Calcasieu Paper Co., Inc. v. Memphis Paper Co.

222 S.W.2d 617, 32 Tenn. App. 293, 1949 Tenn. App. LEXIS 97
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedMarch 23, 1949
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 222 S.W.2d 617 (Calcasieu Paper Co., Inc. v. Memphis Paper Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Calcasieu Paper Co., Inc. v. Memphis Paper Co., 222 S.W.2d 617, 32 Tenn. App. 293, 1949 Tenn. App. LEXIS 97 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1949).

Opinion

SWEPSTON, J.

The material question in this case is whether or not the parties contracted with one another.

Complainant sued defendant on open account for paper sold and delivered to it in May 1946 amounting to $9395.68.

Defendant admitted by its answer the correctness of the debt, but by cross-bill sought a recovery of complainant for $3943.10 for damages for breach of contracts appearing in the form of twenty-five separate orders for paper which it was alleged complainant had accepted but refused to deliver in full.

The decree was for the defendant on its cross-bill in the sum of $3255.46 so that the net amount of the judgment for complainant was reduced to $6140.22.

This appeal is by complainant from the action of the Chancellor on the cross-bill.

There are two assignments of error as follows:

“I. The trial court erred in overruling the demurrer filed by appellant. This was error because:
*296 “ (a) The cross-bill as amended fails to show any contractual obligation on the part of appellant to sell and deliver the merchandise described in the orders sued on and, consequently, fails to show a breach of any contractual obligation to appellee.
“(b) The cross-bill as amended affirmatively shows that the orders tendered by appellee were never accepted by appellant.
“II. The trial court erred in holding that appellant entered into binding contracts with appellee for the sale of the merchandise described in the cross-bill as amended and in awarding damages to appellee for breach of said contracts. This was error because:
“ (a) Each of the alleged contracts sued on upon which a recovery was allowed consisted solely of an offer to purchase by appellee and an acknowledgment of the offer by appellant. Each acknowledgment imposed new terms and conditions which were not accepted by appellee.
“(b) Each acknowledgment of each order sued on contains the following provisions:
“ ‘ Because of the Present National Emergency We Do Not' Guarantee Prices, Quantity or Delivery. The Price Prevailing at Time of Shipment Will apply. Priorities, Preferences or Other Limitations of Supply Affecting Our Suppliers or Us, and Transportation Delay, Shall Be Deemed Beyond Our Control.’
“ ' Shipment subject prior orders. This order is being entered for shipment when our schedule permits, and no specific promise as to delivery can be made at this time.’
“By the express terms of the foregoing provisions appellant never obligated itself to deliver the goods described in appellee’s offers to purchase and, therefore, can not be liable in damages for its failure to deliver.
*297 “(c) The orders and acknowledgments of orders sued on do not constitute contracts because lacing entirely in mutuality and because the provisions of the documents construed together are too indefinite and uncertain to be legally enforceable.
“(d) Prior to and at the time of the alleged contracts sued on appellant was distributing its production on a quota basis without regard to orders with the consent and approval of appellee, and appellee at all times received more than its quota.
“(e) At the request of appellee appellant’s production during 1946 was shipped against orders received in the year 1945 during the life of the Second War Powers Act, which orders were invalid and unenforceable under the terms of the Second War Powers Act, and if this production had not been diverted to prior invalid orders at the request of appellee and had been applied to the orders sued on, the orders sued on would have been filled.”

The suit was tried regularly upon depositions, so that the review is under Code Section 10622 so far as questions of fact are to be determined with a prima facie presumption of correctness of the findings of the Chancellor.

We think assignment I must be overruled for the reason that the demurrer has been waived.

The record shows that the demurrer was argued and overruled on February 10, 1947 and leave granted to rely on same in appellant’s answer to the cross-bill. Yet we do not find in the record that the demurrer was called up or disposed of before or at the hearing.

This situation existed in both of the following cases and it was held that the advantage of a demurrer is lost and the same will be treated as waived when not dis *298 posed of at or before the hearing of the cause on the merits. Rogers v. Betterton & Co., 93 Tenn. 630, 27 S. W. 1017; Patterson v. Tate, 141 Tenn. 607, 213 S. W. 981; Gibson, Section 315.

Assignment II presents the much mooted question of when and how an order for merchandise becomes a contract and its solution requires a discussion of the facts.

The Memphis Paper Company, defendant and cross-complainant, had been buying paper from complainant for twenty years under a very friendly relationship.

Upon the advent of World War II a shortage of paper arose. The Government requisitioned a percentage of the production of complainant which ultimately reached thirty-five percent. This necessitated that complainant dispose of the rest of its production under a quota system among its customers. Defendant’s quota was 29.1 tons per month. From 1942 until the end of the war in 1945 this quota was abided by with each customer. After the war the quota was disregarded to a large extent and defendant was a preferred customer to the extent of almost double for the first five months of 1946.

On account of the foregoing and of labor shortages and other restrictive conditions complainant superimposed on its regular acknowledgment of order forms the following: “Because of the present national emergency we do not guarantee prices, quantity or delivery. The price prevailing at time of shipment will apply. Priorities, preferences or other limitations of supply affecting our supplies or us, and transportation delay, shall be deemed beyond our control.” R. 50, 75, 98.

During the war defendant continued sending in its orders by mail and by telephone and took what it could obtain under its quota, as of course it could only do because the Federal directive relieved all sellers of requisi- *299 tioued type of materials of liability on contracts unperformed because of the directive.

After the War Powers Act, 50 U. S. C. A. Appendix, Section 631 et seq., expired at the end of 1945, complainant shipped to defendant during the first five months of 1946 158 tons of paper on back order of 1945 and possibly 1944, and 463.1 tons on current orders of 1946.

On June 1, 1946, complainant wrote defendant that the controlling capital stock of the corporation had been acquired by others who planned to use the entire production of paper, so that it would not be able to ship any more paper to defendant.

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Bluebook (online)
222 S.W.2d 617, 32 Tenn. App. 293, 1949 Tenn. App. LEXIS 97, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/calcasieu-paper-co-inc-v-memphis-paper-co-tennctapp-1949.