Regents of the University System v. Carroll

50 S.E.2d 808, 78 Ga. App. 292, 1948 Ga. App. LEXIS 731
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedOctober 27, 1948
Docket31999.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 50 S.E.2d 808 (Regents of the University System v. Carroll) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Regents of the University System v. Carroll, 50 S.E.2d 808, 78 Ga. App. 292, 1948 Ga. App. LEXIS 731 (Ga. Ct. App. 1948).

Opinion

Gardner, J.

W. E. Carroll, Clarence H. Calhoun, Mrs. Hattie J. Pickard, Mrs. Emma B. Moore, and Sam Pickard, trustee for Sam Pickard Jr., brought suit in Fulton Superior Court against the Regents of the University System of Georgia and Fulton Na *293 tional Bank to recover damages caused by an alleged breach of contract by the regents. It was alleged that the radio station WGST is held and owned by the regents in trust for the Georgia School of Technology, and that the contract sued on was made by the regents with the plaintiffs for and on behalf of said Georgia School of Technology. The petition further alleged: that under the contract sued on it appeared that the regents purchased from the plaintiffs, who were the stockholders of Southern Broadcasting Stations Inc., the capital stock therein owned and held by them, agreeing to pay the plaintiffs therefor “a sum equal to 15 percent of the net billings of Radio Station WGST, located in Fulton County, Georgia, of the sale of time on the air for any and all types of broadcasting, visual and sound, including any and all revenue which may be derived from such sources as a result of any new developments in the broadcasting field during the period for which the payments under said contract are to be made by said defendant”; that under the agreement such payments were to be made monthly to the Fulton National Bank as agent, beginning April 15, 1943, and to January 6, 1950; that the regents paid this sum, to wit, 15 percent of said net billings of the radio station from April 15, 1943, to and including July, 1945; that no further sum has been paid by the regents under said contract after July, 1945; that under the contract each month since July, 1945, an amount, to wit, said 15 percent of the billings of the station for that month, has become due the plaintiffs by the regents and has not been paid by them; and that there is now a large sum due the plaintiffs under the contract, which amount is unknown to them, and the ascertainment thereof requires an inspection of the books of the radio station and an accounting. The plaintiffs prayed for judgment and an accounting to ascertain the amount due them under the contract. A copy of this contract was attached to the petition, and it was therein provided as set up in the petition. We might here state that on December 4, 1945, the regents filed the third application for a license renewal. At the same time they filed an application for a construction permit. As an exhibit to both applications they filed a statement affirmatively showing that no further effect was being given to the agreements condemned by the Federal Com *294 munications Commission. Thereafter, on March 7, 1946, the application was granted and the license renewal was issued. Since the issuance of that license there has been another renewal, on May 1, 1947, which runs until May 1, 1950. The radio station is being currently operated under this license.

In its answer to the said petition, Fulton National Bank admitted that it had been selected as the medium through which the regents were to make said payments to the plaintiffs. The bank had on hand a small sum left over from payments made to it by the regents, which it paid into court.

The regents admitted the allegations of the petition dealing with the subject-matter of the contract, and that no payments had been made thereunder to the plaintiffs since July, 1945. The regents set up in their answer the amount of the 15 percent of the net billings of the radio station from July, 1945, to the date of the filing of the suit, thus obviating the necessity of an accounting to ascertain such sum. They did not contest the fairness of the contract or its validity, except that they set up that, under the ruling of the Federal Communications Commission, the regents could not legally perform said contract and the nonperformance thereof was excused, and the regents were not due the plaintiffs the sums sued for or any other amount under said contract — that is, the regents contended that, under the rulings and findings of the Federal Communications Commission, it had become impossible to carry out the contract sued on, and therefore the regents are excused from a performance thereof. The commission contended that the contract whereby the regents purchased the stock of the Southern Broadcasting Stations Inc. from the plaintiffs, and agreed to pay a certain percent of the net billings of the station for a specified number of months, was contrary to the public interest and inconsistent with the provisions of the Federal Communications Act (47 U. S. C. A., § 151 et seq.). The defense of the regents, therefore, is to the effect that they are excused as a matter of fact and of law from further performance of this contract by reason of the impossibility of their performing the same because of an act of law.

The case was submitted to Honorable Bond Almand, one of the judges of the Superior Court of Fulton County, upon an agreed statement of facts and without the intervention of a jury, *295 and judgment was rendered for the plaintiffs and against the regents, awarding damages for the 15 percent of the net billings of said radio station accruing from July, 1945, to the date of the present suit, and amounting to $144,968.63 principal and $10,-991.31 as accrued interest. Judge Almand denied the contentions of the defendant as to the legal impossibility of performing the contract sued on by reason of an act of law, and that the regents were therefore excused from performance and ruled that the Federal Communications Commission was without power to take any action which would have the effect of nullifying, changing, or in any wise modifying the duties and obligations of the parties to said contract thereunder, whereby the regents purchased the stock of said broadcasting company, agreeing to pay therefor 15 percent of the net billings of the station or gross income thereof derived from the operation of said radio station; and also ruled that the action of the Federal Communications Commission, in denying a license renewal to the regents for the ■operation of radio station WGST, so long as the said contract remained in effect, would not excuse the regents from further performance of such contract on the ground of impossibility of performance by reason of an act of law.

It appears that the first application to the Federal Communications Commission for a renewal of the license for radio station WGST was made in January,' 1940, by the Georgia School of Technology, and that this application was denied. After conducting hearings, the commission found that the radio station, in July, 1923, was acquired by gift from Clark Howell Sr., a trustee of the school; that a contract had been made with Southern Broadcasting Company, predecessor of Southern Broadcasting Stations Inc., to operate the station, the latter to receive the major portion of the income derived from the operation of the station; that thereafter Southern Broadcasting Stations Inc., which had succeeded to the rights of Southern Broadcasting -Company, agreed to operate this station under the same contract; that in 1933 the board of trustees of the school was abolished, and the Regents of the University System of Georgia, an agency of the State of Georgia, was established by the State legislature; that an agreement was entered into on June 18, 1936, between the regents, acting for the Georgia School of Technology *296

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50 S.E.2d 808, 78 Ga. App. 292, 1948 Ga. App. LEXIS 731, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/regents-of-the-university-system-v-carroll-gactapp-1948.