93 So. 409 | Ala. | 1922
This bill is filed to specifically enforce a contract between the appellee and appellant, and, while two contracts are referred to, one of 1910 between the appellant and appellee's predecessor, and the other of 1920 between the appellant and appellee, the last contract is intended as a confirmation of the 1910 one by the appellee, as modified by the one of 1920, and which said last contract is the one sought to be enforced. It seems to be a well-settled principle of law that an executory contract for the sale of property, by the terms of which the price to be paid for the whole subject-matter is to be determined by appraisers, to be selected directly or indirectly by the parties, cannot be specifically enforced in equity, so long as there is a failure from any cause to appoint referees, or after appointment, to assess the value. Montgomery Gas Co. v. Montgomery,
This contract provides for the purchase of the plant, or system, as it stood June 10, 1910, at the fixed price of $400,000, with the understanding that the water company should be compensated for all extensions and enlargements made between June 10, 1910, and *499 the time of the exercise of the option of purchase, less 1 per cent. per annum, the value to be fixed by arbitrators, based upon the difference in the value between the parts of the system as may have been substituted for those as they existed in 1910, the cost of additions and extensions. It must be observed that the price for the plant, or system, was fixed by the contract, and that all that was left open for arbitration was the fixation of the value of the extensions and improvements of the plant and which is merely subsidiary to the main object of the contract. Hence this contract is unlike the one considered in the Montgomery Gas Co. Case, supra, and is quite similar in principle to the one specifically enforced in the case of Jackson v. Jackson, 1 Sm. Gif. 184. This English case involved a contract for the purchase of the premises and bleach works for a certain price, but the price to be paid for the plant and machinery was to be fixed by arbitrators, and it was contended that the contract could not be specifically enforced, because the valuation of the machinery and plant had not been made. Sir John Stuart, V. C., held this clause was nonessential and granted a specific performance after the price had been ascertained in another manner. The price for the manufactory itself, which was the main thing, had been fixed, and the provision in reference to the machinery was in its nature auxiliary and subsidiary to the main object of the contract.
We therefore hold that, as the contract fixed the price for the plant, or system, the fixation of the value of the improvements and extensions was a mere subsidiary to the main object of the contract, and when the arbitrators did not act, or failed to fix the value, the chancery court should not declare such a failure a fatal defect to the contract, but should, in a suit for specific performance, direct a fair and reasonable value to be ascertained in some manner preliminary to the decree, either by referring the matter to a master or other officer, or by appointing a skilled person as a special valuer, or by determining the amount itself. Pomeroy on Contracts (2d Ed.) § 151, and note.
The case of Caldwell v. Caldwell,
Section 1261 of the Code of 1907, as amended by Acts 1911, page 565, expressly authorizes cities and towns to purchase waterworks subject to incumbrances and to assume the payment and performance of same. The assumption by the city of the payment of the face value of the outstanding bonds issued by the water company, not to exceed $425,000, was authorized by this statute, and was in no sense such an issuance of bonds by the city as is forbidden by section 222 of the Constitution of 1901, without first obtaining a majority vote as provided by said section. This was a mere assumption by the city of the payment of a certain amount, an outstanding indebtedness and incumbrance against the property. It had the right to assume the debt and the incumbrance, and the fact that the mortgage secured a debt represented by bonds, instead of notes, is of no importance, and did not convert the transaction into such a bond issue by the city as forbidden by section 222 of the Constitution.
This provision deals only with bonds issued in the usual and ordinary way as then understood — that is, bonds issued, put forth, and circulated by the city as its original obligation — and is no restraint upon the city as to incurring and assuming debts other than by the issuance of its own bonds. Here the bonds have never been issued, put forth, or circulated by the city as its original obligation, so as to bring it within the meaning of the word "issued," as used in section 222 of the Constitution. This statute, or the transaction pursuant thereto, is not repugnant to this constitutional provision. If the debt assumed was excessive, the constitutional restraint, or check, must be found in sections 224, 225, and 226, as the manner of assuming same is not forbidden by section 222, and was expressly authorized by the statute.
The case of Voss v. Waterloo Water Co.,
It is insisted by the appellee that the bill was prematurely filed, as September 30th was the final date for the consummation of the contract, a point decided against the appellee by the trial court; but, as there is no cross-appeal or assignment of error, the propriety of considering this point may be questionable. But as it may arise again, and affect the vitality of the present suit, we hold that, as per the averments of the bill, it was *500 not prematurely filed. The contract contemplated that the arbitration would take place and the value of certain auxiliaries to the system would be fixed prior to the 30th of September, 1920, and the averments of the bill show a virtual abandonment of the arbitration by the respondent and its arbitrator, as well as an inability or impossibility to hold same and render an award between the filing of the bill and the 30th of September.
Our attention has been called in brief of appellee's counsel to the well-settled principle of equity that courts of equity will enforce only such agreements as are mutual; that is, in order to give one party a specific performance, the other party must have had a similar right in case of default by the former. The present contract is mutual, and contemplates reciprocal duties, obligations, and rights as to the enforcement of same. True, the city was given an option to purchase, and the water company had no right to compel the exercise of the option; but, after the city had exercised the option, the obligation to perform was mutually binding, and, had the city declined to perform, the water company could maintain a bill similar to this one against the city. Castle Creek Water Co. v. City of Aspen, 146 Fed. 8, 76 C.C.A. 516, 8 Ann. Cas. 660, and note.
The trial court erred in sustaining the respondent's demurrer to the bill, and its decree is reversed, and one is here rendered overruling same, and the cause is remanded.
Reversed, rendered, and remanded.
SOMERVILLE, THOMAS, and MILLER, JJ., concur.