Ward v. McKinley

191 P. 322, 97 Or. 45, 1920 Ore. LEXIS 210
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 13, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 191 P. 322 (Ward v. McKinley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ward v. McKinley, 191 P. 322, 97 Or. 45, 1920 Ore. LEXIS 210 (Or. 1920).

Opinion

McBRIDE, C. J.

1, 2. There is but one question raised on this appeal: Is the contract pleaded in defendants’ answer unilateral? If it is, the judgment of the Circuit Court must be affirmed. If not, there must be a reversal. If plaintiff is so bound by the contract, to order and receive the minimum amount of lumber therein provided for, the defendants would have a remedy against him for damages for failure to order such amount, in which event there is no want of mutuality. This is the test. If plaintiff is not so bound, the agreement does not rise beyond the dignity of a mere option to purchase from the failure [54]*54to exercise which no canse of action will arise. It is a well-established rnle of law that courts should incline, .where snch a construction is reasonable, to construe a contract in favor of mutuality: Minnesota Lbr. Co. v. Whitebreast Goal Co., 160 Ill. 85 (43 N. E. 774, 31 L. R. A. 529); Dreiske v. Davis Colliery Co., 156 Ill. App. 291; Rice v. Miner, 151 N. Y. Supp. 983 (89 Misc. Rep. 395).

In the case first above cited, the court said:

. “Contracts should be construed in the light of the circumstances surrounding the parties, and of the objects which they evidently had in view. The circumstances, which both parties had in view at the time of making the contract may be referred to for the purpose of determining the meaning of doubtful expressions. Courts will seek to discover and give effect to the intention of the parties, so that performance of the contract may be enforced according to the sense in which they mutually understood it at the time it was made; and greater regard is to be had to their clear intent than to any particular words which they may have used to express it.”

The doctrine is well stated in the above excerpt. Courts naturally are reluctant in cases like the present, where parties have deliberately prepared a long and formal contract, with many elaborate provisions, and have gone through the ceremony of signing and sealing it, to say that in spite of all this preparation and careful execution, they are not bound and that no contract has been in fact executed.

If the plaintiff was anything but a schemer and a dishonest man, he intended when he signed his contract that the defendants should understand that he was binding himself to take all the output of their mill, with the exception therein specified, at the prices agreed upon; and the defendants would not, if they were not lunatics, have signed except with that un[55]*55derstanding. It is inconceivable that they would have tied up practically the entire output of their mills for a term of years and agreed to sell to no one but plaintiff, except with the understanding that he was to take that output.

At this stage of the case, in the absence of testimony to the contrary, we are bound to assume that plaintiff was ready 'and willing to perform every stipulation required of him, and that there has been no default in fact upon his part; that he had ordered, received and paid for 628,231 feet of lumber, and was ready and willing to seasonably order, receive and pay for the remainder, according to contract, and that defendants, om the pretext that the contract was not binding upon their part, refused to furnish him with any more lumber.

3. It is idle to say, and counsel does not seriously contend, that there was no consideration passing to plaintiff. The agreement to hold the entire output subject to plaintiff’s orders and not to sell it to other parties, was itself a sufficient consideration.

¥e have before us, then, an agreement of the defendants, based upon a sufficient consideration, to sell and deliver to the plaintiff all the output of their min for the period therein specified, to the exclusion of other parties. We will now proceed to construe the agreement as a whole, “taking it by its four corners,” to ascertain if its true meaning and intent was to bind plaintiff to take and pay for that entire output, or whether it was intended to give bim an option to take or refuse to take it — an option, if he saw fit to do so, to neglect to order a single foot of lumber and to compel defendants to manufacture and pile it in their yard and allow it to .rot there at their own expense and without remedy. That such a condition was ever within the contemplation of the par[56]*56ties, when they prepared and executed the elaborate agreement involved in this suit, is not thinkable. If plaintiff is not bound to take what he bound the defendants to sell to him, it must be due to some mistake or deception in the preparation of the instrument, and we are not prepared to say that such is the case.

The contract, by its terms, is an agreement for a present sale and future delivery of lumber. The stipulation is:

“In consideration of one dollar * * paid by the party of the second part to the parties of the first part * * the parties of the first part hereby agreed to'sell and do hereby sell and agree to deliver,” etc.

The defendants further agree that they “will saw, manufacture, and deliver unto the party of the second part” (plaintiff) “at least four million (4,000,000) feet board measure for each sawing season, * * which said party of the second part agrees to pay for, according to the terms and conditions hereinafter set forth.” These stipulations constitute the framework of the contract. It is an agreement to sell and deliver not less than ten million (10,000,000) feet of lumber on the one band, and an agreement to pay for the lumber só delivered on the other. The manner of delivery and payment are matters of detail.

As to the manner of delivery, it is stipulated that it shall be delivered “f. o. b. cars at Bend, Oregon, at such times, in such manner and in such quantities as the party of the second part may from time to time direct.” Meanwhile, it is to be insured by defendants at their expense for the benefit of plaintiff- — this clause impliedly recognizing some property right of plaintiff in the lumber even before delivery upon the cars.

[57]*57The lumber is to be paid for by plaintiff when “manufactured according to specifications forwarded from time to time by party of the second part and delivered f. o. b. cars at Bend,” etc.

A fair construction of this clause binds plaintiff to not only pay for the lumber when delivered, but to furnish specifications whereby it may be delivered. The word “furnished” cannot be construed to have been used in the past tense, but in the future, and must therefore have the meaning of “to be furnished” and so construed.

Thus, In re Freeman, 27 App. Div. 593 (50 N. Y. Supp. 520), a statute provided that an officer might be removed upon charges “duly furnished.” The court held the word “furnished” meant that the charges should be furnished to some official body.

And in State ex inf. v. Lewin, 128 Mo. App. 149 (106 S. W. 581), it was held that the word “furnish” means to supply; therefore, we conclude. that the words “to be furnished” mean by interpretation, that the plaintiff was bound to supply defendants’ specifications for the lumber described in the contract.

Taking this construction, and there being no time fixed within which specifications — by which we understand particular kinds of lumber desired in a particular shipment — were to.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
191 P. 322, 97 Or. 45, 1920 Ore. LEXIS 210, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ward-v-mckinley-or-1920.