Hardwick v. American Can Co.

113 Tenn. 657
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 113 Tenn. 657 (Hardwick v. American Can Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hardwick v. American Can Co., 113 Tenn. 657 (Tenn. 1904).

Opinion

M'r. Justice Neil

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The complainant, trading under the name of “The Cleveland Stove Works,” entered into the following contract with the defendant company, viz.:

“The Cleveland Stove Works, of Cleveland, Tennessee, contracts and agrees to ship to the order of the American Can Company, of Atlanta, Georgia, five thousand or more stoves, which are to be shipped within one year from date.” There were other provisions not necessary to set forth here, but which, so far as may be required, will be stated later, in their appropriate place.

The bill in the present case was filed to recover damages for the breach of this contract. It alleged that the complainant had manufactured the five thousand stoves, and had tendered them to the defendant, but that [661]*661the latter bad taken only eleven hundred and ninety-one, declining to receive the remaining stoves.

The defenses, so far as necessary to be here stated, were that the defendant was not bonnd to order any of the stoves at all, that nnder the contract, it had the option to take the whole number named, or any less number, or none; secondly, that the contract was too indefinite for enforcement.

The damages claimed in the bill were laid at $15,000. The case was tried before the chancellor, and resulted in a judgment in favor of the complainant for the sum of $5,500. When the case reached this court on appeal, it was referred to the court of chancery appeals. That court added two items, amounting to something over $100 to the recovery, and affirmed the decree of the chancellor. From the decree of the court of chancery appeals an appeal has been prayed and prosecuted to this court, and errors have been assigned here.

The first error assigned makes the point that the court of chancery appeals erred in refusing to sanction the first defense above set out. x

There was no error in the matter complained of. The contract, in portions which we have not quoted, fixed the price of the stoves, or a means of ascertaining the price. The wording of the instrument which we have quoted is peculiar, it is true, in that the obligation is, in terms, only upon the complainant “to ship to the order of” the defendant so many stoves ; but we think that no other conclusion can be reached than that the [662]*662complainant was to furnish and the defendant was to receive at least five thousand stoves, within the time limited, one year from the date of the contract. The obligation of the complainant to furnish must in sound reason find its correlative in a corresponding obligation on the part of the defendant to receive.

In order to a proper understanding of the second defense, it is necessary that we should state the facts found in respect thereof by the court of chancery appeals. - ■

That court finds that the defendant, American Can Company, had purchased the plant and business of the “Conklin Factory,” located at Atlanta, Georgia, • and' continued the business of the latter concern at the same place; that for ten years prior to the date at which the “Conklin Factory” was purchased by the defendant, the complainant had been selling stoves to the “Conklin Factory,” and had had several contracts with that organization, each for five thousand stoves, the last of which was made on August 3, 1900, and was in force when the “Conklin Factory” was purchased by the defendant company, and that the latter assumed and carried out this contract, the complainant furnishing thereunder five thousand stoves or more; that after the making of the contract, last mentioned, complainant proceeded with the work of making stoves of different kinds, such as he thought would be suitable to the trade, and of such patterns as he had previously sold to the “Conklin Factory.”

[663]*663Tbe court of chancery appeals further finds that at the expiration of the contract last referred to, complainant addressed a letter to the defendant inclosing the draft of a new contract, and on June 19, 1901, he again wrote asking a return of the paper as soon as possible, assigning as a reason for the request that he wished to be prepared with an adequate amount of iron for the making of the stoves; that after a number of letters had passed, the defendant, through its proper- officer, said it was willing to make the contract as soon as they could agree upon the price of No. 2 pig iron (which regulated the price of the stoves); that after an agreement had been reached upon this subject the writing was executed and returned to the complainant.

It is further found that after the execution of the writing, complainant proceeded to manufacture stoves of about twenty different sizes and kinds, as embraced in the contractthat defendant gave no specifications as to the kind it wished, and therefore complainant took the sales he had previously made to the “Conklin Factory,” for previous years, and made an estimate for the existing contract, on a basis of the average taken in such previous years; “that complainant acted upon this theory, and adopted this method for ascertaining, what assortment defendant would have ordered had it complied with the contract, that is, had the defendant taken the assortment ordered by it” (or its predecessor), “for previous periods, and under prior contracts, thereby assuming that the same assortment would be required under [664]*664tbe present contract, inasmuch as ■ the defendant was supplying the same territory covered by previous contracts.” . . . “That defendant was to order and take from complainant all the stoves necessary to supply, for the term agreed upon, the trade of the Conklin Factory, the defendant expressly stipulating that it would not handle, buy, or sell, the stoves of any other manufacturer during the existence of the contract; that taking one year with another, a dealer will sell practically the same assortment of sizes each year, and that where a manufacturer has supplied a wholesale dealer for a number of years, he would become familiar with the assortment the purchaser would require, and that the number of stoves would be taken in assorted sizes;” that the defendant was to take its entire requirement of stoves from complainant during the time stated in the contract, and “in such an assortment as to Sizes and kinds as defendant needed to supply its trade;” that the parties themselves, by their conduct and correspondence construed the contract as requiring the defendant to order and receive at least five thousand stoves, during the time fixed in the contract, and that complainant was bound to ship that number to defendant’s order within the year; that both parties to the contract so understood it.

In addition to the foregoing findings, we shall now set. out certain clauses of the written contract sued upon not previously copied. They are as follows:

“In consideration of the agreement or contract of the [665]*665Cleveland Stove Works, as aforesaid, tbe said Conklin Factory, of the American Can Company, agrees and binds itself not to handle, buy or sell, or offer to buy or sell, stoves from any manufacturer, jobber, commission man, or broker, from and after this date, for a period of one year, unless and provided, the Cleveland Stove Works are unable to fill the orders of the Conklin Factory of the American Can Company, with a reasonable degree of promptness, and in that event, reasonable concessions will be made as to the quantity to be taken . . .

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Bluebook (online)
113 Tenn. 657, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hardwick-v-american-can-co-tenn-1904.