Konic International Corp. v. Spokane Computer Services, Inc.

708 P.2d 932, 109 Idaho 527, 1985 Ida. App. LEXIS 758
CourtIdaho Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 4, 1985
Docket15882
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 708 P.2d 932 (Konic International Corp. v. Spokane Computer Services, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Konic International Corp. v. Spokane Computer Services, Inc., 708 P.2d 932, 109 Idaho 527, 1985 Ida. App. LEXIS 758 (Idaho Ct. App. 1985).

Opinion

WALTERS, Chief Judge.

Konic International Corporation sued Spokane Computer Services, Inc., to collect the price of an electrical device allegedly sold by Konic to Spokane Computer. The suit was tried before a magistrate sitting without a jury. The magistrate entered judgment for Spokane Computer, concluding there was no contract between the parties because of lack of apparent authority of an employee of Spokane Computer to purchase the device from Konic. The district court, on appeal, upheld the magistrate’s judgment. On further appeal by Konic, we also affirm the magistrate’s *528 judgment but base our result on reasoning different from that of the lower court.

The magistrate found the following facts. David Young, an employee of Spokane Computer, was instructed by his employer to investigate the possibility of purchasing a surge protector, a device which protects computers from damaging surges of electrical current. Young’s .investigation turned up several units priced from $50 to $200, none of which, however, were appropriate for his employer’s needs. Young then contacted Konic. After discussing Spokane Computer’s needs with a Konic engineer, Young was referred to one of Konic’s salesmen. Later, after deciding on a certain unit, Young inquired as to the price of the selected item. The salesman responded, “fifty-six twenty.” The salesman meant $5,620. Young in turn thought $56.20.

The salesman for Konic asked about Young’s authority to order the equipment and was told that Young would have to get approval from one of his superiors. Young in turn prepared a purchase order for $56.20 and had it approved by the appropriate authority. Young telephoned the order and purchase order number to Konic who then shipped the equipment to Spokane Computer. However, because of internal processing procedures of both parties the discrepancy in prices was not discovered immediately. Spokane Computer received the surge protector and installed it in its office. The receipt and installation of the equipment occurred while the president of Spokane Computer was on vacation. Although the president’s father, who was also chairman of the board of Spokane Computer, knew of the installation, he only inquired as to what the item was and who had ordered it. The president came back from vacation the day after the surge protector had been installed and placed in operation and was told of the purchase. He immediately ordered that power to the equipment be turned off because he realized that the equipment contained parts which alone were worth more than $56 in value. Although the president then told Young to verify the price of the surge protector, Young failed to do so. Two weeks later, when Spokane Computer was processing its purchase order and Konic’s invoice, the discrepancy between the amount on the invoice and the amount on the purchase order was discovered. The president of Spokane Computer then contacted Konic, told Konic that Young had no authority to order such equipment, that Spokane Computer did not want the equipment, and that Konic should remove it. Konic responded that Spokane Computer now owned the equipment and if the equipment was not paid for, Konic would sue for the price. Spokane Computer refused to pay and this litigation ensued.

Following trial, the magistrate found that Young had no actual, implied, or apparent authority to enter into the transaction and, therefore, Spokane Computer did not owe Konic for the equipment. 1 In reaching its decision, the magistrate also noted that when Spokane Computer acquired full knowledge of the facts, it took prompt action to disaffirm Young’s purchase.

We agree with the magistrate’s result. However, rather than base our decision on the agency principle of apparent authority, as did the trial court, we believe that more basic principles of contract are determinative in this case. “When the result reached by the trial court is correct, but entered on a different theory, we will affirm it on the correct theory.” Goodwin v. Nationwide Insurance Co., 104 Idaho 74, 83, 656 P.2d 135, 144 (Ct.App.1982).

Basically what is involved here is a failure of communication between the parties. A similar failure to communicate arose over 100 years ago in the celebrated case of Raffles v. Wichelhaus, 2 Hurl. 906, 159 Eng. Rep. 375 (1864) which has become better known as the case of the good ship “Peerless”. In Peerless, the parties agreed on a sale of cotton which was to be deliv *529 ered from Bombay by the ship “Peerless”. In fact, there were two ships named “Peerless” and each party, in agreeing to the sale, was referring to a different ship. Because the sailing time of the two ships was materially different, neither party was willing to agree to shipment by the “other” Peerless. The court ruled that, because each party had a different ship in mind at the time of the contract, there was in fact no binding contract. The Peerless rule later was incorporated into section 71 of the RESTATEMENT OF CONTRACTS and has now evolved into section 20 of RESTATEMENT (SECOND) OF CONTRACTS (1981). Section 20 states in part:

(1) There is no manifestation of mutual assent to an exchange if the parties attach materially different meanings to their manifestations and
(a) neither knows or has reason to know the meaning attached by the other.

Comment (c) to section 20 further explains that “even though the parties manifest mutual assent to the same words of agreement, there may be no contract because of a material difference of understanding as to the terms of the exchange.” Another authority, Williston, discussing situations where a mistake will prevent formation of a contract, agrees that “where a phrase of contract ... is reasonably capable of different interpretations ... there is no contract.” 1 S. WILLISTON, CONTRACTS § 95 (3d ed. 1957).

One commentator on the Peerless case, maintaining that the doctrine should be cautiously applied, indicates three principles about the case doctrine that are generally in agreement: (1) “the doctrine applies only when the parties have different understandings of their expression of agreement”; (2) the doctrine 'does not apply when one party’s understanding, because of that party’s fault, is less reasonable than the other party’s understanding; and (3) parol evidence is admissible to establish the facts necessary to apply the rule. Young, Equivocation in the Making of Agreements, 64 COLUM. L. REV. 619 (1964).

The second principle indicates that the doctrine may be applicable to this case because, arguably, both parties’ understandings were reasonable. Also, as pointed out by the district court, both parties were equally at fault in contributing to the resulting problems. The third principle is not relevant to the present case.

The first principle is not only directly applicable to the present case, but also corresponds to reasoning used in Snoderly v. Bower, 30 Idaho 484, 166 P. 265 (1917), citing the Peerless case. In Snoderly the court dealt with two parties who had contracted to grow hay.

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Bluebook (online)
708 P.2d 932, 109 Idaho 527, 1985 Ida. App. LEXIS 758, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/konic-international-corp-v-spokane-computer-services-inc-idahoctapp-1985.