Caldwell v. E. F. Spears & Sons

216 S.W. 83, 186 Ky. 64, 1919 Ky. LEXIS 161
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedNovember 28, 1919
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 216 S.W. 83 (Caldwell v. E. F. Spears & Sons) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Caldwell v. E. F. Spears & Sons, 216 S.W. 83, 186 Ky. 64, 1919 Ky. LEXIS 161 (Ky. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Thomas —

Affirming.

Alleging the violation of a contract which they claim was held by them for the purchase of the 1916 hemp crop of the defendant and appellant, the plaintiffs and appellees brought this suit to recover damages for such violation, and there was a judgment in their favor for the sum of $1,907.88, to reverse which defendant prosecutes this appeal.

The contract relied on was an agreement between plaintiff and defendant by which the former was to purchase defendant’s hemp at ten dollars per hundred pounds. The damages claimed is the difference between the agreed purchase price and the value of the [66]*66hemp at the time for delivery, which difference was four dollars per hundred pounds, calculated upon the basis of the amount of hemp, made up the sum returned by the jury in its verdict. Defendant made no denial of the amount of damages if he is liable at all, his only defense being that he made no contract to sell plaintiffs his hemp.

The grounds urged for a reversal are (1) that the court should have given to the jury, at defendant’s instance, a peremptory instruction to return a verdict in his favor. (2) Errors in the instructions given to the jury, and (3) that the court should have granted the motion for a new trial because of (a) surprise which ordinary prudence on the part of defendant could not have guarded against, and (b) a misinterpretation on the part of two of the jurors of the court’s instructions, whereby they were led to subscribe to the verdict which they otherwise would not have done.

Briefly considering these in the order named, it will he necessary in disposing of ground (1) to make a statement of some of the testimony given by the witnesses The plaintiffs are dealers in hemp, and have their principal office at Paris, Kentucky. In 1916 they had an agent in Boyle county, Mr. Bichard Cobb, who was a farmer living about three miles' from Danville. The defendant was also a farmer in that county, and on August 21 of that year plaintiffs’ agent met defendant at Dan-ville. The two differ in their testimony as to the place of meeting, the time, and as to what occurred. Cobb, the ag’ent, testified in substance that defendant offered to accept ten cents .per pound for his hemp, and that he then replied, “Well, I want to see what I can do here with the farmers today in locating crops and so on, and I will let you know. ’ ’ He says this conversation occurred about eleven o’clock a. m., in front of Cecil’s store; that some time in the afternoon he met defendant on the street and the latter asked him: “Have you heard from your man yet?” To which the agent replied, “No, I wasn’t going to call him until I went home. There is several fellows that is not in town that I expected to see and I will call those as soon as I go home, and let you know. ’ ’

Defendant’s version of the transaction is that he met the agent Cobb at about noon, in a restaurant in Dan-Mile; that the latter asked him what he would take for his hemp, whereupon he replied, “Mr. Cobb, I will take [67]*67ten cents per pound for my hemp to day.” That he repeated that statement after he had finished his meal and was leaving the restaurant. He denies having any further conversation with the agent during the day about the matter. About six o’clock that afternoon Cobb from his residence telephoned the plaintiffs informing them of defendant’s offer, and it was immediately accepted. Cobb then attempted to reach the defendant over the telephone, by calling the residence on his farm, his father’s residence, and different places in the city of Danville. About nine o’clock p. m. he again called the residence of defendant’s father (where defendant resided) but he was still absent, and word was left with his brother that plaintiffs accepted .the proposition to purchase his hemp at ten dollars per one hundred pounds, ihe brother agreeing to deliver the message. Plaintiff did not return home until áfter his brother had retired, and he left his father’s residence early next morning-, before his brother arose, so that the message was not delivered to him until noon, after hi.s return from a business trip which he had made to an adjoining’ county. Upon being notified by his brother of plaintiffs’ acceptance, the defendant repudiated it upon the ground that it was not made within the time limit of the offer, which he contended was to be for that day only, and that the day ended at sunset.

Instruction No. 1 given by the court directed tiie jury to find for plaintiffs if they believed from the evidence that the offer of sale was,not confined to the day upon which it was made, • and instruction No. 2 directed them to find for defendant if they believed that the offer was limited to the day upon which it was made. As we have seen, the jury returned a verdict for the plaintiffs, thereby finding that the offer was not limited as defendant insisted.

So the question is narrowed to this point — whether the offer as testified to by the agent Cobb, and which his principal afterward accepted, followed by the communication of acceptance the next day after the offer constitutes a binding contract. It will be observed that the facts in the case do not present the question whether a bare proposal, unaccompanied by any previous negotiations or any facts or circumstances looking to a continuance of the offer, would constitute a contract if accepted by the [68]*68offeree at any time in the future, since both parties, testified that the offer was to remain open, but differ as to the length of time.

* The law upon the subject of the creation of a contract by the making of an offer and its subsequent acceptance is well stated in 13 Corpus Juris, pages 292 and 297. With reference to the making of the offer the text, on page 293, says:

“An offer, if not under seal, may be revoked or withdrawn at any time before it is accepted, and the acceptance communicated when communication is necessary, for until then there is neither agreement nor consideration. Where an offer is accepted before it is revoked, the contract is as obligatory as if both promises were simultaneous. Here, as in other like cases, if both parties meet, one prepared to accept and the other to retract, whichever speaks first will have the law with him; and this question is one of fact to be decided by the jury.”

Concerning the acceptance of the offer, on page 297 the text says:

“An offer comes to an end at the expiration of the time given for its acceptance, a limitation of time within which an offer is to run being equivalent to the withdrawal of the offer at the end of the time named. Where no time is. fixed in the offer it expires at the end of a reasonable time. What is a reasonable time depends largely on the nature of the particular offer and the circumstances of the case.”

■ The opinions of this court are in full accord with the above excerpts, as will be seen from the following oases: Moxley’s Adbxrs. v. Moxley, 3 Met. 309; Postal Telegraph-Cable Co. v. Louisville Cottonseed Oil Co., 140 Ky. 506; Shaw & Company v. Ingram-Day Lumber Company, 152 Ky. 329; Citizens National Life Insurance Company v. Murphy, 154 Ky. 88; Portland Cement & Coal Co. v. Steckel, 164 Ky. 420, and Hutcheson v. Blake-man, 3 Met. 80. All of the writers upon the subject of contracts state the doctrine substantially as above.

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Bluebook (online)
216 S.W. 83, 186 Ky. 64, 1919 Ky. LEXIS 161, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/caldwell-v-e-f-spears-sons-kyctapp-1919.