Sunco Manufacturing Co. v. Hargrove

581 P.2d 925
CourtCourt of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 22, 1978
Docket50750
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 581 P.2d 925 (Sunco Manufacturing Co. v. Hargrove) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sunco Manufacturing Co. v. Hargrove, 581 P.2d 925 (Okla. Ct. App. 1978).

Opinion

ROMANG, Judge:

Defendant-Appellant Hargrove (Appellant) had a contract for the construction of a building with Defendant Cecil Tangner d/b/a A & R Construction Co. (Tangner). Tangner had a contract for the supply of materials with the Plaintiff-Appellee Sunco Manufacturing Co. (Appellee). Toward the end of construction Appellant sent the following letter to Appellee on November 19, 1974:

It is my understanding that an agreement has been reached by your corporation and Mr. Cecil Tangner regarding an unpaid balance of materials used and installed on my medical building now in construction at 7 North Broadway, Edmond, Oklahoma.
Mr. Tangner has requested that I make my check in the amount of $1,500 which would pay for all labor and material to complete my contract, payable to Sunco Corporation and A & R Construction Company jointly.
Please accept this letter as my committment to make my check payable jointly to your corporation and A & R Construction Company upon completion of my contract now in effect.
Mr. Tangner informs me also that upon your receipt of this committment that you will issue a lien waiver covering my project to date and through completion of my contract.

On November 20, 1974, Appellee executed a waiver of materialman’s lien and delivered it to Tangner. The waiver was never delivered to Appellant.

*927 On June 17,1975 Appellee sent Appellant a letter attaching Appellant’s letter of November 19, advising that the $1,500 payment had been outstanding for eight months, and requesting payment. On January 19, 1976 Appellant wrote Appellee advising that Appellant had not received the lien waiver, that the letter of November 19, 1974 was “null and void,” and that the $1,500 was to be paid to Tangner alone on counsel’s advice. On January 12, 1976 Appellant had accepted an indemnification agreement from Tangner protecting Appellant from damages for payment to Tangner in light of the fact that the time for filing of a lien had passed.

Appellee filed this action for breach of contract. Judgment by default was entered on September 26, 1976 in favor of Appellee against Tangner and in favor of Appellant against Tangner on the indemnification agreement. 1 After trial to the court, judgment was entered in favor of Appellee and against Appellant on February 16, 1977. Appellant appeals arguing that (1) the November 19th letter quoted above was an offer which was not accepted prior to its revocation on January 19, 1976 and, if accepted, that the acceptance was not communicated to the offeror before revocation, and (2) that certain interrogatories were improperly excluded from evidence.

The District Court labelled the November 19th letter as a “committment” and concluded that Appellant’s revocation effort of January 19, 1976 was ineffective. It is unclear whether the trial court considered the execution of the lien waiver to be an acceptance of an offer not needing communication or that communication to Tangner was sufficient, whether the request for payment was sufficient communication of acceptance, or whether Appellee’s reliance on the November 19th letter in executing the waiver and its forbearance from filing a lien until it was too late estopped the Appellant from revoking its offer. The theory on which the respective contentions rested in the trial court does not appear in the record and the Journal Entry does not cast any light on these issues. Indeed, Appellee contends the letter of November 19th was itself an acceptance although the contention is not supported by argument.

In their briefs the parties do not differ as much on the law as on its application. Since the November 19th letter was a communication to a party with whom the Appellant had no previous negotiations (Tangner was clearly not the agent of either party but had contractual relations with each) it seems clear to us that the letter was an offer to pay $1,500 jointly to Appellee and Tangner on completion of the contract and that “on receipt of this com-mittment that [Appellee] . will issue a lien waiver.” This offer was clearly made to enable Tangner to obtain the lien waiver it needed to supply to Appellant. The lien waiver was given on November 20th but apparently such was not communicated to Appellant. In our opinion Appellant bargained for a lien waiver to date and conditioned payment on completion of the contract. The completion could not have been bargained for on these facts since there is no evidence of an effort to obtain Appellee’s promise to be a surety for Tang-ner or to complete the work on Tangner’s default. The question then is whether this offer for a unilateral contract, i. e., an offer of a promise in exchange for the issuance of a lien waiver, was accepted by the issuance of the lien waiver although not actually communicated to the offeror at the time.

Title 15 O.S. 1971, § 70 provides that “performance of the conditions of a proposal, or the acceptance of the consideration offered with a proposal, is an acceptance of the proposal.” But 15 O.S. 1971, § 72 also provides that a “proposal may be revoked at any time before its acceptance is communicated to the proposer . . .The question becomes one of the duty of the offeree in a unilateral contract to notify the offeror *928 that the act requested has been performed. Our cases are not dispositive of this issue and the matter is otherwise not free from doubt. One authority has outlined the problem thusly:

“On the question of whether . [the offeree in a unilateral contract] must give notice of the fact that he has performed there are essentially three views. The first is that notice is not required unless requested by the offeror. The second view, adopted by the Restatements, is that a contract arises at least upon performance, but if the offeree has reason to know that the offeror has no adequate means of learning of the performance with reasonable promptness and certitude, the duty of the offeror is discharged unless the offeree exercises reasonable diligence to notify the offeror or the offeror otherwise learns of the performance within a reasonable time or the offer expressly or by implication indicates that notification is not necessary. The third and least tenable view is the same as the second except that if notice is required, no contract is consummated unless and until the notice of performance has been communicated.” Calamari and Perillo, The Law of Contracts pp. 60-61 (2nd Ed. 1977) (footnotes omitted.)

Generally, Prof. Williston is associated with the first view, 1 Williston on Contracts § 68, and the second view is associated with the Restatement of Contracts (First and Second) § 56. Cf. 1 Corbin on Contracts §§ 67-68. By analogy the Uniform Commercial Code, 12A O.S. 1971, § 2-206(2) provides that

“[w]here the beginning of a requested performance is a reasonable mode of acceptance an offeror who is not notified of acceptance within a reasonable time may treat the offer as having lapsed before acceptance.”

We recognize that these authorities are neither binding on this Court on these facts nor authoritative expressions of the meaning of our statute in Title 15.

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Bluebook (online)
581 P.2d 925, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sunco-manufacturing-co-v-hargrove-oklacivapp-1978.