A. H. Andrews Co. v. Stowers Furniture Co.

52 So. 316 | Ala. | 1910

SAYRE, J.

Action on the common counts and on a special contract for the agreed price of 125 opera chairs, alleged to have been sold by plaintiff to defendant. There are also counts charging defendant as guarantor for one Wood, to whom the chairs are alleged, alternatively, to have been sold. All questions arising out of the pleadings were settled in the court below in favor of the defendant, appellee here. We think the case may be properly disposed of on consideration of the issues presented by the complaint and plea B.

This plea tendered a meritorious issue, and was not, as for any objection taken to it by the demurrer, defective in form or substance. Looking to the most obviously material feature of the defense presented, it appears that defendant undertook to guarantee the price of the chairs to plaintiff, on consideration in part of *248the plaintiff’s promise to consign them to defendant, although they were sold to Wood. It is alleged that plaintiff failed to consign the chairs as agreed. Whether the agreement by which the defendant became bound was in writing, or made orally, was clearly of no consequence, unless the defendant made it so by pleading the statute of frauds. Other pleas set up that defense. The plea under consideration went upon an entirely different line. Further, both plaintiff and defendant were necessarily parties to any agreement by which the latter undertook for a consideration to guarantee to the former payment for the chairs. Such is the import of the plea. It succinctly states the facts necessary to the defense interposed, and there was no occasion to incumber it with the averment of other facts merely circumstantial.

On consideration of the evidence we are of the opinion that the plea referred to was proven without conflict or adverse inference. We will undertake to set out only enough of the evidence to make the situation clear: Wood applied to defendant, a furniture house in the city of Birmingham, to purchase chairs for a place of amusement which he was about to open. Defendant, being unable to meet his requirements out of its stock, referred him to plaintiff, a manufacturer of furniture in the city of Chicago, giving him a letter of introduction as a personal friend and customer, stating his purpose to buy chairs, and that “any selection that he might make same may be charged to our account.” This was on August 21, 1907. On the same day defendant wrote to plaintiff, inclosing a copy of the letter they had given to Wood, and said: “In figuring this bill we want 50 per cent, profit net f. o. b. Birmingham, so in quoting prices kindly be guarded as we have stated.” Wood presented his letter to the plaintiff in Chic*249ago on August 29th. In the meantime (August 24th) plaintiff had written in substance that it could not safely add 50 per cent, to its net selling price with any hope of securing Wood’s order, if he should be inclined to look about. Beplying (August 27th), defendant said it would have to handle the account at its enu of the road, stated that Wood would doubtless not loot elsewhere, indicated its expectation of sharing in the profit of the sale, and concluded by leaving the matter entirely with the plaintiff, and asking the plaintiff to handle it to the best of its ability. August 29th Wood appeared at plaintiff’s place of business in Chicago, and entered into a written agreement for the purchase of the chairs on his own account. Plaintiff agreed in its contract with Wood, among other things, that the chairs, when made, should be consigned to him at Birmingham.

August 31st plaintiff wrote to defendant as follows: “The Stowers Furniture Co., Birmingham, Ala. — Gentlemen: Your letter of August 21st, introducing Mr. T. F. Wood, has been placed in our hands by Mr. Wood, and we to-day have negotiated same with him for 150 of our 221 opera chairs, the price being $5.50 apiece delivered at Birmingham. Our instructions are to ship these chairs to you and that you would guarantee the payment. The contract is made to Mr. T. F. Wood and signed by him. Now, we are going to undertake the delivery of these goods f. o. b. Chicago to you for the price of $4.50. This would leave $1 commission to you. but out of this you would have to stand the freight. Our best information to-day is to the fact that the rate on these chairs to Birmingham will be about 90 cents per hundred, and these chairs will weigh about three chairs to the hundred, and the cost will be about 30 cents a chair. This would leave you a natural com*250mission of 70 cents on each chair, on 150. This is the best we can do for you, and the best trade we can make for you. Now, we would like to have you confirm the understanding of this letter by saying we should send the chairs direct to you, charging you at the rate of $4.50 f. o. b. Chicago, payment to be made Oct. 15, 1907. The confirmation of this understanding will be sufficient, if you will write your O. K. and signature on the original copy, which we inclose herewith. We send you this in duplicate, so you can keep one and return the other one to us. We will proceed to the making of the chairs pending a reply to this letter. Thanking you, we are, very truly yours, The A. H. Andrews Co.”

The foregoing letter was returned to plaintiff with the following indorsement: “We hereby guarantee this account. Sept. 7, ’07. Stowers Furniture Co., Chas. M. Powell, Geni. Mgr.” At the same time defendant wrote as follows: Birmingham, Ala., Sept. 7th, 1907. A. H. Andrews Co., 174 Wabash Ave., Chicago, 111.— Gentlemen: We beg to inclose you letter O. K.’d as per your suggestion, which guarantees payment of this account; but, in an interview to-day with Mr. T. F. Wood, he advises us that you quoted him a price of $5.50 f. o. b. Birmingham. I advised him that you had quoted us a price f. o. b. Chicago, not mentioning the price you quoted us, of course. He said that our prices should be f. o. b. here as well. Mr. Wood may write you regarding this matter; but you may tell him same has been arranged between you and I, and that same will be shipped out promptely as per original order. Mr. Wood assured us this morning that he would possibly pay cash for these goods on delivery. That was the only incentive in having you charge him as stiff a price as possible. Yours respectfully, Stowers Furniture Co., Chas. M. Powell, General Manager.”

*251September 9th defendant concluded the negotiation by a letter as follows: Stowers Furniture Co., Birmingham, Ala. — Gentlemen: We are in receipt of your valued favor of Sept. 7th. We have the confirmation of your order to Mr. Wood. We thank you for this, and will say that we are at work upon the chairs and will undoubtedly make shipment in time. Yours very truly, The A. H. Andrews Co.”

This correspondence evidenced the contract between the plaintiff and the defendant, and on it, after some delay, of which complaint ivas made, but which may now be laid out of consideration, the chairs were consigned to and accepted by Wood at Birmingham. Defendant expected that the consignment would be to it, until it learned that the chairs had been delivered to Wood.

Familiar principles of law suffice to decide the case here presented. It may be conceded, for the argument, that, if the sale of the chairs had been consummated on the faith of the defendant’s two letters of August 21st, defendant’s obligation would have been the primary obligation of an original promisor. But such was not the case. Plaintiff was not content with the terms offered by those two letters, nor did it in fact make a sale to Wood in accordance with them. It negotiated with defendant for different terms, and the negotiation became merged in the proposal contained in its letter of August 31st and defendant’s acceptance of September 7th, which thereupon, as for anything appearing in the record, became the final memorial of an agreement of minds then reached for the first time. The stipulation for consignment to defendant put the defendant in a position of advantage, gave it security in respect to the payment of the purchase price, for which it had a right to contract, and must be taken as a part of the *252consideration of its guaranty. And whether so or not, and whether defendant’s obligation was that of surety or guarantor — we think the contract in its final shape made it one or the other — the consignment to Wood was a plain breach of the contract between plaintiff and defendant. Thereupon, on well-established doctrine, defendant had the right to stand' upon the exact terms of its contract, and any deviation from it by the plaintiff discharged and absolved the defendant.—Moses v. Home B. & L. Ass’n, 100 Ala. 465, 14 South. 412. Having reached the conclusion that the plea in question presented a meritorious defense, and that on it the defendant was entitled to the general affirmative charge, consideration of whether other pleas were a sufficient answer to the complaint, or whether- they were established by a like measure of uncontradicted proof, becomes immaterial.

We are not at all convinced that there was any error in the various rulings of the trial court on the introduction of evidence. None of it, to which objection was taken, had any tendency to establish a contract different from that shown by the evidence we have set out, nor to show that the contract was not breached by the plaintiff in the particular mentioned, nor that there was on defendant’s part any waiver of the breach. These rulings were therefore innocuous, and cannot in any event work a reversal of the judgment under review. The judgment and proceedings in the trial court will therefore be affirmed.

Affirmed.

Dowdell, C. J., and Anderson and Evans, JJ., concur.
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