Lamborn v. Woodard

20 F.2d 635, 1927 U.S. App. LEXIS 2608
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedJuly 5, 1927
DocketNo. 2579
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 20 F.2d 635 (Lamborn v. Woodard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lamborn v. Woodard, 20 F.2d 635, 1927 U.S. App. LEXIS 2608 (4th Cir. 1927).

Opinion

BAKER, District Judge.

Lamborn & Co., plaintiffs in error, plaintiffs below, wore engaged, among other things, in buying and selling of sugar. James A. Woodard-Holmes Company, defendants in error, defendants below, were wholesale merchants located in the small town (population about 3,000) of Edenton, N. C.; their trade being largely rural and consisting in sales to small country stores. It will tend to a clearer understanding if they be designated by the positions they occupied in the trial court.

The plaintiffs, under date of June 8, 1920, sent to defendants a telegram reading as follows:

“Savannah, Georgia, June 8, 1920.
“J. A. Woodard-Holmes Co., Edenton, N. C. Offer subject confirmation limited quan[636]*636tity 'fine' granulated basis twenty-six cents less two per cént' fob Savannah Refinery shipment sellers option one-third July or . August one third August or September one third September or October cannot buy unless take all positions if interested wire quickly-
“Lamborn & Co.”
To this, the, defendants replied on same day: . , .
“Edenton, N. C., via Atlanta,. Ga.
“Lamborn and Co., Savannah, Ga. Telegram received. accept your offer ship two hundred.bags.fine granulated sugar hundred pound bags. ■ '
“J. A; Woodard-Holmes Co.”

The next day (June '9, 1920) plaintiffs wired defendants as follows:

“Savannah, Ga., June 9 — 20.
“J. W. Woodard-Holmes Co., Edenton, N. C. Bought fifty seven barrels fine granulated basis twenty six cents less two per cent fob Savannah refinery shipment sellers option one third July or August one third August or September one third September or October.
“Lamborn & Co.”

There were no other communication or correspondence between the parties until June 22, when plaintiffs wrote defendants a letter, in which they refuse expressly to make shipments until and1 unless contract, claimed to have been theretofore forwarded, is. duly signed by,both parties.

Nothing further occurred between the parties until July 15 — three weeks after the letter of June 22 and about five weeks after the date of telegrams — when plaintiffs wrote defendants a letter in which they sought to introduce two. entirely new provisions into the alleged contract: (a) .Change in date of delivery from July or August for first, one-third to June or July; and (b) change the delivery of entire order in 100-pound bags as specified to 50 per cent, thereof in barrels weighing from 315 to 365 pounds, and further state: “If we fail to1 hear from you immediately we will take your silence as an acceptance of the assortment we desire to ship out.”

On July 17 (apparently by return mail) defendants answered: “Very sorry that we can’t handle your sugar. We have purchased from other places.”

By subsequent correspondence plaintiffs expressed desire to ship but continued to insist upon 50 per cent, being accepted in barrels weighing from 315 to 365 pounds each.

Defendants never signed the pontract demanded by plaintiffs in their letter of June 22,’and "never accepted any part of the‘sugar in question. Plaintiffs offered the sugar for sale, and on November 2,1920, sold it to Paradise & Rich, Atlanta,' Ga., at. eleven cents per pound, and sent defendants a statement showing balance due of $3,048.60 as a loss, which defendants declined to pay, and this action was.instituted.

Practically the only question involved is whether or not a contract was made by the exchange, of the three telegrams hereinbefore quoted. The plaintiffs insist that the acceptance, in the light of the allegations of article 7 of the complaint, “In the sugar trade, fifty seven barrels is the same as 200 bags,” and the defendants insisting that they offered to purchase 200 bags of sugar * weighing 100 pounds each, and no other sized parcels or paekagés, and that plaintiff was compelled to accept the offer in such terms to make a contract.

The learned judge below instructed the jury that no contract was made as alleged, that the defendants did not wrongfully refuse to accept and pay for the sugar in question, and that defendants were not indebted in any amount to the plaintiffs, and in compliance therewith the jury did so find.

There are four assignments, of error, the latter two being formal, the case being brought here upon the first and second; the first being plaintiffs’ exception to the charge of the court directing the jury to find there was no contract made as alleged, and the defendants did not wrongfully refuse to accept and pay for the sugar in question; the second being to the refusal of the court to submit the issues1 to the jury under proper instructions.- ■

There is no question about the well-known and equally well-established proposition that “where a person offers to do a definite thing, and another accepts conditionally, or introduces a new term into the acceptance, his answer is a mere expression of willingness, and is not a definite agreement to perform.” In order to construct a contract, there must be a proposal squarely assented to. There must be a meeting of two minds in one and the same intention, in order to constitute a contract, and an acceptance of an offer varying in terms is a rejection of the offer. Minneapolis & St. L. Ry. Co. v. Columbus Rolling Mill Co., 119 U. S. 149, 7 S. Ct. 168, 30 L. Ed. 376; Wilson v. Lumber Co., 180 N. C. 271, 104 S. E. 531; Rucker v. Sanders, 182 N. C. 607, 109 S. E. 857; Watters v. Hedgepeth, 172 N. C. 310, 90 S. E. 314; Clark v. Lumber Co., 158 N. C. 145, 73 S. E. 793; Cozart v. Herndon, 114 N. C. 252, 19 S. E. 158. 13 Corpus Juris, pp. 281, 282.

The defendants admittedly were small [637]*637town wholesalers (population of Edenton 3,000), their trade being limited to the rural district surrounding and sales to small country stores. The defendants testified, and it is uneontradicted, that their trade could not. handle sugar in barrels, but that they could handle 100 pound bags advantageously.

"A careful reading of the telegram from defendants to plaintiffs, dated June 8, expressly stipulates that deliveries are to be made in “100-pound bags.” The word “bags” is twice used therein. Thus definite and exact emphasis is placed by defendants upon the conditions of their proposed acceptance, thereby injecting into the negotiations a distinct and entirely new condition, to wit, that the sugar should be shipped in 100-pound bags — a term which was vitally necessary to defendants’ protection, in view of the nature of their trade and the market conditions then prevailing. It is manifest, therefore, that defendants’ telegraphic answer was not, as contended by plaintiffs, an acceptance of the plaintiffs’ offer, but was for “two hundred 100-pound bags.”

By reference to plaintiffs’ telegram of the next day, June 9, it is equally clear that plaintiffs did not accept the defendants’ newly introduced stipulation, to wit, that the sugar should be in 100-pound bags, but sought to ignore it and attempted to interest defendants in an entirely different proposition “57 barrels,” which is approximately the same amount of sugar.

Plaintiffs practically conceded in their argument that

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Bluebook (online)
20 F.2d 635, 1927 U.S. App. LEXIS 2608, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lamborn-v-woodard-ca4-1927.