Ross-Vaughan Tobacco Co. v. Johnson

206 S.W. 487, 182 Ky. 325, 1918 Ky. LEXIS 364
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedDecember 3, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 206 S.W. 487 (Ross-Vaughan Tobacco Co. v. Johnson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ross-Vaughan Tobacco Co. v. Johnson, 206 S.W. 487, 182 Ky. 325, 1918 Ky. LEXIS 364 (Ky. Ct. App. 1918).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Carroll

Beversing.

These three appeals involving, except in one .respect, the same question of law and fact will be disposed of in one opinion. The Boss-Yaughan Tobacco Company, a corporation, was engaged in 1916 in the business of purchasing, handling, shipping and selling tobacco, and in the conduct of its business established several houses in the counties of Ohio, McLean, Daviess, Hancock and Breckinridge, in which it received tobacco that it bought from the growers, in order that it might prepare the same for market.

[326]*326In pursuance of its business it purchased from farmers, who were growers of tobacco in the various counties named, crops of tobacco, and the purchases so made were evidenced by written contract with each farmer. It appears that all of these contracts were printed forms with blanks left to be filled in writing with the date when the contract was made, the year the tobacco contracted to be sold was grown, the price to be paid for the different grades, the name of the place at which the tobacco was to be delivered and the name of the farmer selling the crop.

The following is a form of the blank contract that was used:

...........................................................................191............

I have this day sold to Ross-Vaughan Tobacco Co., Incorporated, my present crop of Tobacco, the growth of 191............ supposed to be...........................pounds, for which they agree to pay me as follows:

For Leaf free from Lugs $.................. per hundred lbs.

For Lugs free from Trash $.................. per hundred lbs.

For Lugs free from Trash $.................. per hundred lbs.

For Trash at $.................. per hundred lbs.

........................................................................ at $.................. per hundred lbs.

Said tobacco to be delivered well cured and in good order and free from damage at the option of the purchasers at their factory in................................................................

On November 16, 1916, the appellees, Ellis Johnson, D. N. Havener and S. J. Hussey, severally signed and delivered to the Ross-Vaughan Tobacco Company one of these contracts after the blank spaces had been filled in with writing specifying the date of the contract, the price to be paid for each grade of tobacco, and the place at which the tobacco was to be delivered, viz.: Hartford, Kentucky. ' ■

In January, 1917, each of the appellees having failed and refused to deliver the tobacco that he had sold by the contract before mentioned, these separate suits were brought against them by the Ross-Vaughan Tobacco Company. In its petitions it set up the contract, the failure and refusal to deliver the tobacco which it averred it was ready and willing to receive and pay for; that the defendants had sold or were about to sell the tobacco they had sold to this plaintiff, and had so notified it. [327]*327It further set out the damages it had sustained and asked an injunction restraining them from selling or disposing of the tobacco to any other person and that they be compelled by mandatory process to deliver the tobacco to it.

It further appearing that the circuit judge was absent from the county, a temporary restraining order was issued by the circuit clerk in each case in conformity with the prayer of the petition. Thereafter the defendants, without waiving their general demurrer to the petition, filed answers, in one paragraph of which the averments of the petition were traversed, and in the second paragraph it was alleged that the contracts were procured by a fraud, while in the third paragraph it was set up that the contract was void and of no effect because it did not bind the Ross-Vaughan Tobacco Company to receive or pay for the tobacco and was, in short, a unilateral contract.

When the eases came on for hearing the general demurrers filed to each of the petitions were sustained, the temporary restraining orders set aside and the petitions dismissed.

As the amount in each case is two hundred dollars but less than five hundred dollars, the Ross-Vaughan Tobacco Company has brought the cases here, asking that an appeal be granted and the judgments reversed, and as we have concluded that the appeals prayed should be granted and the judgments reversed, it will be necessary to write an opinion stating the grounds for reversal.

It will be observed that the' contracts when the blanks were filled and the contracts signed by the farmers stipulated that the farmers had sold their crops of tobacco, specifying the number of pounds at a specified price per hundred pounds named in the contract and that they were to deliver the tobacco “well cured and in good order and free from damage at the option of the purchaser at their factory in Hartford, Kentucky.v

That the tobacco company had warehouses in Hartford, Kentucky, at which it received tobacco and paid therefor, is not disputed, but it is contended in behalf of the appellees, as it was in the lower court, that the contract sued on was a mere option, since by its terms the tobacco company was not obliged to either receive or pay for the tobacco, and this being so, the contract was lacking in that mutuality of obligation upon each of [328]*328the contracting parties that is so necessary to constitute a valid and enforcible contract. Other questions are raised but this is the principal one.

It will be observed from an inspection of the contract that except for the use of the words “at the option of the purchaser” in the last clause, there would be no ambiguity in the contract. In other words, if this clause had read: “Said tobacco to be delivered well cured and in good order and free from damage at their factory in Hartford, Kentucky,” there could not be any dispute as to its meaning. It is, however, insisted by counsel for appellees that the use of the words “at the option of the purchaser” left it at the option of the purchaser to either accept and pay for the tobacco or decline to receive or pay for it, and accordingly the contract was open to the fatal objection of binding the seller but not the buyer.

The rights of the parties are of course to be determined by the writing which constituted the whole contract between them, and unless this writing was mutually binding upon both of the parties it was not enforcible against either, because mutuality of obligation is essential to the validity of the contract.

As said by this court in Second National Bank of Ashland v. Rouse, 142 Ky. 612, “A contract, to be binding, must be mutual. One party cannot be bound while the other has the option to accept or reject its terms. The minds must have met, and the contract, to be binding upon one, must be such that the other is likewise bound.” This being the applicable law, it only remains to be seen whether this contract was mutually binding upon both parties, or only intended to bind the seller, and not the purchaser.

The contract should be given a reasonable and practical construction. No technical rules should be allowed to defeat the intention of the parties.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
206 S.W. 487, 182 Ky. 325, 1918 Ky. LEXIS 364, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ross-vaughan-tobacco-co-v-johnson-kyctapp-1918.