WILLSON, C. J.
(after stating the facts as above). The negotiations resulting, as claimed by the bank and Record, in the modification, as alleged by them, of the contract sued upon, were between Record, representing the bank, and John M. Wright, representing the Tyler Company. Record testified that the change was agreed upon February 28, 1914, after he and Wright had adjusted accounts existing between the bank and the Tyler Company growing out of another contract between them.
He further testified:
“The egg-case business was getting late, the season was far advanced on the last day of February, and we talked about the condition, and Mr. Wright told me to have no anxiety about it, he was not going to overstock us, it was as much against his interest to overstock us as it was against our interest to be overstocked. * * * I said: ‘Mr. Wright, you say you are not going to overstock us, that is very nice, but we want to understand each other.’ I got the contract and read to him that part of which obligated the Paris Box Factory to take all the veneer the Tyler Box Company could cut during the life of the contract. Wright said, ‘the real agreement never contemplated that the Paris Box Factory should take more than it could use during the season, and we do not want you to take more veneer than you can use.’ I then said: ‘Let’s fully understand each oth
er, do you agree that that part of the contract which (requires us to take all the cut shall be modified and rescinded, and that hereafter the contract shall be that the Paris Box Factory shall take all the veneer from the Tyler Box Factory, that it can use for the season, and no more?’ Wright replied that ‘We do so agree,’ and added that he would like for us to take a car occasionally, as he wanted to keep a small crew at the plant. I told him we would use all we could, and hoped the egg-ease business would pick up, and that we would be able to use more veneer than it now appeared, and he said: T think the business will improve, and that you will need more than you now expect you will use.’ That was on the 28th of S’feb-ruary, and early in March we wrote him and told him to hold up shipments,- and on the 25th of March, I believe, we told him we could not handle any more, and asked to discontinue. That is the agreement that was made between Mr. Wright and I on the 28th of February. From the time Mr. Wright was here until we notified them to hold up, they shipped us 10 cars. On the 3d of March they shipped a car, 10,560 sets; on March 5th a car, 11,700 sets; another on the 5th of March, 12,700 sets; two on March 10th, one 8,666 sets, and the other 8,500 sets; two on the 16th of March, one 12,-000 sets, and the other 12,290; two on the 17th of March, one 12,870, and the other for 11,535; and then they skipped until the 25th of March when they shipped us one car of 7,537 sets. That aggregated 108,352 sets. That was after Mr. Wright and I agreed on a car occasionally. We made every effort possible to use all the veneer possible in our business, and we did all we could. I think we had between 75,000 and 100,000 sets that we could not use and had to carry over. At the time we made the new contract we probably had that number of sets on hand that we bought and paid them for. After Mr. Wright was here and we had that agreement, we carried over about 65,000 sets that we could not use. We paid for all that veneer. In other words, we tried to buy enough to run on, and we had 65,000 sets more than we sold, I believe it was 65,900 sets; I don’t know exactly, so I’ll say about 65,000.”
[1]
The Tyler Company insists that the agreement shown by the testimony set out above was not;, binding upon it, because, it asserts, the modification of the contract sued upon, claimed to have been thereby accomplished, ,was without a consideration to support it. We do not. think so. While the bank was thereby relieved of any obligation to take more of the material than it could use in its business for the season covered, by the contract, the Tyler Company was relieved of its obligation to sell to the bank all the material cut by it, and to turn over orders it might receive for egg eases to the bank. It seems to us, therefore, it cannot be said that there was no consideration, or a lack of mutuality in the consideration, for the modification claimed. 1 Page on Contracts, 302, 308. It has been said that a contract like the one sued upon “may be modified without a new consideration, the consideration of the original contract being deemed sufficient.” 35 Cyc. 124; City of Ft. Madison v. Moore, 109 Iowa, 476, 80 N. W. 528; Fiber Co. v. Lumber Co., 132 Wis. 1, 111 N. W. 241; Bowman v. Wright, 65 Neb. 661, 91 N. W. 581, 92 N. W. 580; Strahl v. Grocer Co., 5 Neb. (Unof.) 482, 98 N. W. 1043; Prye v. Kalbaugh, 34 Utah, 306, 97 Pac. 333; Hertz v. Pub. Co., 9 Ala. App. 178, 62 South. 567. We do not understand the ruling made in the cases decided by the courts in this state, and cited by the Tyler Company, as being to the contrary, except the one made in Terrell v. Proctor, 172 S. W. 1000, where it was said by the Court of Civil Appeals that:
“In
some states the courts have held that the consideration existing in an original executory contract is considered as imported into any new parol modification, and no new consideration need be shown, but we do not understand our courts to so hold. Whitsett v. Carney, 124 S. W. 443; Walker v. Tomlinson, 44 Tex. Civ. App. 446, 98 S. W. 906; Mayfield v. Cotton, 21 Tex. 1; Hogan v. Crawford, 31 Tex. 633; Bonzer v. Garrett, 162 S. W. 936; Consumers’ Fertilizer Co. v. Badt
&
Co., 157 S. W. 226; Porter v. Metcalf, 84 Tex. 468, 19 S. W. 696.”
While the cases cited in the quotation from the opinion in the Proctor Case set out above do not bold that the consideration of an executory contract will support a modification thereof agreed upon by the parties, they do not, as we understand them, when considered with reference to their respective facts, hold to the contrary, and we are of opinion that the rule recognized by courts in other jurisdictions is the true one. It follows that ,we think the assignments numbered 2, 3, 4, and 14 in the Tyler Company’s brief should be overruled.
[2, 3]
The witness Wright testified that the agreement of February 28, 1914, between himself, representing the Tyler Company, and Record, representing the bank, was not as testified to by Record, but was that the Tyler Company, when requested by the bank to do so, would so reduce the output of its plant as to not overstock the bank with material. The court refused a special charge asked by the Tyler Company, based on this testimony and on testimony showing that thereafter-wards the Tyler Company did reduce the output of its plant, directing the jury to find for it on the theory that the bank was bound to receive and pay for the reduced output of the plant. We think the refusal of the charge was not error. Under the contract as made originally the Tyler Company had a right, without any agreement on the part of the bank, to reduce the output of its plant, for it had not bound itself not to do so. The testimony of Wright, therefore, did not show a modification of the original contract. If it had shown one, then it .would not have been error to refuse the charge, because there was no pleading on the part of the Tyler Company which would have authorized the submission of such an issue to the jury. The eleventh assignment therefore is overruled.
[4, 5]
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WILLSON, C. J.
(after stating the facts as above). The negotiations resulting, as claimed by the bank and Record, in the modification, as alleged by them, of the contract sued upon, were between Record, representing the bank, and John M. Wright, representing the Tyler Company. Record testified that the change was agreed upon February 28, 1914, after he and Wright had adjusted accounts existing between the bank and the Tyler Company growing out of another contract between them.
He further testified:
“The egg-case business was getting late, the season was far advanced on the last day of February, and we talked about the condition, and Mr. Wright told me to have no anxiety about it, he was not going to overstock us, it was as much against his interest to overstock us as it was against our interest to be overstocked. * * * I said: ‘Mr. Wright, you say you are not going to overstock us, that is very nice, but we want to understand each other.’ I got the contract and read to him that part of which obligated the Paris Box Factory to take all the veneer the Tyler Box Company could cut during the life of the contract. Wright said, ‘the real agreement never contemplated that the Paris Box Factory should take more than it could use during the season, and we do not want you to take more veneer than you can use.’ I then said: ‘Let’s fully understand each oth
er, do you agree that that part of the contract which (requires us to take all the cut shall be modified and rescinded, and that hereafter the contract shall be that the Paris Box Factory shall take all the veneer from the Tyler Box Factory, that it can use for the season, and no more?’ Wright replied that ‘We do so agree,’ and added that he would like for us to take a car occasionally, as he wanted to keep a small crew at the plant. I told him we would use all we could, and hoped the egg-ease business would pick up, and that we would be able to use more veneer than it now appeared, and he said: T think the business will improve, and that you will need more than you now expect you will use.’ That was on the 28th of S’feb-ruary, and early in March we wrote him and told him to hold up shipments,- and on the 25th of March, I believe, we told him we could not handle any more, and asked to discontinue. That is the agreement that was made between Mr. Wright and I on the 28th of February. From the time Mr. Wright was here until we notified them to hold up, they shipped us 10 cars. On the 3d of March they shipped a car, 10,560 sets; on March 5th a car, 11,700 sets; another on the 5th of March, 12,700 sets; two on March 10th, one 8,666 sets, and the other 8,500 sets; two on the 16th of March, one 12,-000 sets, and the other 12,290; two on the 17th of March, one 12,870, and the other for 11,535; and then they skipped until the 25th of March when they shipped us one car of 7,537 sets. That aggregated 108,352 sets. That was after Mr. Wright and I agreed on a car occasionally. We made every effort possible to use all the veneer possible in our business, and we did all we could. I think we had between 75,000 and 100,000 sets that we could not use and had to carry over. At the time we made the new contract we probably had that number of sets on hand that we bought and paid them for. After Mr. Wright was here and we had that agreement, we carried over about 65,000 sets that we could not use. We paid for all that veneer. In other words, we tried to buy enough to run on, and we had 65,000 sets more than we sold, I believe it was 65,900 sets; I don’t know exactly, so I’ll say about 65,000.”
[1]
The Tyler Company insists that the agreement shown by the testimony set out above was not;, binding upon it, because, it asserts, the modification of the contract sued upon, claimed to have been thereby accomplished, ,was without a consideration to support it. We do not. think so. While the bank was thereby relieved of any obligation to take more of the material than it could use in its business for the season covered, by the contract, the Tyler Company was relieved of its obligation to sell to the bank all the material cut by it, and to turn over orders it might receive for egg eases to the bank. It seems to us, therefore, it cannot be said that there was no consideration, or a lack of mutuality in the consideration, for the modification claimed. 1 Page on Contracts, 302, 308. It has been said that a contract like the one sued upon “may be modified without a new consideration, the consideration of the original contract being deemed sufficient.” 35 Cyc. 124; City of Ft. Madison v. Moore, 109 Iowa, 476, 80 N. W. 528; Fiber Co. v. Lumber Co., 132 Wis. 1, 111 N. W. 241; Bowman v. Wright, 65 Neb. 661, 91 N. W. 581, 92 N. W. 580; Strahl v. Grocer Co., 5 Neb. (Unof.) 482, 98 N. W. 1043; Prye v. Kalbaugh, 34 Utah, 306, 97 Pac. 333; Hertz v. Pub. Co., 9 Ala. App. 178, 62 South. 567. We do not understand the ruling made in the cases decided by the courts in this state, and cited by the Tyler Company, as being to the contrary, except the one made in Terrell v. Proctor, 172 S. W. 1000, where it was said by the Court of Civil Appeals that:
“In
some states the courts have held that the consideration existing in an original executory contract is considered as imported into any new parol modification, and no new consideration need be shown, but we do not understand our courts to so hold. Whitsett v. Carney, 124 S. W. 443; Walker v. Tomlinson, 44 Tex. Civ. App. 446, 98 S. W. 906; Mayfield v. Cotton, 21 Tex. 1; Hogan v. Crawford, 31 Tex. 633; Bonzer v. Garrett, 162 S. W. 936; Consumers’ Fertilizer Co. v. Badt
&
Co., 157 S. W. 226; Porter v. Metcalf, 84 Tex. 468, 19 S. W. 696.”
While the cases cited in the quotation from the opinion in the Proctor Case set out above do not bold that the consideration of an executory contract will support a modification thereof agreed upon by the parties, they do not, as we understand them, when considered with reference to their respective facts, hold to the contrary, and we are of opinion that the rule recognized by courts in other jurisdictions is the true one. It follows that ,we think the assignments numbered 2, 3, 4, and 14 in the Tyler Company’s brief should be overruled.
[2, 3]
The witness Wright testified that the agreement of February 28, 1914, between himself, representing the Tyler Company, and Record, representing the bank, was not as testified to by Record, but was that the Tyler Company, when requested by the bank to do so, would so reduce the output of its plant as to not overstock the bank with material. The court refused a special charge asked by the Tyler Company, based on this testimony and on testimony showing that thereafter-wards the Tyler Company did reduce the output of its plant, directing the jury to find for it on the theory that the bank was bound to receive and pay for the reduced output of the plant. We think the refusal of the charge was not error. Under the contract as made originally the Tyler Company had a right, without any agreement on the part of the bank, to reduce the output of its plant, for it had not bound itself not to do so. The testimony of Wright, therefore, did not show a modification of the original contract. If it had shown one, then it .would not have been error to refuse the charge, because there was no pleading on the part of the Tyler Company which would have authorized the submission of such an issue to the jury. The eleventh assignment therefore is overruled.
[4, 5]
The suit was against the bank and Record as partners. There was no denial, under oath, by either the bank or Record of the partnership, as was required by the statute. Article 1906, Vernon’s Statutes. It is insisted that the court therefore erred when he peremptorily instructed the jury to find in favor of Record, because it was not shown that he had any connection with the trans
action evidenced by tbe contract, other than as the agent of the bank. For the reason urged, and also because of the admission in the second paragraph of the bank and Record’s answer that they were partners in the business of manufacturing egg cases as charged in the ninth paragraph of the petition, the instruction, doubtless, was error; but the error was harmless, because, if they .were partners and the bank was not liable, as was determined by the jury, Record as its partner could not have been liable, and a finding against him would have been unauthorized.
It is believed the court did not err in refusing to give to the jury the special charge numbered 2, requested by the Tyler Company. Neither the original contract, nor that contract as modified, according to the testimony, required the bank to give notice to the Tyler Company before it did that it could not use more of the material than it accepted and paid for.
[6]
What has been said disposes of all the assignments except the first, in which the Tyler Company complains of the action of the court in overruling its exception to the fifth paragraph of the bank and Record’s answer. The action of the court, if erroneous—and we think it was—was harmless, for the matter set up in that paragraph as a defense to a recovery by the Tyler Company, as it sought, was not submitted to the jury as constituting a defense to the suit.
The judgment is affirmed.