McConnell v. Arkansas Brick & Manufacturing Co.

69 S.W. 559, 70 Ark. 568, 1902 Ark. LEXIS 109
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedMay 17, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 69 S.W. 559 (McConnell v. Arkansas Brick & Manufacturing Co.) 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
McConnell v. Arkansas Brick & Manufacturing Co., 69 S.W. 559, 70 Ark. 568, 1902 Ark. LEXIS 109 (Ark. 1902).

Opinions

Bunn, C. J.

This is a bill in equity filed in the Pulaski chancery court by the appellee, the Arkansas Brick & Manufacturing Company, against E. T. McConnell, as superintendent, and M. D. L. Cook, as financial agent, and Jefferson Davis, J. W. Crockett, George W. Murphy, T. C. Monroe and Frank Hill, members of the board of penitentiary commissioners, with prayer as follows, to-wit:

“The premises considered, the plaintiff prays that a temporary restraining order be issued, restraining the defendants, and each of them, from taking any action to prevent the due performance of said contracts, or towards a restriction thereof, and particularly from taking from the plaintiff’s works any of the men now engaged in labor therein; and requiring defendant McConnell, as superintendent of the penitentiary, to proceed with the execution of said contracts and the furnishing of labor as therein agreed upon. And plaintiff prays that, upon a final hearing, a decree be entered as above prayed, and that the said order of the board canceling the contract be declared null and void.”

„ The contracts were made by E. T. McConnell, as superintendent at the time, and J. C. Massey, as financial agent, and approved by the board of penitentiary commissioners, consisting at the time of D. W. Jones, governor; Jefferson Dayis, attorney general; Clay Sloan, auditor; A. C. Hull, secretary of state, and Frank Hill, commissioner of mines, etc., all of whom made and approved the contracts and assignments thereof; and the rescinding resolution was passed by the board of commissioners, composed at the time of Jefferson Davis, governor; G. W. Murphy, attorney general; T. C. Monroe, auditor; J. W. Crockett, secretary of state, and Frank Hill, commissioner of mines, etc.

The complaint sets forth in extenso a contract made by and between the said superintendent and financial agent, on the one part, and the Arkansas Chair Factory,' on the other, and the approval of the same by the board of penitentiary commissioners, signed in writing by each and every one of them, and the subsequent assignment of the same by the chair factory company to the Arkansas Brick & Manufacturing Companjq the appellee, with the approval of said penitentiary -board. It 'further sets forth that, by reason of the passage of the act to erect a new state house on the penitentiary grounds and the putting of said grounds in control of the state house commissioners, and the consequent necessity of removal of the penitentiary Avails and buildings to another locality and erecting others there, it became necessary to make an amendment to the original contract, or a substituted contract, and that the same Avas made and approved by the said board of commissioners as in the first instance; and that under these contracts both parties proceeded to and did perform their respective obligations for and during the period of eighteen months, and that the plaintiff, by reason of said contracts, expended large sums of money in perfecting its plant, so as to be able to perform its part of the same, and entered into engagements by reason thereof involving many thousands of dollars, impossible to be complied with unless the laborers are furnished'it in accordance with the contract aforesaid. That, up to the time of the adoption of the resolution, plaintiff has continued promptly to report as required, and to pay into the treasury the monthly sums stated according to said reports for the hire of the convicts permitted to labor for it, and for the last month, extending up to the date of the canceling resolution, it has paid in the sum of $4,000 or more for the hire of about 200 convicts for the month. That on the 13th day of August, 1901, the said board of penitentiary commissioners at one of its meetings passed a resolution in the following language, to-wit: “Believing that said contract is unjust to the state and made Avithout legal authority, because the same Avas made for a term of years beyond the life of the board making it and amounts to a lease of the state convicts which is prohibited by laAAr, and believing that it is to the best interest of the state and the management of the penitentiary that the same be annulled and set aside, therefore, be it resolved by the penitentiary board that said contract, so entered into between the state of Arkansas and the said Arkansas Brick & Manufacturing Company be, and the same is hereby, annulled, canceled and held for naught, the cancellation of said contract to take effect October 15, 1901, and on and after said October 15, 1901, the state refuses to further comply with the terms of said contract, and the superintendent of the penitentiary is hereby ordered on and after said date to Avithdraw from said. Brick & Manufacturing Company all convicts in their employ and turn them back into the walls- of the penitentiary, subject to the further orders of this board.” Plaintiff states that, by reason of this resolution, the contracts were in effect annulled and set at. naught, and, by reason of said breach of the same, it has lost, and will lose, as a natural consequence, a sum of money largely in excess of $100,000, and that its consequential damages will be a very large sum, detailing each item of damage; that the contracts were fair and lawful, and that said resolution was without authority of law, while in fact having the force and effect of law, in that it put a stop to the performance of said contracts, since the said superintendent and financial agent will obey the same, unless restrained. The contracts are exhibited with the complaint, and said resolution is set out in full therein.

The defendants filed their demurrer to the complaint, containing seven several grounds. Nos. 3, -1 and 5 were subsequently withdrawn, and the court overruled the same as to grounds 1, 2, 3, 6, 7 and 8, which are as follows, to-wit:

“]. For that the said parties are not and could not be charged, to have done anything in their individual capacity, nor have they, nor is it shown that they have any individual capacity to carry any pretended contract with the complainant into effect, as set forth in its complaint and amendments, and in their official capacity are acting solely in behalf of the state.

“2. And because said complaint and amendment thereto seek only for relief respecting convicts belonging to the said state, and,, if the matters recited therein have any validity, which they deny, complainant’s cause of action is against the state of Arkansas, and. cannot be maintained.

“6. Because the said complaint and amendment thereto do not state a cause of action.

“7. Because the facts set forth in the said pleadings do not entitle complainant to any relief herein.

"8. Because this court has no jurisdiction to grant the relief prayed for herein.” ’’

The chancellor overruled the demurrer upon each and every one of said grounds set forth above, and the defendants declined and refused to answer or plead over, but rested on their said demurrer, and thereupon the following decree was rendered, to-wit :

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
69 S.W. 559, 70 Ark. 568, 1902 Ark. LEXIS 109, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcconnell-v-arkansas-brick-manufacturing-co-ark-1902.