Washington Mills Co. v. Frohlick

5 Tenn. App. 217, 1927 Tenn. App. LEXIS 52
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJune 3, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 5 Tenn. App. 217 (Washington Mills Co. v. Frohlick) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Washington Mills Co. v. Frohlick, 5 Tenn. App. 217, 1927 Tenn. App. LEXIS 52 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

OWE'N, J.

The complainant Washington Mills Company has appealed from a decree of the chancery court of Shelby county dismissing its bill. The complainant operates cotton mills in North Carolina and Virginia. The defendants are eo-<partners and at the time of the filing of the bill were engaged in buying cotton in Memphis with an office in Memphis, Tennessee". The complainant manufactures cotton into cloth.

The complainant alleged that it purchased from the defendants on September 4, 1924, six hundred bales of middling, hard body western cotton from west of the Mississippi river at a price of forty points *219 on December quotations on New York Exchange. It was alleged that the said six hundred bales of cotton were to be shipped as follows: Seventy-five bales on October 10th; seventy-five bales on October 20th; seventy-five bales on November 10th; seventy-five bales November 20th, and seventy-five bales on the same dates in the months of December 1924 and January 1925, making eight shipments of seventy-five bales each, and on the 10th and 20th of the three latter months of 1924 and the first month of 1925.

.The bill alleged that said cotton was subject to the call of complainant at the basis price of forty points on December quotations, as shown by the New York Exchange. It was alleged that this was the usual and customary way of fixing the contract price of cotton in the cotton trade, and meant that the complainant would, at the time it desired, fix the price of said 600 bales of cotton purchased, and it would buy six hundred bales of cotton for December delivery through the New York Cotton Exchange, through a brokerage firm by the name of Post and Flagg, and that when complainant bought the six hundred bales of cotton through its brokers, Post and Flagg through the New York Exchange for December delivery, this would be the price complainant would pay the defendant for said six hundred bales of cotton, plus forty points, which forty' points is called the basis.

The bill alleged that the defendants had breached their contract; that they had failed and refused to ship the cotton covered by said contract. It further alleged that the complainant did not fix the price of said cotton; that it did not buy futures as hedges against said cotton, for the reason that had it done so it would have been compelled to have accepted it delivered in the city of New York at the New York Cotton Exchange, and it might have been compelled and required under the rules of said Exchange to accept cotton of a different kind and character than that purchased from the defendants. The bill further alleged that the basis advanced on said cotton between the dates of the. contract and the dates of delivery, or, in other words, after the market value of the cotton increased so that complainant sustained a loss by reason of the change in basis, complainant insisted that it has sustained a loss of $4818.75 by reason of defendant’s breach of the contract.

The defendants denied that any contract had ever been made, but if it had, the complainant breached the same. Defendants relied upon the following defenses):

1. That Frohlich & Barbour were justified in treating the contract as canceled and in cancelling same and refusing to make any shipments.

2. That the conduct of the Washington Mills Company throughout and its institution of this suit was inconsistent and not in good *220 faith, and is an attempt to hold Frohlich & Barbour liable for an alleged loss of some forty-eight hundred dollars, when no loss was in fact sustained.

3. That the Washington Mills Company, the buyer, was not entitled to recover on an alleged executory contract in which there was no definite contract price fixed, but which merely fixed the method on which the price was to be later fixed on the call of the Washington Mills Company, and which price was never fixed or attempted to be fixed by the Washington Mills Company.

4. That the Washington Mills Company was estopped by its conduct and failure to fix the contract price, to sustain the suit as brought, or to assert any claim whatever for an alleged breach of contract.

A jury was called for and empaneled, and it appears that no issues were formulated until about all the proof of the complainant and defendants had been submitted, when the Chancellor submitted one issue to the jury, viz: "What was the amount of complainant’s damage, if any.” At the conclusion of all the proof, upon a motion made by the defendants, the Chancellor instructed the jury to answer the issue, "none.” The complainant seasonably filed its motion for a new trial, which motion was overruled, and it prayed and was granted an appeal to this court, and has assigned the following-error: "The court erred in peremptorily instructing the jury to answer 'none’ to the issue ‘what was the amount of complainant’s damage, if any.’ ”

The negotiations between the complainant and the defendants pertaining to the six hundred bales of cotton in controversy were had through one B. S. Moore, of Winston-Salem, North Carolina, acting as a broker for the defendant. Mr. Moore was to receive seventy-five cents per bale for the cotton he sold. He instituted suit for his commissions, which was tried with complainant’s suit. During the pendency of the suit, however, Mr. Moore dismissed same and the trial proceeded between the complainant and defendants.

Counsel for complainant relies upon the following principles of ■ law, and cites the following authorities in support therefor:

1. Under the common law, the courts have broken away from the old civil law doctrine that unless the price is fixed in the contract, there can be no recovery thereunder. Phifer v. Erwin, 6 S. E., (N. C.), 672; Hardwick v. Can. Co., 113 Tenn., 657; Memphis Furniture Mfg. Co. v. Wemyss Furniture Co., 2d Fed. (2nd Series) 428; Chaffee v. Farmers Cooperative Elevator Co., ,168 N. W., 616; Burlington Grocery Co. v. Lines, 120 Atl. (Vt.), 169.

2. The law regards that as certain which can be made certain and therefore, the damages being capable of ascertainment, there is no impediment in the courts to a recovery. See authorities cited under *221 first proposition, and also Solter et al., v. Leedom & Worrell Co., 252 Fed., 133; Benjamin on Sales, 6tb Ed., pages 169 and 170.

Counsel for the defendants rely upon the following propositions of law:

1. The buyer cannot maintain a suit for damage or loss on an executory contract to sell, on which no definite sale price is fixed, but which merely provides the method of fixing the price, where the buyer fails to fix the price or to make any attempt to do so. The obligations of the parties under such a contract are conditional, upon the price being fixed substantially in the manner provided, and plaintiff’s failure to fix the price relieves the defendants from all liability. Benjamin on Sales (6 Ed., pp. 169-170); Williston on Sales, Vol., 1, p. 321; 35 Cyc., p. 49, Note 20; Louisville Soap Co. v. Taylor, 279 Fed. Rep., 470; 27 A. L. R., 119, Certiorari denied, 259, U. S. 583; Western Paper Mfg. Co. v. Downing Box Co., 293 Fed., 725; Hutton v. Moore, 26 Ark., 394; Elberton v. Hawes, 122 Ga. 859; Allen v. Sams, 31. Ga. App., 405; Preston v. Smith, 67 Ill. App., 613; DeVane v. Fennell, 24 N.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cloud Cotton Co. v. White
366 S.W.2d 144 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 1961)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
5 Tenn. App. 217, 1927 Tenn. App. LEXIS 52, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/washington-mills-co-v-frohlick-tennctapp-1927.