Clark & Son v. Ley

1 Pa. D. & C. 437, 1921 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 129
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Crawford County
DecidedJuly 18, 1921
DocketNo. 48
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Pa. D. & C. 437 (Clark & Son v. Ley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Crawford County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clark & Son v. Ley, 1 Pa. D. & C. 437, 1921 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 129 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1921).

Opinion

Prather, P. J.,

This action was brought to recover damages for the breach of an alleged contract concerning the purchase and sale of a quantity of lumber.

[438]*438The contract relied upon and pleaded is confined to a written order or letter of plaintiff, addressed to defendant, containing an offer, and defendant's answer thereto, which are set forth as follows:

“Shipping Order
No. 291 Haniel Clark & Son,
Manufacturers-Wholesalers, Hardwood Lumber.
To John Ley, of Titusville, Pa.
Please ship to Haniel Clark & Son,
Destination to be furnished later,
Description.
All the 4/4 No. 1 Common and Better Chestnut piled or stocked at the siding at Fieldmore Springs station on the New York Central R. R. This stock is to include the few pieces of No. 2 Common or S. W. which might be included in the piles with the distinct understanding that there shall not be to exceed 5 per cent, of the total number of feet of the lower grade of No. 1 Common. It is estimated that there will be three carloads of this stock.
Prices No. 1 & No. 2 Common $32.00 per M’
FAS 42.00 ” ”
In case we decide to load the Common & F A S in separate cars we are to pay you 50c per M’ for F A S so loaded in addition to the prices given above.
Terms: 2 per cent, off 10 days from arrival.
We think we will be able to load this stock at your convenience within the next 2 or 3 weeks. Haniel Clark & Son
By-
Haniel Clark & Son, “Titusville, Pa., April 27, 1918.
Union City, Pa.
Dear Sirs: Your order for chestnut at Fieldmore Springs, Pa., received, and will load same for you providing inspection is fair and satisfactory.
Regarding the oak that you saw will let you have it at $26.00, $36.00 and $56.00 as talked if you want it within the next ten days. Chestnut and oak prices are F. O. B. cars Fieldmore Springs and Titusville, Pa.
Signed, J. D. Ley.”

Following the exchange of letters as set forth there was no other communication, oral or written, between the parties until the first week of July, 1918, when plaintiff called defendant on the 'phone and was informed by him that the lumber had been sold to another party.

Plaintiff, having thus discovered that it was now out of the power of defendant to furnish the particular lumber mentioned, opened up a correspondence with him, urging its right to have this lumber or its equivalent.

To these letters defendant replied, expressing his regret at his inability to comply with plaintiff’s request, and expressed his willingness or desire to go into the market and procure similar lumber to the satisfaction of plaintiff.

While this testimony was admitted, we do not regard it as relevant to the issue. At most, defendant’s declared willingness to do something he thought he was required to do, or ought to do, could impose no obligation upon him other than that required by the alleged contract: McClure v. Times Publishing Co., 169 Pa. 213.

It is only when a written contract is ambiguous that the interpretation placed upon it by the parties themselves becomes a relevant inquiry in its construction.

[439]*439Where a contract is partly in writing and partly in parol, the rule of interpretation is stated in Schwab v. Ginkinger, 181 Pa. 8, as follows: “It is evident, therefore, that the whole of the actual contract between the parties, being partly in parol and partly in writing, must all be considered in order to determine what the contract really was. The principle that a contract which is partly in writing and partly in parol becomes all parol is too familiar to require the citation of authorities. But in this case the application of the written paper to the subject of contention requires the help of the parol testimony. . . . With this testimony before the jury the question would be, what was the contract between the parties?”

In the case before us, however, there is no parol contract to consider. Either plaintiff’s written offer under date of April 25, 1918, and defendant’s written answer dated April 27, 1918, constitute the contract or there is none. Does defendant’s letter in answer to plaintiff’s offer modify or qualify the offer? If so, it was not an acceptance.

If defendant’s answer, or acceptance, was conditioned upon some modification in the offer or specific addition thereto, then plaintiff was called upon to act or speak indicative of his assent to defendant’s counter-proposal. Plaintiff’s reply or conduct would be evidence of his mind. Plaintiff might by his conduct have brought himself within the principle recognized in Dougherty v. Briggs, 231 Pa. 68, 80, and have insisted that it was evidence of his acceptance of defendant’s terms.

But did plaintiff do anything to bring itself within this doctrine? It did nothing by conduct or answer between April 27th and July 3rd to inform defendant it was accepting his terms or relying upon taking the lumber mentioned.

If defendant still had the lumber on July 3rd and afterward, while the correspondence was being carried on, there would be some color to plaintiff’s position with reference to the evidential value of such correspondence, but under the undisputed facts we think these letters were incompetent for any purpose.

If we are correct in this conclusion, then the writings pleaded furnish the entire evidence of the alleged contract and must be interpreted in their own light.

In Dougherty v. Briggs, 231 Pa. 68, 75, the Supreme Court said: “When it is sought to establish a contract by letters which pass between the parties, containing proposals, answers and counter-proposals, it must be made to appear that at some point in the correspondence there was a definite and unqualified proposal by one party which was unconditionally and without qualification accepted by the other party. In other words, the minds of the parties must come together on all the essential terms of the alleged contract. This is the established doctrine, and is recognized in our cases: Slaymaker v. Irwin, 4 Whart. 369; Allen v. Kirwan, 159 Pa. 612. In the former case Mr. Justice Sergeant, delivering the opinion, quotes with approval the rule announced by Mr. Chitty in his General Practice as follows (page 380) : ‘The whole terms of the contract when in writing need not be expressed on the same paper or documents, but may be collected from several letters containing proposals and alternate agreements between the parties; but then the last communication must be a distinct and unqualified assent to an equally clear proposal; and if the last letter suggest any new or further proposition requiring the assent of the other party, or some communication from him to complete the transaction, then no contract or agreement is constituted:’ 1 Chitty, Gen. Pr., 118.”

[440]*440In Joseph v. Richardson, 2 Pa. Superior Ct.

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Related

Singerly v. Thayer
2 A. 230 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1885)
Allen v. Kirwan
28 A. 495 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1894)
McClure v. Times Publishing Co.
32 A. 293 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1895)
Schwab v. Ginkinger
37 A. 125 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1897)
Thaler Bros. v. Greisser Construction Co.
79 A. 147 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1911)
Dougherty v. Briggs
79 A. 924 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1911)
Ehrenstrom v. Hess
105 A. 44 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1918)
Joseph v. Richardson
2 Pa. Super. 208 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1896)
Clements v. Bolster
6 Pa. Super. 411 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1898)
Swing v. Walker
27 Pa. Super. 366 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1905)
Stuart & Peterson Co. v. Newton
52 Pa. Super. 158 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1912)
Slaymaker v. Irwin
4 Whart. 369 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1839)

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Bluebook (online)
1 Pa. D. & C. 437, 1921 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 129, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clark-son-v-ley-pactcomplcrawfo-1921.