Porto Rico v. Title Guaranty & Surety Co.

227 U.S. 382, 33 S. Ct. 362, 57 L. Ed. 561, 1913 U.S. LEXIS 2310
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedFebruary 24, 1913
Docket154
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 227 U.S. 382 (Porto Rico v. Title Guaranty & Surety Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Porto Rico v. Title Guaranty & Surety Co., 227 U.S. 382, 33 S. Ct. 362, 57 L. Ed. 561, 1913 U.S. LEXIS 2310 (1913).

Opinion

Mb. Justice Holmes

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a suit upon, a joint and several bond executed by the defendant in error as surety for the Vandegrift Construction Company. In the Circuit Court a nonsuit was ordered and the order was affirmed by the Circuit Court of Appeals on the ground that the plaintiff by its own act had made performance of the condition impossible. 103 C. C. A. 607; 180 Fed. Rep. 64b. The facts are these:

By an ordinance of March 2, 1903, Porto Rico granted to the Vandegrift Company the right to build and operate an electric railway and also a power plant in specified places in the island. Within one year from acceptance of the grant the grantee was to have its roadbed completely graded between the Island of San Juan and the urban portion of the municipality of Caguas, and the foundations and approaches of a certain bridge completed. Section 15.. Within two years it was to have the parts of the railway lying between the urban portion of San Juan and Caguas and certain other points finished and ready for service. Section 16. Within three years it was to have the whole line completed and in operation. Section 17. It was stated to be expressly understood and agreed that upon the grantee’s failure to have the line in full operation within the time limited, i. e. three years, the grantee’s right to operate , any part of it or to sell electric light and power should cease unless the failure should be declared by the Executive Council to be due to one of certain excuses, such as the act of God. Section 16.

A power dam at Comerio Falls was to be completed in one year and the greater' part of the electric apparatus *384 contracted for; the whole power plant and transmission lines necessary for operating the railway to be completed within three years. Section 18. The grantee was to pay the government two per cent, of its gross receipts from the sale of light and power to private consumers, § 23, was not to charge above certain maxima fixed for passengers and freight, § 25, and was to carry certain persons, such as prisoners and police on duty, free of charge. Sections 27, 28.- The rights, privileges and concessions-granted by the ordinance were expressed to be subject to amendment, alteration or .repeal by the Executive Council. Section 30. Then it was provided that the rights granted “shall be accepted by the grantee in writing and by executing a bond in favor of the People of Porto Rico, in the sum of one hundred thousand dollars satisfactory etc., . . . and conditioned upon the full completion of the work herein' authorized within three years after such acceptance and in accordance with the conditions herein contained, and in. accordance with the plans and specifications therefor approved as herein provided; and conditioned also upon the payment by the grantee to the People of Porto Rico of any loss or damage or costs accruing against the People of Porto Rico, by reason of the construction of the works herein authorized, at any time during the period of construction herein limited” &c. Section 34.

Upon presentation of a certificate of completion from the Commissioner of the Interior, “and upon the full compliance with the terms of this ordinance to the satisfaction Of the Executive Council, and upon .the full payment by the grantee of any loss, damage and costs accruing against the People of Porto Rico as in said bond provided, the said bond shall be cancelled.” - Section 35. Finally the ordinance is to “take effect immediately upon the acceptance by the graiitee of the terms and conditions hereof as above provided.” Section 38.

*385 The bond in suit was executed, referring to and annexing the ordinance, and conditioned among other things that the principal, within three years from the date of the acceptance by it of the ordinance should fully complete the work ‘in accordance with the conditions therein contained; ’ and again that it should ‘duly perform within the said period of three (3) years, all other terms and conditions in said ordinance required to be performed by the principal within the said period.’ 1

*386 The principal failed to do within the year the work required by § 15 to be completed in that time as has been stated, and a little more than two months after the year elapsed, in July, 1904, the Executive Council passed an ordinance amending §§ 15, 18 and 30 of the former one, the amendment being approved by the President on August 2. The time allowed in § 15 was extended to January 1, 1905, provided that, the number of men employed on or before August 7 should be not less than 250 and that the number should be increased up to 500 or thereabouts, the intent expressed being that as many men should be engaged as was necessary to complete the work, and provided that the men should be paid weekly, and provided further that upon failure .to comply with the terms and conditions of the amendment the franchise should be subject to immediate forfeiture. The requirement in § 18 as to the power-dam at Comerio Falls, &c., also was- extended to January 1, 1905. Finally to the provision in § 30 as to amendment, &c., of the concession there was added the express requirement of the approval of the Governor of Porto Rico and of the President of the United States, and the statement that it was subject to the power of Congress to annul or modify the same. This amendment seems to have been sought and accepted *387 by the principal, but was not known to the defendant Surety Company, so far as appears.

In February, 1905, a further ordinance was passed, approved by the Governor in March and by the President on May 12, which recited a failure by the Company to comply with the terms of §§ 15 and 18, either in their original form or as amended, and therefore repealed and revoked the grant and declared all “sureties or obligations . . . given by thé said grantee as a guar-, anty . . . forfeited to the People of Porto Rico to all and whatsoever extent the same shall be liable under the law.” • In September, 1906} this suit was begun;

The main question is the scope of the condition of the bond. The plaintiff says that it was for the due performance of all the terms required by the ordinance, and, since the bond was a contract made in Porto Rico, as no doubt it was, at least as between these parties, that upon any breach of condition the whole penalty became due by the local law. Civil Code, §§ 1120, 1121. . The Circuit Court of Appeals on the other hand assumed that the bond was only for the result at the end of three years.

After some hesitation we have come to the conclusion that the court was right. It is true that the bond is to be read in connection -with the original ordinance and that the latter contained terms that were not complied with. But the ordinance only required a bond for the full completion of the work within three years and in accordance with the conditions therein contained and the plans. Section 34. In the ordinance the only condition properly so called, the only fact that warranted a revocation of the grant apart from the general power to repeal, was by § 16 a failure to have the whole railway in operation as required by § 17.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
227 U.S. 382, 33 S. Ct. 362, 57 L. Ed. 561, 1913 U.S. LEXIS 2310, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/porto-rico-v-title-guaranty-surety-co-scotus-1913.