McIntyre Lumber & Export Co. v. Jackson Lumber Co.

51 So. 767, 165 Ala. 268, 138 Am. St. Rep. 66, 1910 Ala. LEXIS 108
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedFebruary 10, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by47 cases

This text of 51 So. 767 (McIntyre Lumber & Export Co. v. Jackson Lumber Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McIntyre Lumber & Export Co. v. Jackson Lumber Co., 51 So. 767, 165 Ala. 268, 138 Am. St. Rep. 66, 1910 Ala. LEXIS 108 (Ala. 1910).

Opinion

MAYFIELD, J.

— Appellee, a company engaged in the manufacture and sale of lumber, including cross-ties, sued appellant, a lumber company engaged in the purchase, sale, and export of lumber, including cross-ties, for a breach of an alleged contract. Issue was joined on count 3 as last amended, and counts 4 and 5 added by amendment.

The third count as last 'amended was as follows: “(3) The plaintiff claims of the defendants the further sum of one hundred and six and 39/100 dollars ($106.39) and the interest thereon, damages, for the breach of an agreement entered into by them on, to wit, July 20th, 1907, in substance as follows: The defendants agreed to purchase all of the heart ties 5 in. x 8 in. x 8 ft., meaning thereby 5 inches thick by 8 inches wide by 8 feet long, that the plaintiffs manufactured at their mill, until the defendants notified the plaintiffs to discontinue the cutting, the plaintiffs to load the ties on the cars on the railroad near the plaintiffs’ mill, at and for the infice of fifteen dollars ($15.00) per thousand feet f. o. b. cars; and plaintiffs agreed to sell to the defendants the said ties at the price and on the terms above specified. And the plaintiffs aver that they made, to wit, 7,093 feet of such ties for the defendants, and had the ties ready to load on cars, whereupon the defendants instructed, or advised, plaintiffs that they would take no more ties from the plaintiffs, and although the plaintiffs continued to have the said ties so manufactured, ready for loading, the defendants refused to accept the said ties, and to pay for same.”

The other counts were practically the same as this, except that they averred that the ties Avere ready to be delivered on board the cars, and that defendant refused to accept the ties or to allow plaintiff to load and deliver, etc.

[271]*271It is first insisted by appellant that the counts do not state a cause of action, in that they do not show any mutual agreement, binding alike on both parties, and that the alleged contract is so vague and indefinite as to be wholly void for uncertainty. It is true that a contract for the future delivery of personal property may be void because there is no consideration or mutuality, if the contract or any material part of it is wholly conditioned upon the will, wish, or want of only one of the parties; but an accepted offer to furnish or deliver such articles as may be needed or consumed by a person in a given business, during a limited time, is binding, because it contains the accepted offer to purchase all the articles thus required during this time, and from the party who invokes the offer, but a mere offer to furnish such as a party might want or desire would be void. A contract to purchase the entire output of a mill or plant, for a given and reasonable time, at a given price, is valid, and so, likewise, is a contract to purchase the entire output of a certain product of a plant, such as all the heart lumber, at a certain price; but an agree.ment to purchase all that the manufacturer desires to sell to the purchaser, at a certain price, or all that the purchaser desires to take, at a certain price, would be void. The mere fact that the amount of the product is uncertain or depends upon the will or efforts of the manufacturer, does not render the contract void. It is the fact that whether he will be bound depends upon his will or caprice that renders the contract void. All contracts for the entire output of a given plant or business, of course, as to amount produced, depend more or less upon the will and efforts of the manufacturer; likewise does the amount of the purchase of all the materials a party may need in his business depend in a measure upon his will and efforts.

[272]*272The contract in question was nothing more nor less than an agreement on the part of the defendant to purchase all of the cross-ties of a given kind manufactured by the plaintiff, who was engaged in the business of manufacturing lumber, at a given price, until the purchaser ordered the manufacturer to make no more. It is true that the purchaser could terminate the contract at its pleasure, but it was required, as a part of the contract, to take all those on hand at that time, at the agreed price, and on the conditions fixed by the contract. It is likewise true that the manufacturer might have been unable to manufacturer any ties of this kind, or it may have had the choice not to manufacture them if it willed, but, if it did manufacture them, then it was to sell to this purchaser and to no one else, and at this price and no other. After it had manufactured 1 or 1,000 of these ties, it was bound by this contract to sell them to defendant and at this price, and the purchaser was bound to take them at this price and under the conditions of the contract. There was nothing indefinite or uncertain, then. The contract was mutually binding on the parties, and was as definite and certain as any contract could be. All contracts or agreements of this nature are indefinite and uncertain in their incipiency, but if they are capable of being-made certain, and are made certain by words or deeds of the parties, they are thereafter binding on both parties. There are many contracts of this kind — options, contracts to purchase the output or products of certain plants, etc. — where the quantity of the purchase is in its very nature uncertain until the article is produced; but, after this term is made certain, the' contract is as binding as any other. If plaintiff had sold the ties in question to a third party, it would have been liable to the defendant as for a breach of this contract. If it [273]*273had refused to sell or deliver to the defendant at this agreed price it would have been liable as for a breach of the contract. So it is a mistake to say that plaintiff was not bound by the contract. It was not bound to manufacture any given number of these particular ties, and probably not any; but if it did manufacture them it was bound to sell them to this defendant at this price. This was the contract, and it was valid. Of course the defendant could not have compelled the plaintiff to manufacture these particular ties; that was not the contract. The contract was that if it did manufacture such ties it would sell them to defendant at this price. After it had manufactured the particular kind of ties which the defendant offered to purchase of it, if it would make them, and to purchase all of that kind which it would manufacture, until defendant notified it to manufacture no more, it would be unconscionable to allow the defendant to say, “I will not take the ties because I could not have compelled you to manufacture them.” The plaintiff had made certain that which was at first uncertain.- The defendant had caused the plaintiff to become bound, and it cannot now escape liability, on the ground that the plaintiff could have avoided being bound by declining to manufacture the ties.

The Supreme Court of the United States, in the case of Storm v. United States, 94 U. S. 76, 24 L. Ed. 42, speaking of a written contract something like the one in question, uses this language: “Where the defendant has actually received the ¡consideration of a written agreement, it is no answer to an action brought against him for a breach of his covenants in • the same to say that the agreement did not bind the plaintiff to perform the promises on his part therein contained, provided it appears that the promises in question have in fact been performed in good faith, and without prejudice to the [274]*274defendant. — Morton v. Burn, 7 A. Ad.

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Bluebook (online)
51 So. 767, 165 Ala. 268, 138 Am. St. Rep. 66, 1910 Ala. LEXIS 108, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcintyre-lumber-export-co-v-jackson-lumber-co-ala-1910.