Klamath County v. Klamath County Development Co.
Klamath County v. Klamath County Development Co.
Opinion of the Court
This case was briefed and argued with thé case of Ward v. Klamath County, ante, p. 574 (218 Pac. 927). In this suit the effort of the plaintiff county is to secure an injunction against The Klamath Development Company to prevent it
Really, the suit is designed to result in a decree quieting the title of the county to block 10. As we have shown in the preceding case, by the defeasance clause in the original deed and by the recital in the contract of May 1,1918, the ownership of the property is in the defendant, The Klamath Development Company, and the plaintiff has no title therein to quiet. The record shows that Klamath County had every opportunity offered to it by The Klamath Development Company to complete the courthouse on Block 10. The defendant gave the county every opportunity to extricate itself from its difficulties and complete the building on that block. It is not apparent how The Klamath Development Company could have helped or prevented that which occurred in respect to the injunction suits mentioned in the pleadings. For all that appears in the record, they were rightful and properly allowed. In such a position, the county cannot shield itself behind them or make them binding
It is claimed that the defendant should have given notice to the plaintiff and demanded that it complete the courthouse before it set about to regain the property; but by the valid acts, adjudicated so to be, of the county, it has built a serviceable courthouse on its own land, resulting in a situation where it is powerless as against a complaining taxpayer, to continue the building of the Hot Springs courthouse. Although the County Court has the power to build a necessary courthouse, yet it has no right to go into that business by the wholesale or for speculative purposes. Thus, it appears that the county has maneuvered itself into a situation where its wants are supplied for courthouse purposes and that it has no right to build more courthouses, at least for the present. It is a situation where the plaintiff, as a matter of law, had put it out of its power to perform the contract and consequently, conceding only for the sake of the argument that there has been any contract pleaded, it was discharged and under such circumstances a demand would have been useless. This doctrine is taught in Carter v. Rhodes, 135 Cal. 46 (66 Pac. 985); Bell v. Shields, 18 Idaho, 649 (111 Pac. 1076); Smith v. Jordan, 13 Minn. 264 (97 Am. Dec. 232); Stark v. Duvall, 7 Okl. 213 (54 Pac. 453); Andrews v. Frye, 104 Mass. 234; Gray v. Robertson, 174 Ill. 242 (51 N. E. 248); Richards v. Reeves, 149 Ind. 427 (49 N. E. 348); Grant v. Groshon, Hard. (Ky.) 85 (3 Am. Dec. 725); Negus v. Simpson, 99 Mass. 388; Bassett v. Bassett, 55 Me. 127; Newcomb v. Brackett, 16 Mass. 161; Delameter v. Miller, 1 Cow. (N. Y.) 75 (13 Am. Dec. 512).
It is not apparent how the defendant could be estopped by any court action that has occurred or by
The decree of the Circuit Court dismissing the suit is affirmed. Affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- KLAMATH COUNTY v. KLAMATH COUNTY DEVELOPMENT CO.
- Status
- Published