Hunt v. Stimson

23 F.2d 447, 1928 U.S. App. LEXIS 3190
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 3, 1928
Docket4743
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 23 F.2d 447 (Hunt v. Stimson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hunt v. Stimson, 23 F.2d 447, 1928 U.S. App. LEXIS 3190 (6th Cir. 1928).

Opinion

DENISON, Circuit, Judge.

Plaintiffs in error, a partnership* with headquarters at Nashville, Tenn., were manufacturers of lumber, controlling several small mills in Tennessee, and owning a mill in Georgia. They received from defendants in error an order for certain ash lumber, and acknowledged the order by letter dated March 15, 1920, the essential parts of which are as follows:

“J. W. Stimson & Co., Owensboro, Kentucky. Wo enter your order, dated March 12, 1920, No. 1195, and accept and agree to fill the same only upon, the conditions herein, stated. To be consigned to you as directed. Terms: * * Frt. allowed on present rate of freight, f. o. b. Nashville or Blakely, Ga. * * To be shipped during the next three months — delivery to bo complete by July 1, 1920. * * * The conditions upon which we accept this order axe stated herein, and no agent or representative has any authority from us, except to solicit orders. * * * The acceptance and filling of orders, and all questions about settlements, adjustments, and remittances, are to be taken up with us direct at Nashville. If, upon arrival and inspection of any shipment on this order, there is any ‘ complaint to be made, about quality, measurement, widths, lengths, ■dryness, or any other feature of such ship-merit, the ear shall be held intact, subject to our inspection and order, and complaint made in not less than 5 days after car is unloaded. If the complaint cannot be satisfactorily adjusted, the lumber is to be returned to us upon our request, and we reserve the right to cancel the order covering any lumber on this contract. * * * Ten to 20 carloads — covering the actual amount wo produce and have ready for shipment during the time above mentioned. Firm texture white ash at the following prices: [Here follows a schedule of sizes and prices and loading specifications — ■ prices ranging from $275 for 4-inch timbers of the highest quality down to $75 for 1-inch No. 2 common.] If your order is not properly entered above, and the conditions of this contract agreeable, we will expect immediate advice; otherwise, we will expect you to be governed by same.”

This was accepted by the purchasers and became the contract. During the period named six cars were shipped. No dispute arose. The vendees then neglected or refused to give further shipping directions, and eventually denied liability to receive any more. The vendors brought this action, claiming damages for the failure to receive the remaining 14 ears out of a total of 20. At the close of plaintiffs' evidence upon a jury trial, the court below directed a verdict for defendants, for the reasons that the contract imposed no legal obligations, and that the plaintiffs had not proved that they were ready and able to perform.

The mutually binding force of contracts to sell and buy the output of a going manufacturing operation is now well settled, even though there is no definite obligation on either side to the extent of a named quantity. Pittsburgh Co. v. Neuer Co. (C. C. A. 6) 253 F. 161.

We have no hesitation in classifying this contract as one for output, modified by the minimum and maximum limits. At the different mills the vendors were engaged in cutting timber of all kinds as it came along from a complete cutting operation. This brought to the saws at Blakely and at the Tennessee mills continuing quantities of ash, more or less, as might happen. This was cut into lumber of such thickness as good sawmill practice permitted. The result was that there was a continuing more or less regular production of ash lumber of the sizes and grades specified. True, the vendors might measurably decrease or increase the quantity by some selection of timber to be cut or logs to be sawed; but the contract kept this selective right within limits *450 which were agreed upon as reasonable. The contract was therefore sufficiently definite to indicate a meeting of minds.

The feature next noticeable is presented by the maximum and minimum limits. Which party had the right of choice ? It is not clear that this question, as an independent one, exists, because it is modified by the output feature; but if the contract were to be treated as an ordinary one with such limitations, and whether it were to be judged by the rule of the “first actor” or by the rule that the choice lies with the one for whose benefit the option is given (see full discussion in Crystal Co. v. Robertson Co. [C. C. A. 6] 289 F. 15, 18), the vendors, not the vendees, had the right to elect. The elasticity was allowed for their benefit, and the first step was for them to .produce and have ready for delivery the first shipment that might be specified.

. We think, therefore, that the contract contemplated and covered all of the firm texture white ash boards of the specified sizes and of the vendors’ production which should be ready for shipment during the time specified, and extended to 20 ears, if soi much were ready. A literal reading would confine the subject-matter to lumber which was produced by the vendors after March 15, but this is not the reasonable meaning. The vital thing was that the lumber should be ready for shipment. There might be, as there was in fact, a small amount which was ready for shipment on March 15, and which the conduct of the parties showed they intended to include. We think it more reasonable to say that the phrase “which we produce” was intended merely to identify the lumber as the vendors’ product, and, plainly, if it was ready for shipment on March 15, it was ready “during the time above mentioned.”

A question is made as to the period of the contract. It says “during the next three months.” In precision the time would expire June 15. Then the contract continues: “Delivery to be complete by July 1,1920.” These clauses should be read together and reconciled. In our judgment, the proper construction is that delivery on or before June 15 was contemplated, but that the additional tolerance or grace period of two weeks was provided for. The vendees might fairly expect completion by June 15. They could not demand it until July 1.

The serious question which is made as to the validity of the contract depends upon the cancellation clause above quoted. It is said that, if either party to an executory contract retains the right to cancel it at his pleasure for any remaining period, it imposes no positive obligation on him, and the contract fails for lack of mutuality. The general principles applied in courts of equity may develop a lack of mutuality into a bar to relief ; but in courts of law that defense rests on the legal rule that a contract must be supported by consideration, and at law it is only upon a contract where there is no consideration for the defendant’s promise sued upon, except' the plaintiff’s cqrrelative promise, that the question of mutuality becomes important. See the full and satisfactory discussion by Circuit Judge Woolley, in Meurer Co. v. Martin (C. C. A. 3) 1 F.(2d) 687. 1 This is well illustrated by the familiar option contract of purchase or sale. A contract which imposes on the vendors an obligation to sell, but puts no 'duty upon the vendee to buy, except at his pleasure, will be completely valid, if the vendee parts with sufficient consideration to support the vendors’ promise; and the situation must be the same, where the vendee definitely agrees to buy, though the vendors have an option to sell or not; and relatively small considerations are held sufficient.

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Bluebook (online)
23 F.2d 447, 1928 U.S. App. LEXIS 3190, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hunt-v-stimson-ca6-1928.