Untitled Texas Attorney General Opinion

OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL OF TEXAS AUSTI 2. I GROVERSELLERS Yl ATTORNEY GENERAL Honwable Weaver Ii. Baker. Cbaiman State Board of Control - Austin, Texas Dear Sir: Opinlen Be. O-7005 Rer Authority of Beard islature will have and Insurance Corpo such surety bonds on the members of t yeas haa been received and given careful st ortlens of your letter: agreed te execute the the State Board of ontract has been fully performed on partles therete and beth parties to abide by the terms of the aaid contract. :Hon.,Weaver H. Bsker, psge 3 23 , Paragraphs tuo 8nd three of the aontraat you have with CentrsrtSurety 8nd Insurenae Corporstlon 8re quoted belovt "The Party of the Second Part hereby aantrsats and agrees to execute the surety bonds on the member8 of t.heState Board of Control, the Searetary to the Stste B0s.H of Cbntrol, 8nd the Superfntendents8nd Storekeeper-aoaountantsof the vsrious ~eemosyn8ry Institutions of,the State of Texas, under the super- vision of the Boaed ,ofControl, 8s required by statute as 8nd vhen their present bonds axpire, or nev onea 8re requfred, fey 8 period of two ye8rs be-g Septehber 25, 1944. It is agreed and understood that should surety bonds be required 8y lev of other employees of the State Board of Control or the various Eleemosynary inatitutZonsduring the time aovered by this aontraat, the Party of the Second Part sgrees to execute them.. This is ln acaordanae with the speaifiaationsand bid proposal 8s submitted by the Pwty OS the Seoond,Part 8nd opened by the Party of the First Part on September 25, 1944, 8nd said speoifiaationaand bid proposal 8re hereby made 8 part of this contract for all purposes. "In 8aaord8nae vith the provisions of the bid submitted by the Party of the Seaond Pert, the Party of the First PsFt hereby contracts snd 8gFeea to pay to the Party of the Ssaond Part Two ($2.00) Dollars per thous8nd per 8nnum for the Vsrious fidelity bonds to be executed by the Party of the Second Part. In a aase the Legislature should provide that premiums may be paid for two years In advance, the Party of the Seaond P8rt agrees that the premium sh8ll be Three and Sevqnty Xundredtha ($3.70)Dollars per thousand for m'two year peplod. The Party af the Second Part agreea to submit to the proper institution, or the Board of Control as the aase m8y be, 8 statement for the premium of each bond, executed In trlpllaate 8nd aaaomparnledby 8n affidavit as required by lav...? It will be noted thst the effeative period of the aontraat is from September 25, 1944, to September 25, 1946. There sppears to be no question as to the vslldity of this aontraat 'atthe time it Hon. Weaver Ii.Baker, page 4 20 was signed September 1944, The question, then, is, wh8t eifeat Senate Bill 233 has, 1-Pany, upon the valldltp or legality of the aontraot. It Is ow? opfnion thst the effeot of son8te Bill 233 is to make llleg$the exeaution of bonds thereunder at the rates therein stipulated after the effeative date o? the nevly established rates by the Ismmsnae Board. After suah date, bonds may be made at the new rates for the reason hereinefter rtated. The aonalualon ia predicated upon the rule that vhore a aontraat la exeauted whlah la valid at the time of it8 exeau- tion but by reason of s8ubsoQuent ah8nge in the law - whether by statute or valid 8dBbbItratlvo Order8 making the further subjeat matter Of the aontraot illegal, It operates 8s a dis- ahargo of the aontraat 60 weautc;d. Corpus Jurls Seaundum, Vol. 17, p. 964, Sea. 467, dealerear "Performenaeof a aontraat a8nnot be aompolled vhere it vould involve a violation of law. Hence 8 aontraat is dlwah8rgo& vhero after it has been en- tered Into, the perfornmnae is made unl8vful." The text is supported by numerous a8868 Including Federal deal&ions and others from the highest oourta o” the States of Arlgensas,Callfornl8, De18var0, ffeorgia,Illinois, Indiana M8ryland, Miselealppi,Aev limpshire, Hew York, Texas, West Virginia, 8nd WisaonsIn, In the pocket prt supplefaent,there BFQ Inaluded other a8888 from the State6 of PeIIASylV8d8, Rhode Island and Wyoming. Bule VS. Porter, 22% 3. U. 999, the Texas aaae cited by the text quotes Ruling CSse Law aa followst “One of the aondltlons implied In 8 aontraat is that the promiser shall not be aonrpelledto perform lfop~errmanae la rendered imgosslble by an sat of . The inferenae is that the perties did not aontomplate that dmages should be peid for non- performenae In the event that performance Yaa aubse- quently ppohlbited b law. The deaislons of praa- eions me to the effect that tiacallysll jurl.adla where a contract, legal ln ita inception, becones , HOPI.Weaver H. Bsker, page 5 21 illegal by subsequent statutory enaotment, the aontrsot 1s wholly termlnsted 8% soon 8% the statute takes effeat, even though the time specl- fled for Its performance hes not yet fully expired, and no action aan be maintained by either party for failure to peqform the obllgetlons of the contract after the liiegailty has sttached." In Lcui%vllle and Reehville Railroad Company vu). ROttiey, (n. 3. )55 MU. Ed. 297, It 1s said; "This lmpossibllltyof enforcementexists vhether the agreement 1% illegai ln its lnoeptlon, or whether being oaild vhen made, the lllegallty has been arested by a subsequent statute." The language ~8s 8 quotation from Pommeroy on con- traats. The 3hpreme Court further approving Pommeroy quoted one of hi% supporting critatione , Chief Justlae Lord Ellenborough, who a8idt "That no contr8ct can properly be oarrled into effect which ~88 orlg!naily made contrsry to the provisions of law, or vhlah, being made conalstentlyvith the rules Qf law at the time, ha% become illegal ln virtue of some subsequent law, Bpe proposi- tions which 8dmlt of no doubt." Justiao Harlan then further quoted Judge Cooley upon the aonstltutlonalprovision prohibiting ieglslatlon lmpalring the oblfgstlonso? aontrsats, as follow%: "But the aat to reguiste oommerae is 8 general iaw, and aontraots are 8ivays liable to be more or less affected by general 18~9, even when ln no way referred to . . . But this lnol- dentai effect of the general lav is not under- stood to make It a 18~ impairing the obligation of oontraots. It is 8 necessary effeot of 8ng oonslderable ohange ln the publie iawa. If the Legislature had no power to alter It% police law% when the oontraats would be effeated then the moat important and valusble reforms might be prealuded by the simple devise of entering Into oontraots for the purpoee, Ho doctrine to that effeat would be even plausible, muoh leas sound and tenable." In BrowntBr;sia;;;Merchsnts Bank (H. Y.) 213 Rew York Supplement, 146, 1 1 "Contraotsmade with reference to a subject within the restricted pover OS 8 government oontaln A, Honi Weaver H. Baker, page 6 the implied OOndltlOAthat a ohange in 18v may be made end the obligationsof the parties varied or avoided. Fltts v. Andrevs,192 App.‘Div.160, 182 R. Y. 9. 464; Town of North Hempstead vs. Publio Serviq? Corp., 231 n, Y. 44 450, 1 2 R. B, l&4* Legal Tender C88e6, 12 Wall, J' 57, 551 ?20 L,Rd. 287). ‘The obligation of the law qwlifier, and In case of aonfliat, ovdrridos, the obligation of the oontraot.~ Postal.Tel. Cable Co. v. Assoalated Press, 228 R. Y, 370,-375, 127 f. B. 256. ‘Contrsate must be undsrstood as made In referonae to the poa- 8181s exerolso o? the rightful authority of the government.~ Louisville6 R. R. Co, Y. Rottley, 219 u. 3. 467, 482, 31 8. Ot, 265, 270, 55 L. Ed. 297, 34 L. R. A, (R. 3.) 671. The rights of the p8rties relitlve to the certificateto 8% signed, being subject to government restrlation, aould not be re- moved from suah restrlationby 8 contraat aontrsry to the law. Rudson County Water Co. v. MaCarter, 209 U. 3. 349, 357, 2% S.Ct. 529, 52 L. Bd. 828, 14 Ann. Cas 560~ People ox rel. City of Ecu York v. Nixon, 229 8. Y. 356, 359, 12% N. E. 245. When the new 18~ beceme operative, the parties were re- lieved from performanoe In that nuinner,for, vithout fsult on the psrt of either, both were disabledfY?om performing. Adler v. tiles, 69 Miss. Rep. 601, 126 N. Y, 9. 13 ; People v. dlobe Mutual Life Ins. Co, 91 R. Y. 1754." This dealsion vaa 8ffirmed by the Court of Appeals, the highest jurlsdiationin Rev York. We have found no aase holding.%0 the aontrary. It is proper, however, under the, authorities, to sever the llleg8l portion of the contra& where the nature of the contract makes such matter severable 8nd to enforce the contra& aa to that portion r%m8ining ilegalafter i such severance. t We understand the aorporation 1% 8gre%881% to this being done and is ullllng to write fidelity bonds under the , . . ____- ..----- -. se.-., r-- , contract for the remainder of lta term at the Board*8 pre- scribed rate8 (wry naturally since the rescrlbed mlnirmull rates are higher than the oontraot rate8P edd we think it i.swithin your authority to permit It to do so for the re- mainder of the lll;yz~ of your oontraot.