Sullivan v. McMillan

26 Fla. 543
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJune 15, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by56 cases

This text of 26 Fla. 543 (Sullivan v. McMillan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sullivan v. McMillan, 26 Fla. 543 (Fla. 1890).

Opinion

Raney, C. J.

An issue is made by the pleadings on the first breach of the contract alleged in the declaration, which breach is that the defendants refused to allow plaintiffs to proceed with the contract, and to cut and deliver any more [568]*568logs in accordance with it That there is not sufficient evidence to support this allegation of a breach is the first point contended for in behalf of appellants. The position of their counsel is that the evidence, if any, of a “prevention” of performance, must be found in the correspondence consisting of the five letters set forth in the partial statement preceding this opinion. There is, however, in the bill of exceptions, testimony in addition to these letters, upon which appellees rely in part to sustain the alleged breach. It is this : Wiggins, one of the plaintiffs, testifies that they worked under the contract two years, but were idle in October and November, 1884; that he was first notified by Mr. M. L. Davis, who always paid for'the logs, to stop getting logs. He had recognized Davis as superintendent of the Molino Mills, Davis having given him checks on D. F. Sullivan, and after June, 1884, on M. H. Sullivan ; that Davis wrote plaintiffs a letter dated October 5, 1884, which, omitting formal parts, is : “You will stop, cutting short logs. You can go on with the bill logs.” That witness complied with the request, but kept on cutting “bill logs” not under contract ; “short logs” were under contract, but “bill logs” not so; that immediately after getting the above letters he went down to see Davis and Sullivan, and Davis told him to see Sullivan, but the latter was in New York, and he did not see him, but as soon as Sullivan came back witness went down again to see him. Of this meeting, another witness says : “He told me then not to cut and deliver any more timber. I went down to see Davis and Sullivan. Davis told me to see Sullivan. M. H. Sullivan told me he would take no more logs, as the mills having burned down , he wanted none.” After this, he says, plaintiffs wrote the letter of October 18th.

Referring to the correspondence, it is evident that the [569]*569purpose and meaning of the plaintiffs’ letter of October 18th, was to ascertain from the defendants whether the latter would continue to receive logs which the former might cut and deliver in accordance with the contract sued on, or would refuse to do so. A legitimate inference is that they did not care to act upon the verbal declarations made by Sullivan in his previous conversation on the same subject, although they were neither uncertain or unmistakable in meaning, that no more logs would be received. To this letter there are two replies, one dated the 20th and the other the 28th of the same month. The former of these replies, is in effect, an accouncement of the writer’s readiness, notwithstanding what he had said in the conversation alluded to, to fulfill the contract in so far as it might be found upon examination to remain unexecuted; but that he was not informed whether it had not been entirely executed, and it consequently, was necessary for him to make an investigation to ascertain what was the fact upon this point; that he would do this at once and that his action as to receiving or refusing to receive any more logs would depend upon the result of such investigation. The second reply states in substance, that the promised examination has been made, and after giving reasons, doubtless satisfactory to himself, concludes with the announcement that he considers the contract fully executed upon the part of the plaintiffs, and that it imposes no further obligation upon the representatives of D. F. Sullivan. Considering these two letters together, and in connection with that to which they are responses, we are unable to reach any other conclusion than that they were a distinct and positive notificaItion to plaintiffs that no more logs would be received under Ithe contract. In the first he says in effect: I will investigate as to whether the contract has been fully executed, and [570]*570if I find that it has not been, I will receive logs to the extent or in so far as it remains unexecuted, but if I find that it has already been executed, I will receive no more logs under it. In the second, he says in substance: I have made the promised investigation, and found it has been fully executed by plaintiffs, and there is nothing tobe done under it by the other paiqy to it or his representatives. Admitting the declaration that the contract imposes no further obligation upon D. F. Sullivan or representatives, not to be tantamount, if considered alone, to a statement or notice that no more logs would be received, we - yet do not think it necessary that any such statement should have appeared in the second letter to give the two letters the effect which we attribute to them. Sullivan’s first letter, read in connection with the plaintiffs’ letter, was a clear and unequivocal notification from Sullivan that he would receive no more logs if he should find that the contract had been fully executed, and the second letter informs plaintiffs that he has so found, and it in no wise withdraws or qualifies the notification which the previous letter had annexed to the result or conclusion announced by the latter one. A simple notification of the investigation and the result or conclusion arrived at, was all that remained to be done by, or was to be looked for from Sullivan, after the first letter. Nothing more was necessary to inform the plaintiffs as to the writer’s intention, purpose or decision, as to receiving any more logs under the contract; and further inquiry on the part of the plaintiffs would have been idle or superfluous. Admitting that the word “ consider,” as used in the second letter, is expressive of the judgment of the writer as to whether or not the contract has been completed, it was this, and nothing else, that the first letter had informed the plaintiffs would control the writer as to receiving or refusing [571]*571more logs under the contract. The second letter is the complement of the first, and the two are a reply giving to the plaintiffs’ inquiry the answer that no more logs would be received.

It is necessary to inquire as to the effect upon the above conclusion, of two letters thus far unnoticed. These letters are that from plaintiffs dated October 28th, and Sullivan’s reply to it. The former of these letters is a reply to Sullivan’s letter of the 20th of the same month. Construing, as it does, Sullivan’s letter of the 20th, to assume that plaintiffs had “violated” the contract, and. to ask time for proving that they have done so, the plaintiffs decline to give time, and insist both that they have in all respects complied with their contract and that it is still in a large part unexecuted. It then obsei'ves that Sullivan is right to refuse to go on with the contract, if he is able to assert and prove that the contract has been executed, but, if he cannot do this, it is asking too much of them to request a suspension of their rights in order that he might satisfy himself whether they are acting honestly or not. Professing to act in accordance with the views expressed, it notifies. Sullivan that plaintiffs have some logs at the place of delivery, under the contract, and demands that they be inspected and received, stating that they have been already refused by the inspector under Sullivan’s orders. It also notifies him that if within one week from the receipt of this letter he does not announce to them his readiness to receive those logs, they will take it as a final refusal to go on with the contract.

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Bluebook (online)
26 Fla. 543, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sullivan-v-mcmillan-fla-1890.