Destructor Co. v. City of Atlanta

219 F. 996, 1914 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1367
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Georgia
DecidedOctober 15, 1914
DocketNo. 53
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 219 F. 996 (Destructor Co. v. City of Atlanta) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Destructor Co. v. City of Atlanta, 219 F. 996, 1914 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1367 (N.D. Ga. 1914).

Opinion

NEWMAN, District Judge.

This is a bill in equity filed by the plaintiff against the defendant. The present hearing has been on a motion made by the defendant to dismiss the bill.

The bill, after the necessary jurisdictional averments, sets out that on July 9, 1913, the Destructor Company made a contract with the city of Atlanta for the erection by the company of a plant for the destruction of the city’s refuse. That contract, consisting of several documents, is attached.

It is further alleged: That about a year before this contract was made the company had made a previous contract with the city providing for the erection by the company of substantially the same plant and an electric generating plant for the utilization of the steam produced. That this contract had been made with a previous city administration and had been based upon a practice which had then been current in the city of Atlanta for many years under which one city administration, in making contracts for important public works, pledged the moral obligation of the city to fulfill them in part during the succeeding administrations. That a suit was instituted against the city and the Destructor Company, in the superior court of Eulton county, to have this contract declared illegal and invalid. That the superior court held the contract to be legal, and the case was taken to the Supreme Court of the state, which reversed the decision of the lower court and declared the contract illegal as being beyond the power of the city government. When this decision was announced, the Destructor Company had done a large part of the yrork of erecting the plant, under the first contract, and on the city’s land, relying in good faith on the advice of counsel of both the city and the company that the contract was legal and that the city would fulfill the moral obligation to perform it, and had expended large sums in such performance, but had received no payments from the city. That in this situation the present contract was made. It differed from the previous contract mainly in cutting out the electric generating plant, and thus making no provision for the utilization of the surplus steam produced in the operation of the plant, reducing the contract price, which was $274,750 plus about $8,000 for extras allowed for excavation and foundation, by over $22,000, to the sum of $260,000, and providing that this reduced price be paid $125,000 cash upon the execution of the new contract and the balance of $135,000 when the plant was completed and proved by tests as prescribed in the [998]*998specifications to meet all requirements. That the $125,000 was paid by the city to the company under the present contract, but the payment 'was delayed by the mayor about 30 days after the agreement as to terms had been reached. That on the signing of the present contract the company, entered upon the work of completing the plant, and, in accordance with the terms of the contract, the plant was ready for useful operation by August 15, 1913, and the company thereupon notified the city that the plant was so ready. That the city, a few days later, began regular delivery of the city’s refuse at the plant, and the company has been operating the plant ever since and has kept the plant in continuous operation and destroyed all of the city’s refuse which has been brought to the plant, with a few unimportant exceptions.

It is then alleged that the contract contains certain guaranties of performance in the matter of capacity, steam production, etc., and provides that the fulfillment of these guaranties shall be determined by tests of 24 hours’ duration, with a refuse mixture of certain specified proportions. The contract provides that the first test shall be made at a time fixed by the company and the second test at a time to be agreed upon between the city and the company, within six months after the plant was ready for useful operation.

Certain clauses in the contract are then quoted, which relate to the right of the company to make changes in the incinerator if by doing so it may be made to satisfactorily fulfill the requirements of the guaranty, and with reference to the work being done to the satisfaction of the city of Atlanta and with reference to the percentage of garbage, stable manure, ashes, and rubbish of which the refuse of the city of Atlanta is represented approximately to consist and that the plant was built by the company to burn substantially the proportions of the substances to be furnished as stated; that the proportions in the refuse so furnished was not in accordance with that provided in the contract, but varied extremely therefrom.

It is then alleged that the company, on finding the actual condition so very different from those represented by the city and specified in the contract, to meet which the plant had been designed, did not lie back and claim that under the contract the plant need only burn refuse of the composition represented by the city, but, on the contrary, the company spent every possible effort and a large amount of its own money to make such changes in the plant as were needed to make it meet guaranties under actual conditions; and that, furthermore, the company has made these changes under the extra difficulty of all the time keeping the plant in operation and burning the city’s refuse; that the expense and effort of installing the needed changes would have been very much less had the company shut down the plant to make the changes.

It is then alleged that the company, at the time the bill was filed, had fulfilled its contract with the city, and that on August 8, 1914, on a test of the crematory plant, it complied with all the guaranties and requirements of the contract. It is then alleged that the city refused to pay, and still refuses to pay, the balance due.

• It is alleged that, after the plant was completed and in operation and the city’s refuse being delivered, the company, in pursuance of its right [999]*999under the contract, wrote the city that the company would be ready to run the first test in the early part of the week beginning December 29, 1913, and requested the city to make arrangements accordingly to deliver at that time refuse of the quantity and character called for by the contract for the test, and that the city refused to have the official test made at that time or to supply the refuse for it; that this refusal prevented the running of the first test; that the city has been requested by the company to reconsider its former action, and on January 5, 1914, a request was made on the mayor and general counsel for the city to co-operate in running a test; that arrangements had been made for running a te,st at the time the severe storm occurred on February 13, 1914, hut the test was prevented by the fact that ice covered the streets of Atlanta to such an extent that it was impossible to collect the material for the test. It was then postponed until February 17th, and at that time the refuse at the plant, as the allegations are understood, was insufficient for a test, and during the next few days the requisite material for a test was not furnished.

It is alleged that the company persistently tried to have a test run, and a test was finally agreed upon on March 14th, and it was accordingly run on that day. On this test the crematory satisfactorily destroyed all the refuse but fell 10 per cent, short in the amount destroyed in 24 hours. That is, the contract provided for the destruction of 250 tons in 24 hours, and the plant destroyed 225 tons.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
219 F. 996, 1914 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1367, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/destructor-co-v-city-of-atlanta-gand-1914.