Pritchard v. Johnson-Toby Construction Co.

296 S.W. 17, 155 Tenn. 571, 2 Smith & H. 571, 1926 Tenn. LEXIS 81
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 16, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 296 S.W. 17 (Pritchard v. Johnson-Toby Construction Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pritchard v. Johnson-Toby Construction Co., 296 S.W. 17, 155 Tenn. 571, 2 Smith & H. 571, 1926 Tenn. LEXIS 81 (Tenn. 1927).

Opinion

Mr, Justice Swiggart

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This cause was instituted by the original bill of certain individual complainants and the Roans Creek Drainage District No. 8 of Carroll County, and Carroll County, for the use and benefit of said drainage district, filed against the Johnson-Toby Construction Company et al.

By amendments to the original bill made in the Chancery Court, the individual complainants were withdrawn and the bill stands as the bill of the drainage district, *573 suing by order of and through its board of directors, and Carroll County, for the use and benefit of the drainage district.

The hill avers the creation of the drainage district under the authority of Chapter 185 of the Acts of 1909; the appointment of directors; the making of a contract by the board of directors with the Johnson-Toby Construction Company, for the construction of drainage ditches and levees; the execution of a bond by the construction Company, payable to Carroll County, for the use and benefit of Roans Creek Drainage District No. 8 of said county, conditioned to secure the faithful performance of said contract; the breach of the contract by the failure of the construction company to construct the ditch according to the contract specifications; and the resulting damage to the drainage district from said breach of contract.

The bill prays a decree requiring the Johnson-Toby Construction Company to specifically perform the contract, or, in the alternative, for a decree for the full amount of damages caused by the breach of contract, with a decree against the sureties on the construction company’s bond for all said damages up to and including the amount of the bond.

The bill also prays for general relief.

The bill also contains averments of wrongful acts by the co-defendant, Farmers State Bank, with regard to the handling of a bond issue of the drainage district, and prays for a recovery against the bank. The bank interposed a demurrer, which does not appear to have been passed upon by the Chancellor, and that branch of the cause is not before us for review.

The Johnson-Toby Construction Company made a motion for an order on the complainants to produce their *574 authority for bringing and prosecuting the. suit in. the name of Carroll County, and supported its motion with an affidavit of the county judge to the effect that the solicitors for the complainants “had no authority and were not authorized to make Carroll County a complainant.”

The Chancellor overruled this motion, his decree reciting that the drainage district had the right to use the name of the county, and to bring the suit in the name of the county, for the use and benefit of the drainage district, without the consent of the county.

The Chancellor then sustained a demurrer interposed by the construction company, on the ground that the drainage district-, being an arm or instrumentality of the government, created by the County Court of Carroll County, is given no authority or power by statute to maintain a suit of this character; and on the further ground that the Chancery Court has no jurisdiction to hear and determine the question of damages described in the bill, the County Court of Carroll County having full, complete and exclusive jurisdiction of the matters complained of.

Having sustained this demurrer, the Chancellor dismissed the bill as to. all parties, and from his decree the complainants prayed and were granted an appeal to this court, and have assigned errors.

The Statute of 1909, Chapter 185, providing for the creation and organization of drainage districts, has been before this court for construction and interpretation a number of times, and its general provisions need not be again set out. State ex rel. v. Powers, 124 Tenn., 553; In re Drainage District, 133 Tenn., 684; Drainage District v. Askew, 140 Tenn., 314; Brite v. Grubbs, 144 Tenn., 647; N. C. & St. L. Ry. v. Drainage Dist., 149 Tenn., 490; Obion County v. Coulter, 153 Tenn., 469.

*575 The description of a drainage district organized under this statute, as an arm or instrumentality of the government, as made in the demurrer, is correct, hut it is not merely an arm or instrumentality of the county. It is a state agency, the power to create which is- delegated by the Legislature to the County Court, as the delegate of the State, with a special authority beyond that ordinarily exercised by the County Court. In re Drainage District, 133 Tenn., 684.

Upon the creation of a drainage district by a County Court, the statute directs the-County Court to appoint two directors for the district, who, with the county judge as the third member, constitute the board of directors for the district. The statute then provides that this board of directors “shall have the general control and management of the business affairs of such district and supervision of the same, and be vested with power and authority to make contracts, as provided by this act, for all improvement to be done in said district.” Acts of 1909, chapter 185, section 18.

The two directors appointed by the County Court are given terms of two years each, and provision is made for the appointment of their successors, upon vacancy occurring for any cause.

The board of directors are specifically authorized and empowered to make contracts of the character described in the bill, and it is provided in section 19 that the contractor “shall be required to execute a bond, with sufficient sureties, payable to the county, for the use and benefit of the drainage or levee district, in an amount equal to twenty-five per centum of the estimated cost of the work so let.”

*576 Provision is made for the deposit of cash in lieu of bond, the deposit to be made “with the treasurer of the board of directors.”

Section 37 of the statute is as follows:

‘ ‘ That if any person to whom the work, or any portion of the w.ork, in such improvement district has been let shall fail to perform the same according to the terms specified in his contract, then the cash deposited by him shall be forfeited for the benefit of such district and be paid into its fund; or if bond has been given by such contracting party so failing, then recovery of the damages sustained may be had by suit in the name of the payee in such bond for the use of such district, and such damage on judgment therefor collected and paid into the fund of such district. ’ ’

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Bluebook (online)
296 S.W. 17, 155 Tenn. 571, 2 Smith & H. 571, 1926 Tenn. LEXIS 81, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pritchard-v-johnson-toby-construction-co-tenn-1927.