Horwitz v. Government of the Virgin Islands

17 V.I. 465, 1980 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 8934
CourtDistrict Court, Virgin Islands
DecidedMay 30, 1980
DocketCivil No. 78-35
StatusPublished

This text of 17 V.I. 465 (Horwitz v. Government of the Virgin Islands) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, Virgin Islands primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Horwitz v. Government of the Virgin Islands, 17 V.I. 465, 1980 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 8934 (vid 1980).

Opinion

CHRISTIAN, Chief Judge

OPINION

This class action is before the Court following a court trial on January 28th and 29th, 1980, and closing arguments on February 1, 1980. The determinative issue is the plaintiffs’ contention that the Government is estopped from challenging the legality of contracts it entered into with plaintiffs for the sale of townhouses at Estate Nazareth. The plaintiffs’ argument must fail because the following three ingredients essential to their estoppel theory are absent: (1) the officials who entered the contracts on behalf of the Government must act within the scope of their authority; (2) the plaintiffs must be ignorant of the facts constituting the illegality of their contracts; and (3) the plaintiffs must detrimentally rely on the conduct of Government officials. Accordingly, the Government will not be estopped from asserting the illegality of the sales contracts and the plaintiffs’ claims will not succeed.

The cause arises out of a plan to construct middle income housing at Estate Nazareth, St. Thomas. The plaintiffs are individuals who, prior to January 15, 1975, each deposited $1,000.00 with the Department of Housing and Community Renewal as a downpayment [468]*468on a proposed townhouse unit. In addition to the deposit, each plaintiff signed a Purchase and Sale Contract for a two, three or four bedroom dwelling at the Nazareth project. (See, e.g., Exh. 9.) Each contract was also signed by Darwin Creque as Commissioner of Housing.

Due to Government funding difficulties as well as the late Governor Cyril King’s growing disaffection with the townhouse concept, the Nazareth project was abandoned. The parties have stipulated that the breach, if any, of the sales contracts resulting from the discarding of the project occurred on January 15,-1980. The Government did offer to return the plaintiffs’ deposits in exchange for their signatures on release forms. The vast majority of plaintiffs acceded to this request and obtained their money. The plaintiffs now seek damages representing the difference between the purchase prices stated in their contracts and the market value of comparable housing which they could have undertaken to buy in 1975.

In F. D. Rich Housing of the Virgin Islands, Inc. v. Government, 17 V.I. 410 (D.V.I.1980), this Court held that Rich’s Agreement with the Government for the construction of the Nazareth project was illegal. The Court relied on three distinct illegal aspects of the Agreement: (1) the Agreement violated 33 V.I.C. § 3101 because it created Government financial obligations in excess of appropriations; (2) the Agreement violated Act 3088, 1971 V.I. Sess. Laws at 313-314, because the Government never adopted a Housing Development Plan for the Nazareth project; and (3) the Agreement failed to comply with the cost limitations on middle income housing established by 29 V.I.C. § 191n. The Government now contends that the Rich holding compels the conclusion that the Government’s contracts with plaintiffs for dwellings at the Nazareth project are also illegal. The plaintiffs counter with two assertions. Initially, they maintain that the Rich decision is irrelevant to the validity of their contracts. Alternatively, they argue that the Government is estopped from asserting the illegality defense.

Plaintiffs’ argument as to the materiality of the Rich decision can be dismissed summarily. Firstly, the plaintiffs’ contracts were so intertwined with the Rich-Government Agreement that they could not exist independently of it. The testimony at trial was clear that the plaintiffs’ entire concept of what they were purchasing originated from such items as the specifications, plans (exhibits 3 and 4) and even a model (exhibit 2) developed for and made a part of [469]*469the Rich-Government Agreement. (See also the Parties Agreed Stipulation of Facts, # 3.) In fact, the central thrust of the plaintiffs’ response to the Government defense that the contracts are too vague is that the details may be gleaned from the Rich-Government Agreement. Accordingly, the plaintiffs’ theory that if the Rich-Government Agreement failed, their contracts still obligated the Government to find an alternative developer has little merit.

Regardless of the extent of the interrelationship of the contracts, however, the plaintiffs’ sales contracts are illegal standing by themselves. In effect, each of the three illegal characteristics of the Rich-Government Agreement are also inherent in the plaintiffs’ contracts.1 Specifically, the absence of adequate appropriations for the project as required by 33 V.I.C. § 3101 signifies that the Government could not obligate itself to construct the townhouses for subsequent sales to the plaintiffs. Similarly, the nonexistence of a Housing Development Plan for the Nazareth project as mandated by Act 3088 prevents the Government from legally entering contracts to sell units at the project. Finally, the fact that the terms of the plaintiffs’ contracts violate the cost limitations on middle income housing established by 29 V.I.C. § 191n2 also invalidates the contracts. Thus, the plaintiffs can prevail only if the Government is estopped from relying upon its illegality defenses.

There are six conditions which must be met before estoppel may be found against the Government. The first two are unique to matters involving the Government:

(1) There must be a waiver of sovereign immunity to suit; and

(2) The agent whose conduct is relied upon to work an estoppel must have acted within the scope of his authority lawfully conferred.

United States v. Georgia Pacific Co., 421 F.2d 92, 100-101 (9th Cir. 1970). 1 GOVERNMENT CONTRACTS § 4.100 at 4-64 (1979). The remaining elements are general estoppel principles:

[470]*470(3) The party to be estopped must know the facts;
(4) He must intend that his conduct shall be acted on or must so act that, the party asserting the estoppel has a right to believe it is so intended;
(5) The latter must be ignorant of the facts; and
(6) The party seeking estoppel must rely on the former’s conduct to his injury.

United States v. Georgia Pacific Co., 421 F.2d at 96.

The first element, waiver of sovereign immunity, is established if the Government’s potential liability arises from its acting in its proprietary rather than sovereign capacity. See id. at 100. Although frequently blurred, the essential distinction is that in its proprietary role the Government is acting as a private concern would, while in its sovereign role the Government is carrying out its unique governmental functions for the benefit of the entire public. Id. at 101. Generally speaking,

[w]hen the government enters into a contract with an individual or corporation, it divests itself of its sovereign character as to that particular transaction and takes that of an ordinary citizen and submits to the same law as governs individuals under like circumstances.

United States v. A. Bently & Sons Co., 293 F. 229, 235 (S.D. Ohio 1923). Accord: United States v. Georgia Pacific Co., 421 F.2d at 101; McQuagge v. United States, 197 F.Supp. 460, 469 (W.D. La. 1961).

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