Farmers' Life Ins. v. Foster Building & Realty Co.

272 F. 864, 1921 U.S. App. LEXIS 1696
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedMay 18, 1921
DocketNos. 3640, 3651
StatusPublished

This text of 272 F. 864 (Farmers' Life Ins. v. Foster Building & Realty Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Farmers' Life Ins. v. Foster Building & Realty Co., 272 F. 864, 1921 U.S. App. LEXIS 1696 (5th Cir. 1921).

Opinion

WARKER, Circuit Judge.

The Farmers’ Rife Insurance Company (herein referred to as the Farmers’ Company) brought a suit in equity against the Foster Building & Realty Company (herein referred to as the Foster Company) and Jesse H. Jones, for the cancellation of three contracts, namely: (1) One dated December 20, 1916, between Guarantee Rife Insurance Company (herein called the Guarantee Company), the Farmers’ Company’s predecessor in title to an office building in Houston, Tex., known as the Mason Building, and the Foster Company, whereby the former agreed to furnish heating service for the Foster Building, a theater and office building belonging to the Foster Company, and adjoining the Mason Building, for the period of 25 years, beginning on the 1st day of January, 1917, at $75 per month, the contract providing for a lien on the Mason Building to secure faithful performance; (2) another of the same date between said Jones and the Guarantee Company, whereby Jones agreed to supply electrical energy for lighting and power service for the Mason Building for the period of 25 years from January 1, 1917; and (3) one dated July 16, 1916, between the Guarantee Company and said Jones, whereby the former gave the latter an option to extend for an additional term of 5 years a 5-year lease of the same date to him of part of the Mason Building. A separate suit was brought by the Foster Company against the Farmers’ Company to enforce the above-mentioned contract for supplying heat, etc., to the Foster Building, and to compel the Farmers’ Company to furnish heat in accordance with the terms of that contract. The two suits, without being consolidated, were tried together.

By the decree in the first-mentioned suit the relief sought as to the heating contract and the electrical energy contract was denied, and the contract whereby Jones was given an option to renew the above-mentioned lease to him was canceled. By the decree in the other suit the Farmers’ Company was enjoined from shutting off the heat supplied by its plant to the Foster Building; the decree, however, providing for the Farmers’ Company having the right to apply in the future for a modification or dissolution of the injunction granted upon showing that by [867]*867any act or acts of the plaintiff in that suit or its successor in the ownership. of the Foster Building conditions in that building affecting the heating of it have been changed, without the consent of the defendant in that suit and to its detriment, from what they were on December 20, 1916, when the heating contract was made. The farmers’ Company appealed from the decree in the first-mentioned suit, and by assignment of errors complains of that decree so far as it failed to grant relief prayed for in the bill in that case. Said Jones appealed from the decree in that suit, and by assignment of errors complains of the part of it which canceled the contract giving him an option to renew the above-mentioned lease to him. The Farmers’ Company appealed from the decree in the other suit and assigns as error the rendition of that decree.

So far as the decree in the first-mentioned suit denied the relief sought as to the electrical energy contract, it is not subject to reversal, because, as stated in the memorandum opinion of the trial judge, there was “no proof concerning the same which raises any equity in the plaintiff.” The remaining matters to be considered are the rulings of the court with reference to the heating contract and the contract giving Jones an option to renew his lease.

The Guarantee Company was a life insurance company incorporated under the law of Texas, having the right to acquire and own “one building site and office building for its accommodation in the transaction of its business and for lease and rental.” Revised Statutes of Texas, art. 4735. In June, 1915, it became the owner of the Mlason Building. At that time the Mason Building contained a heating plant and equipment so devised and arranged as to be capable of providing heat for both the Mason Building and the adjoining 10-story Foster Building. By a contract made in December, 1914, the Guarantee Company’s predecessor in ownership of the Mason Building agreed to furnish the Foster Company heating service, etc., for the Foster Building, including the theater therein, for the period of 25 years from the date of that contract for the sum of $50 per mouth. The service called for by that contract was rendered under it until the above-mentioned contract, whereby the Guarantee Company agreed to furnish heat for the Foster Building, went into operation.

[1,2] We are not of opinion that the Guarantee Company, in making the last-mentioned contract, undertook to do a thing which was beyond its corporate power. As above stated, it was expressly empowered to acquire and own an office building for its own use and for lease and rental. The fact that the Mason Building contained a heating plant constructed with a view to its supplying heat for both that building and the adjoining Foster Building did not have the effect of making the Mason Building one which the Guarantee Company was legally incapable of acquiring and holding. Having legally become the owner of an office building containing a heating plant constructed with a view to heating both that building and an adjoining one, certainly it was not beyond the power of the Guarantee Company to dispose of the surplus heat from its plant.

[3] But it is contended that it could not legally obligate itself to furnish heat to the Foster Building for a long term of years. It could [868]*868legally do whatever may fairly be regarded as incidental or auxiliary •to, or expedient or profitable in, the care and management of the office building which it was authorized to acquire and hold. The grant of the power to acquire and hold such a building carried with it by implication the right to do whatever a natural person similarly situated might reasonably and lawfully do in the use and management of such property. If a natural person had become the owner of the Mason Building, and had made such a contract as the one in question, it would be supposed, in the absence of evidence to the contrary, that he did so because he reasonably considered that the making of such a contract was expedient and profitable in the use of his property. It well may be more economical and to the advantage of all parties concerned for two adjoining office buildings to be heated from one plant instead of two. Under the circumstances disclosed, the act of the Guarantee Company in obligating itself to furnish heat from its plant to the Foster Building is to be regarded as incidental and auxiliary to the reasonable use and management of property which it was. empowered to acquire and hold. Jacksonville, M. & P. R. Co. v. Hooper, 160 U. S. 514, 16 Sup. Ct. 379, 40 L. Ed. 515; Fort Worth City Co. v. Smith Bridge Co., 151 U. S. 294, 14 Sup. Ct. 339, 38 L. Ed. 167; 14a Corpus Juris, 254 et seq.

[4] The Foster Building is located between two similar office buildings, the Mason Building and the Gulf Building. When the heating contract in question was made, the Foster and Gulf Buildings were separated by a party wall; there then being no openings or connections between those buildings. Since that contract was made those buildings have been connected with each other by making a number of openings in the party wall between them.

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Related

Fort Worth City Co. v. Smith Bridge Co.
151 U.S. 294 (Supreme Court, 1894)
Taylor v. Agricultural & Mechanical Ass'n
68 Ala. 229 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1880)

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Bluebook (online)
272 F. 864, 1921 U.S. App. LEXIS 1696, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/farmers-life-ins-v-foster-building-realty-co-ca5-1921.