Jessup & Moore Paper Co. v. Bryant Paper Co.

129 A. 559, 283 Pa. 434, 1925 Pa. LEXIS 421
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 21, 1925
DocketAppeal, 234
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 129 A. 559 (Jessup & Moore Paper Co. v. Bryant Paper Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jessup & Moore Paper Co. v. Bryant Paper Co., 129 A. 559, 283 Pa. 434, 1925 Pa. LEXIS 421 (Pa. 1925).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Simpson,

This case was tried before the learned president judge of the court below, without a jury, under the provisions of the Act of April 22, 1874, P. L. 109. He reported in favor of plaintiff but did not assess the damages, because the parties had agreed this should not be done until after the question of liability was finally determined. The court in banc, in an opinion by the trial judge himself, sustained certain exceptions to his rulings, and entered judgment for defendant. The facts are undisputed, and but two questions of law are raised on this appeal by plaintiff from that judgment: 1st. Was the contract in suit enforceable at common law? 2d. If it was, does the 4th section of the Sales Act of May 19, 1915, P. L. 543, stand in the way of a recovery?

The contract was verbal, but was evidenced by a confirmatory letter from plaintiff and an endorsement there *437 on by defendant. By it, plaintiff agreed to sell and defendant to buy “150 to 200 tons per month [of bleached soda pulp], during the year 1921,” the method for fixing the price — out of which provisions the first of the contested questions arises, — being specified as follows: “On the last day of each month......the Jessup & Moore Paper Co., the sellers, will fix their price for their pulp for each [succeeding] calendar month. Upon receipt of notice of this price, if unsatisfactory to the Bryant Paper Co., the buyers shall then submit to the sellers a bona fide offer from a pulp manufacturer, admitted by both the sellers and buyers to be responsible, to furnish the [buyers] 150 to 200 tons of bleached soda pulp during the ensuing month, at a lower price. If the buyers do not submit such offer from a pulp manufacturer, the price named by the sellers -shall be binding on both parties during the month involved. If, however, the buyers submit such offer, the sellers shall have the right to substitute the price so submitted instead of the price fixed by the sellers, and, if so substituted, both parties shall be bound thereby. If not accepted by the sellers, the buyers shall be at liberty to accept the proposal of such other pulp manufacturer for the ensuing month’s supply, and shall not be bound, during that period, to accept deliveries from” the sellers.

As already stated, the entire controversy regarding the enforceability of the contract at common law, depends on the construction to be given to those clauses. Defendant claims that, under them, on the last day of each month, plaintiff could have specified any price whatever, fair or unfair, for the ensuing month, and this would have been binding on defendant, unless it could, by the next day, obtain and submit “a bona fide [counter] offer from a pulp manufacturer,” which offer plaintiff could reject by simply saying the “pulp manufacturer [is not] admitted.-.....to be responsible.” They point out, also, that, even though plaintiff admitted the offerer’s responsibility, it laid the option of accepting *438 the cut price or refusing to do so; if it did neither, unless defendant submitted to the higher price of plaintiff, the latter was not required to furnish the pulp during the ensuing month. These facts, they assert, prove a lack of mutuality in the obligation of the contract, which was, therefore, unenforceable in so far as it was executory. On the other hand, plaintiff asserts the contract was valid and binding, that defendant’s cancellation of it was wrongful, and hence sought to recover in this suit for the loss thus occasioned.

The last day of the month was doubtless specified as the time when plaintiff should initially state the price for the ensuing month, in order that, when the market was unsettled, all the circumstances which might affect the price during that period, would be known to both parties, so far as they could possibly be ascertained in advance; but the contract does not require that the" counter-offer, from a responsible pulp manufacturer, must'be submitted on the day following the receipt of notice of the price named by plaintiff. No time for its submission is fixed; consequently a reasonable time is allowed, and, under the circumstances here appearing, this would mean not earlier than the time when defendant was reasonably required to give shipping instructions to plaintiff. The parties themselves appear to have viewed the contract in that way. On several occasions plaintiff delayed shipments until the last week of the month, in which the pulp was to be delivered, in order that defendant might obtain counter-bids for that month’s deliveries; and, on July 30, 1921, reduced the charge for July because of a better price defendant obtained from another manufacturer, as set forth in its letter of the previous day.

Nor does the contract, when properly construed, give to plaintiff the arbitrary power to fix any price it pleases, or to capriciously claim that the manufacturer, who should give a counter-bid, was not responsible. As to the latter point, the applicable rule is laid down in *439 Singerly v. Thayer, 108 Pa. 291, and consistently followed ever since, to at least as late as Thaler Bros. v. Greisser Construction Co., 229 Pa. 512, 518. Under it the right given to one party to refuse to act because of dissatisfaction must be exercised in good faith, and not expressed as the result of mere caprice. Every contract is to be construed reasonably, and any action by either party, not warranted by its terms, would give to the other a right either of cancellation or suit. Nowhere in the voluminous correspondence appearing in this record, is there even the slightest suggestion of arbitrary or capricious action on the part of plaintiff. A fair difference of opinion may always exist as to what is the lowest price for which an article can be obtained at a given time; hence the right to get counter-bids from other manufacturers was doubtless inserted in order to provide a method of adjustment, should such difference appear. Moreover, while the contract does not so state, and hence it cannot be considered a binding term thereof, plaintiff wrote to defendant* — when the latter sought to postpone deliveries because of the unsatisfactory condition of the trade, — that “we will not at any time ask you to pay a higher price for the pulp than we are charging our own mill [which also manufactures paper therefrom], or our other customers.” So far as appears, or is claimed on this record, plaintiff faithfully kept that promise.

It is suggested by appellee that the contract lacks mutuality, because, although plaintiff, generally speaking, was required to deliver 150 tons per month, it had the option to deliver 50 tons additional, which, if the contract is effective, defendant had no option but to accept. Carried to its logical conclusion, the argument based on this objection would destroy all options. We said, however, in York Metal & Alloys Co. v. Cyclops Steel Co., 280 Pa. 585, 590: “When there is an agreement founded on a consideration, it is not invalid for want of mutuality - because one party has an option while the other *440 has not, or, in other words, because it is obligatory on one and optional with the other. Hence, want of mutuality cannot be set up as a defense by the party who has received the benefit simply because it was left optional with the other party as to whether he would enforce his right: 13 C. J. 336.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
129 A. 559, 283 Pa. 434, 1925 Pa. LEXIS 421, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jessup-moore-paper-co-v-bryant-paper-co-pa-1925.