Strong v. Thurston

191 P. 575, 107 Kan. 368, 1920 Kan. LEXIS 79
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJuly 10, 1920
DocketNo. 22,780
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 191 P. 575 (Strong v. Thurston) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Strong v. Thurston, 191 P. 575, 107 Kan. 368, 1920 Kan. LEXIS 79 (kan 1920).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Mason, J.:

H. L. Strong sued Thurston and Son for damages upon two grain contracts, one for oats and one for corn. As the questions raised regarding the former include all those relating to the latter, as well as some others, only the oats contract will be discussed. The plaintiff • arranged with the defendants by telephone for the purchase from them of a car of oats for shipment on or before November 6, 1917. He immediately sent a written confirmation which, among other things, included a provision that if the grain was not shipped within the time fixed, the contract should remain open until shipment was made or the plaintiff canceled 'it or bought in for the defendants’ account. The defendants failed to ship within the original time, and the plaintiff sent three notices of extension, the last expiring December 10, 1917, and then, getting no word from the defendants, bought elsewhere and sued for the difference between the market and the contract price. The plaintiff recovered, the amount awarded him being based upon the market price on November 7. He appeals on [370]*370the ground that under the special findings of the jury his recovery should have been based upon the market price on December 11, after the expiration of the last extension, the difference amounting to 143/2 cents a bushel. The defendants contest this point, and also complain of the j udgment rendered, and ask that it be entirely set aside, principally upon the ground that the written confirmation had not been assented to by them, that it did not confirm an existing contract but undertook to make a new one, and that in any event it was unenforceable because of some of its provisions.

1. The jury in answer to special questions found that a custom existed among grain dealers, which was known to the defendants, for purchasers of carload lots by telephone to send written confirmations to the seller; and that the confirmation relied upon by the plaintiff was sent by him to the defendants and received by them without objection. This confirmation concluded with a provision that in the absence of a notification to the contrary it should be understood as accepted and binding in all its terms. In this situation, the failure of the defendants to make objection was tantamount to an acceptance of the letter as a statement of the terms of a binding contract. (Strong v. Ringle, 96 Kan. 573, 152 Pac. 631; Wallingford v. Grain Co., 100 Kan. 207, 164 Pac. 275.) The doctrine of the cases cited is in no sense qualified by anything said in Cardwell v. Uhl, 105 Kan. 249, 182 Pac. 415. There the seller complained of an instruction to the effect that in determining whether or not oral contracts had been entered into the jury might consider letters of confirmation sent to him, and this court held merely that no error had thereby been committed.

2. The defendants complain that the petition left it uncertain whether the plaintiff was suing on an oral or a written contract, or upon several contracts of a like undefined character. The criticism is largely verbal. Where the parties to an oral contract expressly or by fair implication agree that its terms are stated in a writing subsequently made, it is of no practical consequence whether or not the entire transaction is spoken of as the entering into a written agreement. Nor is it important that an extension of the time of performance of a contract, like any other change in its terms, may be said in a sense to create a new contract. There was no opportunity for [371]*371the defendants to be in any way misled to their prejudice by the form of the pleadings.

The defendants, by inquiring what is meant by the following phrases used in the confirmation, suggest that they were obscure: “Basis — F. O. B. your track; . . . Billing — Load and call at our expense for billing; Dest. Ry. Katy.” We do not regard them as unintelligible, but as the result of the case does not depend upon it we see no occasion for undertaking their interpretation.

3. The defendants assert that the written communication sent to them changed some of the terms of the oral contract pleaded and added new onés, and therefore was not a confirmation at all. The oral contract set out in the petition as amended was for a car of 1,250 bushels of No. three or better mixed oats at 56 cents track Parsons, shippers’ affidavit weights, federal grades, to be billed out by November 6. The confirmation reserved to the plaintiff the right to change the destination. The provision of the oral contract implied that a shipment was to be made to some point unnamed, and the confirmation merely stated what was doubtless to be inferred— that the buyer was to give directions concerning this. The confirmation contained a provision, which was a part of the printed blank used, that the contract was not complete until shipments were received, graded and weighed at final destination. This was obviously rendered inapplicable by the insertion of these words, which conformed to the oral, contract, in a blank left to show the agreement as to weight — “Shippers reliable affidavit.” Various statements in the confirmation as to shipment, payment and demurrage, which are referred to as changes, are mere details in no way inconsistent with the general scope of the oral contract.

The provision of the confirmation which is most plausibly urged as a departure from the oral agreement read in part as follows: “Grain not shipped in contract time, will be considered as open contracts until shipped, or you are advised we have canceled same or bought in for your account.” This was a matter not touched on in the telephone conversation, but the question as to what the relations of the parties should be in the event shipment was not made within the time stated was one about which there might be a difference of opinion. Conced[372]*372ing that the law would define their rights with exactness in the absence of an express provision, they were privileged to make such agreement in that respect as they saw fit. The explicit statement of the effect of a failure of the seller to comply strictly with his agreement as to time was entirely pertinent to the subject, and was in the nature of an added detail of the transaction. It is a proper function of the confirmatory letter to afford assurance, not merely that there has been no mistake by either party in catching the words of the other, for instance concerning prices and amounts, but that they have the same understanding as to the obligations in detail which each has assumed. The benefit to the business world of the employment of such a device would be largely curtailed if the recipient of a purported confirmation of an oral agreement for purchase and sale could remain silent and later successfully deny any force to one of its provisions on the ground that the matter to which it relates had not in fact been previously mentioned.

4. To the provision of the confirmation which has just been quoted, was added: “If unable to ship in contract time, phone or wire us and secure our further instructions before loading and shipping, and we will then advise if we can still use on contract.” The defendants claim that this addition converted the transaction into a wagering agreement, unenforceable because of that feature. Neither this provision nor anything else in the contract appears to us to suggest that an actual delivery of the oats was not intended.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
191 P. 575, 107 Kan. 368, 1920 Kan. LEXIS 79, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/strong-v-thurston-kan-1920.