R. F. Baker Co. v. P. Ballantine & Sons

8 Conn. Super. Ct. 3, 8 Conn. Supp. 3, 1940 Conn. Super. LEXIS 13
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedJanuary 29, 1940
DocketFile 53822
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 8 Conn. Super. Ct. 3 (R. F. Baker Co. v. P. Ballantine & Sons) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
R. F. Baker Co. v. P. Ballantine & Sons, 8 Conn. Super. Ct. 3, 8 Conn. Supp. 3, 1940 Conn. Super. LEXIS 13 (Colo. Ct. App. 1940).

Opinion

O’SULLIVAN, J.

This action was instituted to obtain both legal and equitable relief. The original two counts were later augmented by a third, but at the time of trial the first was withdrawn. The second count was based on the alleged breach of an oral contract of exclusive agency; the third on the theory of quantum meruit. No effort was made to invoke any of the requested equitable relief, the case being tried to the jury solely as an action at law. A plaintiff’s verdict having been returned and accepted, the defendant has now moved to set it aside.

In support of the second count, the plaintiff offered evidence that during February, 1934, the defendant entered into an oral agreement whereby the former was to be its exclusive agent in the distribution of Ballantine beer in Danbury and five nearby towns. The agency was to continue as long as the plaintiff *5 desired, it being agreed that only the plaintiff should have the right to terminate it whenever it wished. Shortly after the agreement was made, the plaintiff engaged in a modest cam' paign of advertising the defendant’s beer, bought a truck to make deliveries, had its president circulate around among pros' pective customers, and expended moneys for various odds and ends incidental to the dissemination of propaganda for Bailan' tine beer. Between February and September 1st, it bought from the defendant approximately $44,000 worth of beer from which it made a profit in excess of $13,500. About the latter date, the defendant notified the plaintiff that its agency was revoked, and thereafter through its own employees distributed its products to those customers, among others, whom the plaintiff had obtained while acting as agent.

The foregoing evidence was likewise relied on to establish the third count, which, as above indicated, sought damages for the reasonable value of the services rendered and the moneys expended by the plaintiff during the period it was acting in its representative capacity.

While the verdict was a general one, it is perfectly obvious that it was based on the second count, unless the jury threw the court’s instructions to the four winds. But it must be pre' sumed that they accepted the law as stated, and if they did, a verdict for the plaintiff on the third count was an impossibility. Viewed at this point of retrospection, I cannot justify the sub' mission of the issues on this count to the jury. If there was a cause of action, it amounted to one of injuria sine damno, at least under the court’s conception of the proper measure of damages. For the charge ran to the effect that if the plaintiff was entitled to recover under this count, the verdict thereon should represent the difference between what the plaintiff had expended for a new truck, advertising, and the creation of good will, and the profit it had made while acting as agent. As the plaintiff’s testimony demonstrated its profit was greatly in ex' cess of such expenditures, it could not, under the instructions, recover anything under this count. Furthermore, the value of any services rendered was not to be considered by the jury.

Nor, says the defendant, was it entitled to recover under the ■second count, because that count was based upon the breach of •an unenforceable agreement. Its claim is that the agreement was illusory or lacking in mutuality, and, if not of such a nature, then barred from enforcement by the Statute of Frauds *6 orí the ground that it was not to be performed within a year. As to this latter claim, it was ample to say that the law is otherwise. ' If an agreement of this type fixes no definite time for performance but provides that it may be terminated at the will of either party, it is not within the statute. 25 R. C. L. Statute of Frauds §34, and cases cited.

The former claim brings one into that field of the law where-he can browse to his heart’s content, only to return to his daily-tasks with a feeling of bewilderment at the confusion with which his labors with the authorities on the application of the principles of legal consideration have surrounded him. For the problem in this case, expressed in the form of a query, is this: is the agreement between the plaintiiF and the defendant void, because the right to terminate it at will was reserved by the-former and by it alone?

“To agree to do something and reserve the right to cancel the agreement at will is no agreement at all.” Ellis vs. Dodge-Bros., 2 37 Fed. 860, 867, cited in Gurfein vs. Werbelovsky, 97 Conn. 703, 705. This may be deemed sufficiently accurate as-a general statement of law. • Such a promise is illusory because it is, in fact, no promise at all, in that it fails to limit the promisor’s freedom of voluntary choice in the future. Corbin, The Effect of Options on Consideration (1925) 34 Yale L. J. 571. If A agrees that he will work for B if he feels like it, there is nothing to enforce. A’s promise is an illusion. Nor does the so-called agreement become any more effective if A commences the work he has agreed to perform. So much of the agreement as is executory is void because it still remains-illusory.

Agreements have been under judicial analysis which-reserve to one of the parties the privilege of terminating them. At times this privilege has been conditional, and at times, unconditional. In the former instance, the agreements have been held enforceable if the conditional right to terminate has not been exercised before the other party, had he carried out his-promised act, might have compelled performance by or obtained’ damages from him who had reserved the right to terminate the •agreement. Thus, in the Gurfein case, a buyer ordered a quantity of glass from a seller, the former having the privilege-of cancelling the order at any time before shipment. It was held that inasmuch as the seller had the right to’ ship the glass ■at once, or at any time within three months before receiving- *7 notice of cancellation and thus force the buyer to receive and pay for it, there was a legal consideration for the promise to .sell. “The right to- enforce the buyer’s promise to buy is such a consideration, and if that right existed, even for the shortest space of time, it is enough to bring the contract into existence.” Gurfein vs. Werbelovsky, supra, 706.

Where the right to terminate is unconditional, the-agreement may or may not be void. Each case awaits the application of the principle that any agreement is enforceable in a court of law if based upon a legal consideration and if not contrary to public policy or the statutes of the forum.

If one promises to act as agent only as long as he wishes— which is merely another method of stating that he has the right to terminate his agreement at will — it is an illusory and unenforceable promise, so far as the executory phase of his agreement is concerned. Thus, A promises B to act as B’s agent on certain terms, and B agrees that A may do so, but reserves the power to cancel the agreement at any time. B’s agreement is insufficient consideration, since it involves nothing that can properly be called a promise. Restatement, Contracts §79, comment b (1). But if the right to terminate is supported by a consideration, the agreement becomes enforceable.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
8 Conn. Super. Ct. 3, 8 Conn. Supp. 3, 1940 Conn. Super. LEXIS 13, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/r-f-baker-co-v-p-ballantine-sons-connsuperct-1940.