Warren Tank Car Co. v. Dodson

199 A. 139, 330 Pa. 281, 1938 Pa. LEXIS 597
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 28, 1938
DocketAppeal, 110
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 199 A. 139 (Warren Tank Car Co. v. Dodson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Warren Tank Car Co. v. Dodson, 199 A. 139, 330 Pa. 281, 1938 Pa. LEXIS 597 (Pa. 1938).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Stern,

Plaintiff manufactures rolling stock. Defendant operates a traveling carnival. On May 10, 1929, plaintiff leased to defendant eighteen flat cars for a term from October 1, 1929, to April 1, 1932, at a rental of $40,766, payable in six semi-annual installments of $6,794.33 each, the last of which was due on April 1,1932. If defendant performed all the terms of the agreement he was to have the right to purchase the cars for the sum of one dollar. The lease provided that “in the event a default *283 is made in the payment of the rental on the day whereon the same shall become due, then the lessor, its successors or assigns, shall, at its own option, forthwith proceed to take exclusive repossession of the cars hereby leased, and shall by its duly accredited agents, employees or attorneys, make immediate seizure of the said cars wherever found, without notice or process of law, privilege of entry upon the premises of the lessee for the said seizure after default being hereby granted.”

The first installment payment, due October 1, 1929, was paid at that time. During 1930 only $3,300 was paid, and in 1931, $1,500. During the next two years no payment whatever was made, but in 1932 a credit was allowed to defendant of $5,000 for the return of five of the cars. In 1934, $850 was paid. In 1935, $1,200 was paid under a special arrangement by which plaintiff agreed it would not seize the cars during that season. During all this time plaintiff was more or less continuously urging defendant to make further payments, but defendant asserted his inability to do so, threw himself upon the generosity of plaintiff, and repeatedly expressed his willingness that plaintiff should repossess the cars because of the defaults in payment. Including the credit above referred to there was paid under the lease the sum of $18,644.33. The balance of principal and interest due on March 1, 1936, was $29,382.84.

In May, 1935, defendant required the use of additional cars, and, at his request, plaintiff loaned six to him without charge; they were to be kept in repair by defendant and to be returned upon demand.

In May, 1936, plaintiff brought the present proceedings in replevin for these six cars. 1 As a defense to the action, defendant asserted that in February, 1936, it was orally agreed between himself and plaintiff that if *284 he' would immediately surrender possession of twelve cars held by him under the lease of May 10, 1929, 2 plaintiff would give him title to the six cars loaned in May, 1935, that he thereupon did surrender the twelve cars to plaintiff and the latter leased or sold them to another party; accordingly defendant claimed ownership of the six cars. At the trial plaintiff denied the making of such an agreement. It claimed that the leased cars had been surrendered to it upon request without any inducing promise in return, and, as for the six loaned cars, plaintiff did not offer to give them to defendant but merely to sell them to him at a stated price on easy terms of payment. The issue of fact thus created was submitted to the jury. The verdict was in favor of defendant, — a finding which seems strange in view of the improbability of defendant’s version and the fact that in telegrams sent by defendant after the making of the alleged agreement he gave no indication of any thought on his part that the six cars had been given to him. However, upon the present appeal, the verdict is conclusive as to the facts.

The legal question arises whether the agreement upon which defendant relies lacked consideration and is therefore nudum pactum. It is plaintiff’s contention that it had the right, upon defendant’s default, to seize the cars “without notice or process of law,” and since, when the alleged oral agreement was made, defendant had been in default for several years to the extent of many thousands of dollars, it could have taken the leased cars at will, and the surrender of them by defendant amounted to nothing more than the performance of his legal obligation.

It seems to have been the thought of the learned trial judge, as gathered from his charge to the jury, that, be *285 cause plaintiff was eager to obtain immediate possession of the leased cars, and defendant might, by refusing delivery, have forced a resort to legal proceedings, plaintiff derived from the voluntary surrender a benefit which constituted a consideration for its promise to make a gift of the other cars. This view of the law is not ten: able. It is in direct opposition to the principle that a promise to carry out a contract subsisting between the parties, or the performance of such a contractual duty, is not a consideration which will support a contract. It is only when the legal duty is doubtful or the subject of honest and reasonable dispute, that a promise to perform it may serve as consideration for a new contractual obligation: Restatement of the Law of Contracts, section 76. Here, there never had been a dispute of any kind between the parties; so far from denying plaintiff’s right to repossess the cars at any time, defendant himself had frequently suggested their surrender. In Erny v. Sauer, 234 Pa. 330, a mortgagor in default agreed to give up possession of the mortgaged property and to make a deed of conveyance to the. mortgagee; the latter in return agreed to release the mortgagor from further obligation on the mortgage; the mortgagor surrendered possession in accordance with the agreement. It was held that since the mortgagee was entitled to take possession because of the default, as well as to foreclose, there was no consideration passing to him by the voluntary surrender of possession, and the agreement, therefore, to release the mortgagor was not legally binding.

On the motion for judgment n. o. v. the court in banc advanced another theory of consideration as apposite to the case. It called attention to the well known principle that where a contract provides for payments at certain times, and for forfeiture upon default, but the creditor, either by inaction or by an affirmative course of dealing, misleads the debtor into the belief that strict regularity of payments will not be insisted upon, he cannot thereafter declare a forfeiture unless he first gives réa *286 sonable notice tt> the debtor that in the future he will demand performance at the precise times specified in the contract. The court was of opinion that plaintiff, by reason of its continued indulgence, had lost the right to demand immediate repossession, and the prompt surrender of the cars, not being obligatory upon defendant, constituted a consideration for plaintiff’s alleged promise.

The doctrine thus invoked is applied to various types of cases in which attempts are made to declare forfeitures or to rescind contracts. 3 It has, however, no application to the present situation. Neither in its theoretical nor its practical aspects is it available for the purpose for which defendant now seeks to employ it. It is a principle, not of law, but of equity. From the strict legal

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Bluebook (online)
199 A. 139, 330 Pa. 281, 1938 Pa. LEXIS 597, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/warren-tank-car-co-v-dodson-pa-1938.