Sullivan v. Universal Electric Const. Co. of Alabama

227 S.W.2d 387, 1950 Tex. App. LEXIS 1899
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 1, 1950
Docket9836
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 227 S.W.2d 387 (Sullivan v. Universal Electric Const. Co. of Alabama) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sullivan v. Universal Electric Const. Co. of Alabama, 227 S.W.2d 387, 1950 Tex. App. LEXIS 1899 (Tex. Ct. App. 1950).

Opinion

ARCHER, Chief Justice.

This is a suit instituted by C. E. Sullivan and L. A. David, but David withdrew as a party and the case was prosecuted to-final judgment by Sullivan, against the City of Winters, its governing officials, the Universal Electric Construction Company of Alabama, Iñc., its corporate surety upon a performance bond given by it to the City, and Ballard-Hassett Company and certain named individuals alleged, to be owners of original revenue bonds, refunding bonds and lease revenue warrants, and alleged to have been active participants with the City in the consummation of certain invalid transactions relating to a contract of Universal Electric Construction Company of Alabama, Inc., to build an electric generating ' plant and distribution system for the City of Winters.

The plaintiff sought a declaration by the court fixing and determining, the rights of all the parties under the original construction contract entered into -in November of 1941, and under certain amendments thereof attempted to be effected in September of 1946, and he sought .an adjudication of the validity of certain refunding bonds and ■lease rental warrants issued as a result of the 1946 negotiations, and of a portion of a series of refunding revenue bonds issued in the year 1948 while the suit was pending-for trial in the district court.

The case was heard before the court without the intervention of a jury, and judgment was rendered that the plaintiff take nothing. The court filed findings of fact and conclusions of law-

It is alleged that in 1941 the City had an election, overwhelmingly voted in favor of the issuance of $175,000 revenue bonds, and on November 15, 1941, entered into a contract with Universal for the construction of an electric light and power plant and distribution system for its residents. When the bonds were first voted, an injunction suit filed by the West Texas Utilities Company thwarted progress for some months. However, construction was commenced after such delay, but on March 12, 1942, when the plant was approximately seventy-five per cent completed, the City was ordered to halt such construction by official order of the War Production Board. In further disruption of construction during the war, engines, wire and other critical materials already installed or on hand, were taken by the Government.

War Production Board orders and governmental restrictions were released in the summer of 1946, and the City again began its fight to secure its own electric light and power plant and system. The City, its mayor, aldermen and attorneys found that the $16,000 remainder due to Universal upon the construction contract had been expended during the war years and that the City had no way to raise such sum; the Second War Powers Act, under which the War Production Board had issued orders halting construction, providing immunity to the contractor against a suit for damages; labor and material were- almost impossible to obtain, and prices were greatly in excess of prices before the war. The City and. its duly elected officers continued to fight, and conceived the idea of reducing the contract price to the available $144,000, already paid Universal, and of securing from the bond *389 purchaser, Neu, the necessary engines. They negotiated a new or supplemental contract or novation with the contractor. They got Neu to buy and supply the engines and rent them to the City on a .day to day basis. With the good faith and wholehearted cooperation of the contractor and the money lender, this plan was evolved by the City into the transactions of September 10, 1946, of which Sullivan complains.

In February 1947 the- plant was completed. All of the bonds, warrants and contracts of which Sullivan complained when the suit was filed were, paid, discharged and cancelled, and additional 'engines and equipment secured for the then successfully operating power plant. The engines belong to the 'City, the entire plant and distribution system belongs to and is operated by the City, and the contractor has been paid. There is now outstanding the bond obligation against the revenue from the electric system, but there are not now and there have never been any tax bonds, warrants or other obligations imposed upon the residents of Winters in the acquisition of the municipal plant.

Appellant assigns as error nine points. Under the first point he complains of the failure of the trial court to decree whether the transactions of September 10, 1946, or any phases were invalid, and if so to fix the rights and liabilities of the City of Winters; and by the second point, the error of the court in refusing to declare the supplemental contract of September 10, 1946, to be void; and by the third, the error in refusing to decree the $34,000 of refunding bonds issued September 10, 1946, and the interest coupons attached thereto to be void, as an attempted refunding of that amount of interest coupons of the original 1941 bond issue; and by the fourth point the error of the court in refusing to decree that the ordinance authorizing the lease agreement with Neu was invalid; and further by the fifth point the court was in error in refusing to adjudicate that the transactions of September 10, 1946, were a fraudulent scheme between the contractor Neu and the .Bond ■ Company, so that the contractor would be released from his obligations and that Neu and the Bond Company would wrongfully receive refunding 'bonds and lease rental warrants at the expense of and in fraud upon the rights of the City; and by the sixth point, the error of the court in refusing to decree that the $219,000 revenue bonds -issued in 1948 were valid only to the extent that they represented the original 1941 issue of $175,000 with simple interest; and by the seventh point, of the error of the court in refusing to decree that the $36,396.50 of the $150,000 bonds issued in 1948 were invalid; by the eighth point error is assigned at the failure of the court to decree that $1,116.56 (ór at least $871.56) of the $219,000 bonds in payment of interest were invalid; and, likewise, in the ninth point of the error of the court in refusing to decree that the $6,832.50 of the $150,000 bonds of 1948 used to create ‘a sinking fund to pay the first six months’ interest on the total of the 1948 bond issue were invalid.

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Bluebook (online)
227 S.W.2d 387, 1950 Tex. App. LEXIS 1899, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sullivan-v-universal-electric-const-co-of-alabama-texapp-1950.