Saratoga State Waters Corp. v. Pratt

184 A.D. 561, 172 N.Y.S. 40, 1918 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 6581

This text of 184 A.D. 561 (Saratoga State Waters Corp. v. Pratt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Saratoga State Waters Corp. v. Pratt, 184 A.D. 561, 172 N.Y.S. 40, 1918 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 6581 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1918).

Opinion

John M. Kellogg, P. J.:

In considering the agreement in question, it is not necessary to give a name to it, or to the rights acquired thereunder. In substance, it contemplated that for the term of five years (with the privilege of four renewals for a like term) plaintiff’s assignors should bottle and sell the waters from certain springs on the State Reservation at Saratoga Springs and use, for that purpose, the real and personal property of the [563]*563Reservation (used in bottling and selling waters) and such other real estate not required by the Commissioners, as may be necessary to carry on said business. They were to provide for the free drinking by the public of the waters at the source at the springs where such provision then existed. The rights were not to interfere with the bathing rights to be exercised by the Commissioners; the use of the property and rights were to be at-all times subject to the reasonable regulation of the Commissioners. It was also contemplated that they should form a corporation to which the contract should be assigned, and the plaintiff is such assignee.

The agreement was made March 6, 1916, in the name of the State, by the Board of Commissioners of the State Reser-. vation at Saratoga Springs, and the plaintiff’s assignors. The term was to begin April twenty-fifth following the agreement. On the nineteenth of April the Commissioners were legislated out of office and the care, custody and control of the Reservation was placed in "the Conservation Commission. On the twenty-first day of April the Conservation Commission, the defendant being sole Commissioner, gave notice of the termination of the agreement and the refusal of the State to perform it. This action to compel the defendant to turn over the springs to the plaintiff was begun June 13, 1916, and was decided July 6, 1917. The judgment appealed from determines that the agreement is valid, and restrains the defendant, his agents and servants, from interfering with the exercise by the plaintiff of the rights accorded thereby, and defendant is ordered to deliver possession of the property to the plaintiff, and he, his agents and servants, are restrained from not delivering possession and from remaining on or in possession of the property as against the plaintiff, and from interfering with its taking possession and entering upon the property and from bottling and selling the waters, subject, however, to the right of the defendant of inspecting said leased property and taking the water for bathing purposes.

The appellant contends that the Commissioners, in several respects, exceeded their, authority, and assumed to grant rights beyond their powers, and that the agreement is, therefore, unenforcible; that the action is virtually against the State and cannot be maintained and that no sufficient ground for [564]*564equitable relief is shown. Undoubtedly,' in certain respects, the Commissioners in the agreement exceeded their authority, and, aside from the saving clause in the agreement, it could not be enforced. The agreement, in substance, provides that it is subject to all statutes theretofore enacted and that such enactments enter into and become a part of it with like effect as if set forth therein, and that it shall be binding only so far as the Commissioners had power to make it, and that any provision in excess of the authority of the Commissioners shall be disregarded. These provisions, which we have called the saving clause, make it unnecessary to consider the particular respects in which the Commissioners otherwise were exceeding their authority. The real agreement is gathered from harmonizing its language with the statutes and subordinating its terms to the spirit of the statutory law. We conclude, therefore, that while in certain respects and in certain contingencies which may arise, it might be difficult to say with certainty just what the agreement actually means, and while litigation would naturally result in harmonizing it with the statutes and determining its true meaning, that nevertheless, properly interpreted, it is valid. It is evident, however, that there would be great difficulty in enforcing the agreement for a long series of years by order of the court. It contemplates that the State shall furnish new machinery, and replace machinery from time to time, as it becomes useless or wears out. Other acts are to be done by the State. It provides that where an appropriation by the Legislature is necessary to meet expenditures on the part of the State, it shall be valid only to the extent of such appropriation, and then provides that if the Commissioners are without funds to meet any of the expenses required, the other party to the contract may make the expenditures in behalf of the State and take the amount so expended from rentals due or to become due. The court would have great difficulty in enforcing this agreement, or in permitting such expenditures to be made at the expense of the State. If such expenditures were not required or permitted, and the plaintiff was ready to perform its contract, it might well happen that the business would cease and the public be deprived of the benefit of the waters. There may be a never-ending controversy in harmon[565]*565izing the terms of the agreement as written with the spirit of the statutes.

It is urged that equity, and the restraining power of the court, furnish the only relief of real value to the plaintiff; that the defendant had not the right to terminate this contract in behalf of the State and make the State hable for his act and that his individual wrongdoing alone stands between plaintiff and the enjoyment of the contract.

We need not determine whether prior to the amendment of the Conservation Law in 1917,

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Related

Wells v. Roper
246 U.S. 335 (Supreme Court, 1918)
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83 N.E. 571 (New York Court of Appeals, 1908)

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184 A.D. 561, 172 N.Y.S. 40, 1918 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 6581, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/saratoga-state-waters-corp-v-pratt-nyappdiv-1918.