Metcalf v. R. D. Keene & Co.

164 So. 704, 122 Fla. 27, 1935 Fla. LEXIS 1143
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedDecember 17, 1935
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 164 So. 704 (Metcalf v. R. D. Keene & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Metcalf v. R. D. Keene & Co., 164 So. 704, 122 Fla. 27, 1935 Fla. LEXIS 1143 (Fla. 1935).

Opinions

Brown, J.

R. D. Keene & Company entered into a written agreement with H. W. Metcalf for the purchase of all good and merchantable grapefruit, tangerines, oranges, and “Valencias” of the early bloom then growing on Metcalf’s grove; in return, Metcalf agreed to sell the same for eighty cents a box. All the fruit was to be taken from the grove by February 1st, 1932, except the “Temples” and “Valencias” which were to be taken by March 31st and May 10th of that year, respectively.

The buyer, R. D. Keene & Company, so it is alleged in various pleas, allowed a large part of the grapefruit and tangerines to drop at different periods within the period allowed for picking, and also failed to gather some five hundred boxes of merchantable tangerines which were left on the trees after the time set by contract for removal. In turn, Metcalf sold the remaining Temple and Valencia oranges to another party. Keene & Co. sued Metcalf for breach of contract and Metcalf set up the alleged prior breach by the plaintiff, which he claimed allowed him to abandon the contract; he also pleaded a set-off for the fruit that dropped and the tangerines which remained unpicked.

The trial court sustained demurrers to all these pleas except a plea filed April 17, 1933, which was a plea of set-off, *29 or more properly, recoupment, for the 500 boxes of merchantable tangerines that remained unpicked after February 1st, 1932, the time limit set for picking and removal of same under the contract. Judgment on demurrer in plaintiff’s favor was entered and the jury assessed the damages at $2,106.80.

The first two questions propounded by the plaintiff in error simply amount to the question of whether the contract under consideration is a severable or divisible one, or an entire contract.

The trial court evidently proceeded upon the theory that the contract was divisible, but in our opinion it was entire. Quoting from the contract: “The grower does hereby agree to sell to the purchaser all good, merchantable fruit, oranges, tangerines, and Valencias * * * now growing on his grove,” and specifies eighty cents a box for each variety respectively. “The grower hereby acknowledges receipt of the sum of one dollar above specified, as the first payment on said fruit, which "amount shall be applied on the total purchase price * * *. The purchaser shall have up to and including the 1st day of February, 1932, on all fruit except Temple oranges and Valencia or late oranges, and they are to be picked, the Temples by March 31st and Valencias by May 10th.” They continue to speak of the crop as an entire one, stating how it is to be cultivated as a whole, and if the fruit is not sufficient to pay for advances made by the buyer that “this contract shall remain a lien on the grove,” etc.

In this case the contract was for all the fruit or none at the particular price as shown by the fact that 80 cents a box was given for all varieties throughout, regardless of their market or intrinsic value. Doubtless the seller was only willing to sell his valuable fruit for less because he was getting a higher price for his less valuable fruit than he would *30 otherwise get, and the buyer was willing to pay more for the inferior fruit than he would have if he had not been able to get the more valuable fruit at a discount by buying it altogether; therefore, each variety is made to depend on the other.

Stokes v. Ban's, 18 Fla. 656, holds that failure to pay for one installment is breach of the whole contract and denies the purchaser damages for subsequent non-delivery under the contract.

Producer’s Coke Company v. Hillman, et al., (Pa.) 90 Atl. 144: “If, therefore, although the terms of the contract afford the rule for the apportionment of the consideration, yet if there was a special agreement to take the whole or nothing, or if the evidence shows such was the purpose of the parties, then the contract would be entire.”

If the defendant had known that the plaintiff was not going to remove the tangerines he certainly woud not have entered into the sale. The Kruse Case (58 N. W.) holds: “If failure to take the whole would have changed the contract, or the parties would not have entered into same had the act been anticipated, makes it an entire contract.”

2 A. L. R., 643 notes': “If the seller was unwilling to sell one portion without selling the whole, and the buyer was unwilling to take a part unless he could have the whole, the contract in its nature is entire.”

Standard Growers Exchange v. G. O. Harris & Sons (Ga.) 124 S. E. 884: “A declination by the purchaser to take the peaches tendered by the seller in proper compliance with the contract would amount to a breach or tender of a breach of the entire contract and it would be no condition precedent to the seller’s right of action against the purchaser for such breach that the seller should actually tender to the purchaser the remainder of the crop.” In this case *31 the contract was worded identically, in many instances, with the present one, but the point here involved was not squarely settled.

2 A. L. R. 666: “A contract may be single, and yet be divisible or apportionable. The fact that the contract is apportionable as to the articles and the payments does not prevent it from being single so that the default of the purchaser in payment for installments will release the seller as to the balance of the contract, at his election. In other words, a contract to deliver goods in installments to be paid for in installments may have a double aspect. In its general features it may be entire, and yet as to the time of delivery and payment it may partake of a severable character. Applying this rule to the right of the seller to rescind for failure of the buyer to accept and pay for an 'installment, the majority of the cases hold that the buyer’s breach of the contract in failing or refusing to receive or pay for an installment of goods entitles the seller to refuse to make further deliveries or to rescind the contract.”

Laswell v. National Handle Co., 126 S. W. 969: “Under a contract for the manufacture and sale of different kinds of handles, the failure of the purchaser to take a certain kind of handles, the sale of which was necessary to render the contract valuable to the seller, constitutes a breach of the contract entitling the latter to refuse further deliveries of the handles of the different kinds.”

The above case is in point, in principle, that is to say, the sale of the grapefruit and tangerines at 80 cents per box was necessary to render the contract valuable to the seller since the late fruit was worth much more than the grapefruit and the tangerines. To allow the plaintiff to take only that fruit upon which he could make a profit and to leave *32 the fruit upon which only.the defendant could show a profit would be highly unjust and inequitable.

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Bluebook (online)
164 So. 704, 122 Fla. 27, 1935 Fla. LEXIS 1143, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/metcalf-v-r-d-keene-co-fla-1935.