Gulf Coast Water Co. v. Cartwright

160 S.W.2d 269
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 26, 1942
DocketNo. 11327.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 160 S.W.2d 269 (Gulf Coast Water Co. v. Cartwright) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gulf Coast Water Co. v. Cartwright, 160 S.W.2d 269 (Tex. Ct. App. 1942).

Opinion

GRAVES, Justice.

' The individual appellees, nine in number, were the Rice Farmers. All of them, except Dodd, filed suit against appellant, the Water Company, to have declared invalid, or inapplicable, a certain clause in their 1935 irrigation contracts with the Water Company.

The Water Company filed a plea in abatement, plea to the' jurisdiction, general demurrer, special exceptions, and general denial to this suit.

It also filed cross-actions against four of the Rice Farmers, and original actions against the remaining five, in which it sought enforcement of the clause. Three of the first four Rice Farmers filed general demurrers and general denials to the cross-actions, and the last five answered the original actions with general demurrers, general denials, and an adoption of the allegations in the petition of the eight Rice Farmers against the Water Company.

All of these cases were consolidated and tried together..

There were involved two types of contract between the Water Company and the Rice Farmers, all having been made on or about January 21, 1935. Under the first type, for water only that was furnished by it, the Rice Farmers agreed to pay to the Water Company “a cash water -rental equal to one-fourth of the gross proceeds derived from the sale of all rice grown upon lands farmed by” the Rice Farmers. Under the second type, for the land, seed, and water, all furnished by the Water Company, the Rice Farmers agfeed to pay “one-half of the gross proceeds derived from the sale of all the rices grown upon lands farmed by” the Rice Farmers.

At the trial 'it' was stipulated that the Water Company performed its obligations under the contracts with the Rice Farmers, and the only real controversy between the parties was with respect to the inclusion in'the “gross proceeds derived from the sale of all the rices”, of the amounts of benefit-payments received by the Rice Farmers for not planting rice, pursuant to agreements made by them on or about July 13, 1935, with the Secretary of Agriculture, concerning their rice acreage and production for the year 1935.

It was the contention of the Water Company that the amounts of these benefit payments should be, included in such “gross proceeds”, and that, thereby the amount of rental due to it under such contracts would be increased by the sum equal to one-fourth (under the first type) and one-half (under the second type) of the amount of.such benefit payments so received by the Rice Farmers.

It was appellees’ contention, among others, that they had complied -with their respective contracts with appellant in all respects when they paid it the one-half, or one-fourth, as the case might be, of, the gross proceeds derived from the sale of the rice grown during the year 1935 by the respective Rice Farmers, and that the benefit payments received by them from the Government for not planting rice were not a part of the proceeds derived by them from the sale of the rices grown by them; that, even though the respective contracts with the Secretary of Agriculture were made after the water contracts with appellant, such water contracts were made subject to the Agricultural Adjustment Act, 7 U.S.C.A. § 601 et seq., and subject to the rules and regulations of the Agricultural Adjustment Act, and subject to the rules and regulations of the Agricultural Adjustment Administration and the Secretary of Agriculture.

Further, that the portion of the contracts ■relied upon by the Water Company as the basis • for the increased rental was void, because it was (a) without any consideration; (b) lacking in mutuality; (c) discriminatory.

The case was tried without a jury, and, at the conclusion of thé testimony, the court entered judgment denying the Water Company any recovery against any of the parties. - '

The material portions óf the one-fourth type of 'contract are as follows: “In consideration of the'agreement to furnish water as hereinbefore specified and of all other’ agreements herein contained, Second Party agrees to pay First Party a cash water rental, equal to one-fourth of the- gross proceeds derived from the sale of all rices *271 upon lands farmed by said Second Party watered hereunder whether said lands are specifically described by this contract or not. First Party will, at its cost and expense, furnish one-fourth of sacks, one-fourth of hauling- and one-fourth of the storage of said crop of rice.”

Those of the one-half type of contract are as follows:

“First Party does hereby lease and-let to Second Party all of the following described land * * *:
“Said lands being riparian to the canals of First Party and are to be planted and cultivated to rice by Second Party during the year 1935, and it is distinctly understood that only that portion of the lands above described that are actually planted and cultivated to rice shall be covered and included by this lease.
“In consideration for the furnishing of land, seed, and water by First Party, Second Party agrees to pay' as a rental of said seed and water one-half of the gross proceeds derived from the sale of all of the rices grown upon lands farmed by said Second Party under the terms and conditions hereinafter set out.”

The clause — common to both these one-fourth and one-half types of contract for 1935 — that so formed the sole material bone of contention was, in his verbis, this: “By ‘gross proceeds derived from the sale of all of the rices’, as the same is used herein, is meant all moneys received from the sale and shall include payments made by the purchaser to the owner of the rices, payment made to the Secretary of Agriculture under any then existing ‘marketing agreement for Southern Rice Milling Industry’, and any allotment or benefit payment to which party of the Second Part shall be eligible under the rules and regulations of the Agricultural Adjustment Administration or the Secretary of Agriculture.”

In support of its judgment, the able trial court substantially made these among other findings of fact and law:

“II. That each and all of the contracts between the -Rice Farmers and Water Company were made in anticipation of and subject to the rules and regulations to be promulgated by the Secretary of Agriculture and/or the Agricultural Adjustment Administration by and under which the Rice Farmers would be eligible to receive benefit payments for reducing their rice acreage to the allotment and quota fixed by the Agricultural Adjustment Administration.
“HI. That the Agricultural Adjustment Administration, on April 18, 1935, promulgated certain rules and regulations, among which being that the adjustment or benefit payments may not be assigned under any condition, same being forbidden by the contract between the' Rice Farmer and the Secretary of Agriculture, as well as being prohibited by law; except, that the Rice Farmer could pledge such benefit payment in order to obtain funds or credit for carrying on the current operation of the farm; and that the expression ‘Funds’, or credit, for carrying on the current operation of the farm and ‘current production credit’ means funds or credit to meet any necessary expense of preparing of land, planting, cultivating, watering, harvesting and marketing of the rice crop grown in the year 1935.

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Bluebook (online)
160 S.W.2d 269, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gulf-coast-water-co-v-cartwright-texapp-1942.