Okmulgee Coal Co. v. Hinton

1923 OK 188, 218 P. 319, 95 Okla. 92, 1923 Okla. LEXIS 96
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMarch 27, 1923
Docket10662
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 1923 OK 188 (Okmulgee Coal Co. v. Hinton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Okmulgee Coal Co. v. Hinton, 1923 OK 188, 218 P. 319, 95 Okla. 92, 1923 Okla. LEXIS 96 (Okla. 1923).

Opinion

KANE, J.

This was an action for damages for breach of contract commenced by the defendant in error, plaintiff below, against the plaintiff in error, defendant below.

In the written contract involved, the defendant, the Okmulgee Coal Company, is called “the operator,” and the plaintiff, J. W. Hinton, doing business as the Hinton Company, is called the “selling company.” By the terms of the contract, the operator agreed for the period of one year to sell and deliver to the seller four cars per day of standard Blackstone mine run coal at a price of $2.25 per ton.

It was alleged in the petition that the contract was breached by the failure of the operator to se’l and deliver to-. the seller coal in the quantities and at the times prescribed in the contract.

The allegations of the petition under whic-h the J. H Leonard Company was made party plaintiff are as follows:

•The plaintiff the J. II Leonard Company alleges and states that it has an interest in said contract by reason of the fact that it, ■with the knowledge and oral consent of the-defendant, guaranteed the payment of all amounts due the defendant under said contract that might be shipped to the plaintiff the J- H. Leonard Coal Company. And it further alleges and states that by and with the oral consent of the defendant herein, it had an oral agreement with the plaintiff J. W. Hinton to sell all of said coal mentioned in said contract fo-r the said J. W. Hinton for a -stated remuneration.

After a general and special demurrer to plaintifffs’ petition was overruled, the defendant answered:

(1) By a general denial of each and every material allegation contained in the petition of the plaintiffs, except such as are hereinafter specifically admitted.

(2) The defendant specifically denies that it executed the contract sued upon in plaintiffs’ petition.

(3) That defendant specifically denied that it had any agreement whatever with the plaintiff J. H. Leonard Coal Company.

(4) That it was understood and agreed by and between the parties that the contract alleged to be breached was not to become effective until some one satisfactory to the defendant would sign the guaranty indorsed thereon for that purpose; that the said J. W. Hinton agreed to obtain the execution of said guaranty, and stated at the time that one Walter R. Wilson would execute said guaranty; that he failed to secure the signature of said Walter R. Wilson or any one else.

The reply was a general denial.

Upon trial to a jury of the issues thus joined, there was a joint verdict in favor of both plaintiffs for $15,500, upon which judgment was duly entered, to reverse which this proceeding in error was commenced.

The assignments of error we deem it necessary to notice are briefly summarized by counsel for defendant in their brief under two propositions, as follows:

(1) The plaintiffs” petition failed to state a cause of action in favor of the J. S. Leonard iCoial -Company, and defendants demurrer to the petition should have been sustained as to the Leonard Company.

(2) The evidence introduced by the plaintiffs was wholly insufficient to constitute a ratification of the contract by the Okmulgee Coal Company.

*94 We thnk the first assignment of error is well taken. Section 4681, Rev. Laws 1910, provides that:

“Every action must be prosecuted in the name of the real party in interest, except as otherwise provided in this article, but this action shall not 'be deemed to authorize the assignment of a thing in action, not arising out of the contract.”

An examination of the foregoing brief summary of the contents of the contract and of the pleadings, and particularly the allegations of the petition under which the J. H. Leonard Coal Company claims and was awarded joint recovery, discloses that there was no privity of contract between the Leonard Coal Company and the defendant. The authorities hold that the real party in interest is the person legally entitled to the proceeds of the claim in litigation. 13 C. J. 701. The same authority states that one of the reasons for the rule that privity of contract is necessary to an action founded on a breach of contract is that otherwise a man's responsibility for not carrying out his agreement with another would have no limit; there would be no bounds to actions if the ill effect of the failure of a man to perform his agreement could be followed down the chain of results to the final effect.

The allegations of the petition hereinbe-fore set out, as we view it, amount to this: The defendant, the Okmulgee Coal '-Company, obligated itself by a contract to sell the plaintiff Hinton a certain quantity of coal. Thereafter the plaintiff the Leonard Company entered into a contract with Hinton to receive and sell the coal for the latter at a stipulated price; that the Ok-mulgee ¡Coal Company having breached its contract with Hinton thereby prevented him from carrying out his contract with the Leonard Company. Therefore, they pay, the defendant is jointly liable to both plaintiffs. The trial court having taken this view of (he. matter, the result is that, though the defendant made no contract, with the Leonard Company, never promised to sell it any coal or to deliver any to it, and though the Leonard Company never promised this defendant to buy any coal or receive any coal, yet there is now a joint judgment in its favor for $15,500.

Prom an examination of the contract and the allegation® of the petition, we are unable to perceive any such privity between the Leonard Company and the Okmulgee Coal Company as would entitle the former to participate in this case as a party plaintiff.

The question presented for review under the second assignment of error arises substantially as follows:

The parties agree that, on account of certain informalities iu its execution, the written contract sued upon was not originally binding upon the defendant company; the contention of the plaintiff being that by acting and receiving benefits under it the company ratified the previously unauthorized contract. There is no contention that there was any express ratification, so the question in its last analysis is this: Was there, under the facts in this ease, an implied ratification?

The parties also concede that the general rule on ratification is correctly stated in J. I. Case Threshing Machine Co. 1. Lyons & Co.. 40 Okla. 356, 138 Pac. 107, as follows:

“One who voluntarily accepts the profits of an act done by one assuming, although without authority, to be his agent ratifies his act, and takes it as -his own, with all its burdens, as well as its benefits.”

And they also agree that the general rule above stated “applies only where the corporation] througjh its proper officers has knowledge of the facts, and not where it receives and retains the benefits of the unauthorized act or contract in ignorance of the facts, and repudiates the act or contract when it acquires knowledge thereof.” 14 C. J. 390.

Now let us examine the question presented for review in the light of these concessions.

The contract sued upon bears the date of May 1, 1917.

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Bluebook (online)
1923 OK 188, 218 P. 319, 95 Okla. 92, 1923 Okla. LEXIS 96, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/okmulgee-coal-co-v-hinton-okla-1923.