said levee, and had procured a contract of sale for the said $210,000 of bonds at 92 per cent of their face value; and that as the trust company had furnished Morrow certain sums of money, and might, at its optioh, advance other sums of money, it was agreed that for the purpose of securing the payment of any sums of money which were then, or might thereafter, be owed by the said Morrow to said trust company until the completion of the building of the said levee, the said Morrow set over, assigned and transferred to the trust company all his interest in the proceeds of said bonds, and authorized the trust company to collect and apply the same to the payment of such indebtedness, and it. was stipulated that for such sums as were advanced to said Morrow by the trust company, before final settlement of all the accounts between him and the trust company, that the company should have the right to apply the proceeds of said bonds to such indebtedness the same as if made before the completion of said levee work.

This contract further recited that the trust company should have, as its compensation, a commission of $1,050, and all interest which had accrued or might thereafter accrue on said bonds, before their delivery to the purchaser. This compensation was in lieu of the original agreement between Morrow and the trust company, wherein he had agreed to pay a commission of one per cent on the bonds and a certain percentage of the contract price, which the levee district was to pay for the work.

A firm of lawyers in Chicago, 111., had been employed to pass upon and approve the bond issue, but they made a number of requirements which were never complied with, and it was afterward agreed that the firm of Bose, Hemingway, Cantrell & Loughborough of Little Bock should be employed to pass upon this bond issue, and to direct all the legal steps essential to their validity. This employment was suggested in a letter, written for the Pine Bluff Trust Company to the president of the levee district, in which the recommendation was contained that that firm also represent the levee district in certain litigation then pending, which involved the constitutionality of the act itself, and the validity of the assessments made under it. This firm had fixed its fee at $1,000, and Bell proposed to share its payment equally with the levee district, if that firm was given entire control of that litigation, and of the district’s bond issue. This proposition was accepted, and that firm was employed and represented the district in said'litigation. But for various reasons, these bonds were never issued.

The trust company was unable to handle these bonds, or to find a purchaser for them, and Judge James Could was employed for that purpose.

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Related

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154 S.W. 525 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1913)

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Bluebook (online)
158 S.W. 489, 108 Ark. 542, 1913 Ark. LEXIS 71, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cotton-belt-savings-trust-co-v-morrow-ark-1913.