Southwestern Coal Co. v. Gunn

1921 OK 428, 211 P. 398, 88 Okla. 3, 1921 Okla. LEXIS 77
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedDecember 13, 1921
Docket10402
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 1921 OK 428 (Southwestern Coal Co. v. Gunn) 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
Southwestern Coal Co. v. Gunn, 1921 OK 428, 211 P. 398, 88 Okla. 3, 1921 Okla. LEXIS 77 (Okla. 1921).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

Tliis is- an action for damages for breach of contract. The case, was tried to a jury in the district court of Oklahoma county, and verdict and judgment rendered in favor of defendant in error, plaintiff below, in the sum of $1,000 and plaintiff in error, defendant below, has appealed and assigns error.

The part of the contract material to this action is as follows:

“9-29-1916. Southwestern Coal Company.
“Ship to O. E. Gunn, El Reno, Oklahoma thirty ears Creek Lump as ordered. $3.25-If the entire thirty cars are used and paid i,,- .Aiicm-t 1. 1917, ' the coal will be invoiced at $3.00. Coal will-be shipped on" ear at a time.
“O. E. Gunn "

Two days thereafter • this order was accepted by plaintiff in error, and the transaction was merged into what the parties have treated as a contract.

The material averments of defendant in error’s petition are. in substance, that *4 plaintiff in error breached the contract in that it failed and refused to ship the coal; that the price advanced, and that by reason of its failure to ship the coal as ordered he had been damaged in the sum of $3,000, the price having advanced in this sum at the time the contract was breached by letter June 9, 1917. To this petition is exhibited the order and acceptance. To motion of plaintiff in error to make the petition more definite and certain, defendant in error responded with an amended petition which in no way affects the allegations of the original petition and will not be further considered.

Plaintiff in error demurred to the petition generally because it did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action, and specially because the contract sued on and exhibited to the petition was invalid for want of mutuality of obligation. The demurrer being overruled, plaintiff in error answered with a general denial, and that defendant in error had waived whatever rights he had under the contract for lack of diligence in asserting them, and also that the contract was a mere option, not binding on defendant in error, unilateral, and void for want of mutuality.

It will be observed that the last ground of defense was relied on in the demurrer and overruled, and whether it may again be relied on in the answer without leave of the court is a question which is not now decided.

Two cars of the coal were shipped in September, 1916. Defendant ordered by •phone other cars' along through the fall and forepart of the winter, which were not shipped, and finally, on the 7th day of June, 1917, ordered a car by letter, shipment of which was declined by letter on June 9, 1917, and all further shipments refused.

There is nothing to show the date these orders were made except the order of June 7, 1917, or what would be a reasonable time for delivery.

In our view of the case it will only be necessary to consider the 6th and 11th assignments of error, which are as follows ■

(6) “The court erred in overruling the defendant’s demurrer to the plaintiff’s evidence for the reason that the same did not establish a cause of action in favor of the plaintiff and for the further reason that the nlaintiff’s own evidence showed conclusively that he was not the real party in interest.”

(11) '‘fundamental error of the court in giving instructions presented to the jury for the reason that the same and each part thereof was so incomplete and erroneous as to fail to state Uhe issues and principles of law applicable thereto.”

The' question of interest may be shown under a general denial, which is a plea of the general issue at common law, and no instructions being given by the court or requested by plaintiff in error, the jury found generally that defendant in error was the real party in interest, and there being competent evidence in the record to support this finding it will not be disturbed on appeal.

. Is the contract so uncertain or so one-sided in its obligations as to render it unenforceable? We think not.

A simple statement of the contract is as follows:

“Defendant in error proposed to purchase from plaintiff in error thirty cars of coal, Creek Lump, at $3.25 per ton, to be shipped one car at a time as ordered and if it is all received and paid for against August 1st, 1917, the price will be $3.00 per ton.”

This proposition was accepted by plaintiff in error and two cars of coal shipped under it, and the evidence shows that the average car consisted of about 40 tons.

The parties agreed on the trial that the contract was to be performed within one year from its date, and it is from this standpoint we will view it in further construing it for the purpose of passing upon its validity.

Contracts are invalid for want of mutuality when they are obligatory only upon one of the parties, and are void for uncertainty when their meaning is so vaguely expressed as to be wholly unascer-tainable. It is by these rules that the contract q,t bar must stand or fall. Under our statutes (section 953, Rev. Laws 1910) contracts must receive such interpretation as renders them definite and certain, if it may be done without doing violence to the intention of the parties.

We think the intention of the parties is easily ascertainable, and that there cannot in reason arise any confusion or misunderstanding as to the terms and covenants of the undertaking or as to what the parties intended the meaning of the same should be. The seller sold and the purchaser purchased 30 cars of coal at a fixed price, to be shipped on ovfler *5 of the purchaser within a year and part of it was shipped, the parties neither doubting nor disagreeing as to the rights and obligations of each, and fibjL court will not now enter the realm of speculation and undertake to conjure up for the convenience of either party some fanciful obscurity or uncertainty about which the parties themselves never dreamed.

•It is argued with much force by counsel for plaintiff in error that the cases of Rogers v. White Sewing Machine Co., 59 Okla. 40, 157 Pac. 1044, and Cold Blast Transportation Co. v. K. C. Bolt & Nut Co., 114 Fed. 77, are decisive of the case at bar. The contracts in those cases are entirely dissimilar to the contract in question and subject to a different rule of interpretation, and, as construed and applied by the court in those cases, have no application to this case. In Rogers v. White Sewing Machine Co., supra, the contract, as found by the court, provided that defendant would sell to plaintiff such machines as he might order at a stipulated price, and that plaintiff was to have the territory of Haskell county in which to sell the machines as long as he sold them. The contract is silent as to the number of machines purchased or as to Uie time in which it is to be performed, nor is it possible for the court to fix any time for performance. It in no way enjoins the performance of any particular act in a particular time or that must be performed within a reasonable time in order to gjve effect to the contract, but embraces successive acts to be performed indefinitely.

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

Related

Green v. Coleman-Nelson Corp.
1925 OK 773 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1925)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1921 OK 428, 211 P. 398, 88 Okla. 3, 1921 Okla. LEXIS 77, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southwestern-coal-co-v-gunn-okla-1921.