176 Mo. App. 407 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1913
This is a suit on an account for coal sold and delivered to defendant, amounting to $2298.42; but the controversy arises on defendant’s answer, which sets forth two counterclaims.
A jury was waived, and the case tried before the court, which found the issue and gave judgment for. plaintiff on its cause of action and against defendant on both of the counterclaims asserted in the answer. From this judgment defendant prosecutes the appeal, and urges that the court erred in construing the contracts ■ set forth in the answer and relied upon as a foundation for its counterclaim. It therefore appears that the solution of the controversy depends upon a proper construction of the contracts mentioned, and, to this end, the facts and circumstances of the case should be fully stated.
Both parties to the suit are incorporated coal companies and so, too, is the Harman Coal Company, mentioned in connection with the contracts set forth in defendant’s counterclaim. It appears that plaintiff is a Missouri corporation, engaged in operating coal mines at Herrin and Clifford in the State of Illinois, located on the Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Eailroad. Defendant is engaged in both mining and selling coal at Herrin and Clifford, Illinois, and had agreed to sell the Harman Coal Company, its customer, a considerable quantity of coal to be delivered in consign-, ments of so many cars per month, as stipulated in its contracts therewith. The relevant facts touching the controversy here appear in an agreed statement thereof in the record, and the contracts involved are to be interpreted and construed in the light of the facts and circumstances so revealed as attending the situation of the parties and the subject-matter contemplated at the time.
The second contract set forth in the answer and declared upon as matter of counterclaim is of date August 18, 1909, and stipulates that plaintiff agrees to ship and defendant agrees to receive 300 carloads of Carterville district lump coal, screened over a No. 3 screen, at mine price $1.20 per ton, delivered on board Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad cars at Herrin and Clifford, Illinois. This contract provides for the shipment to be made between August 18, 1909 and March 31, 1910, and then stipulates “shipment to be made during the following months: August, 20 cars; September, 60 cars; October, 80 cars; November, 60 cars; December, 60 cars; January, 20 cars; total, 300 cars.”
It is averred that plaintiff breached each of these contracts, in that it omitted and failed to ship to defendant, in all, under both contracts, 284 cars of coal, and for that damages are prayed to compensate the loss’ entailed upon defendant through its failure to realize profits on a resale of the coal.
By its reply, plaintiff admits the contracts, and admits, too, that it omitted to ship all of the coal contemplated in the contracts, but avers that it was under no obligation to do so unless the cars of coal were or
Upon hearing the evidence and considering the agreed statement of facts, the court construed the contracts, in the light of the established course of business between the parties thereunder and all of the circumstances of the case, to impose no obligation upon plaintiff to load and ship the cars of coal except upon orders from defendant to do so, and therefore declared as a conclusion of law that, as plaintiff had shipped all of the coal ordered by defendant during the months specified, no breach appeared, even though 284 cars had not been shipped at all. The conclusion is obviously just in the circumstances of the case, and we believe, too, that it accords with sound law on the subject.
Prom the agreed statement of facts, it appears that both of these parties own and operate coal mines and are engaged in the business of selling and shipping coal to others. Besides operating a coal mine, it appears that defendant is engaged in buying coal as well and re-selling it to customers, as was the course pursued here. Defendant had contracted with the Harman Coal Company to sell and deliver to it a large quantity of coal, and communicated this fact to plaintiff before the contracts set forth in the counterclaim were entered into. The two contracts entered into between plaintiff and defendant, and also the two contracts which defendant entered into with the Harman Coal Company for the sale of coal to it, are set forth in the agreed statement of facts. Prom these several contracts and other evidence in the record, it is revealed beyond question that the two contracts entered into between plaintiff and defendant were to the end
“This contract made in duplicate this 14th day of June, 1909, by and between the Big Muddy Coal & Iron Company of St. Louis, Mo., party of the first part, and the St. Louis-Carterville Coal Co., of Herrin, 111., party of the second part, for the period ending January 10, 1910.
“Mine weight to govern settlement and shipment thereafter at risk of consignee.
“Shipments to he made during the following months: '
July .................... 20 cars
August ................. 40 cars
September ............... 60 cars
October ................. 80 cars
November ............... 40 cars
December ............... 40 cars
January ................ 20 cars
Total ............... 300 cars
“Terms: Cash on the 10th of the month for all shipments made during the preceding month.
“This contract is subject to the contingencies of • transportation, strikes, labor troubles or causes beyond the control of the party of the first part. J •
“Big Muddy Coal & Iron Company,
“By S. L. Shereb,, Ass’t Sec’y<
“St. Louis-Carterville Coal Company,
“By H. S. Haddaway, Sales Manager.”
When this and the companion contract were entered into between plaintiff and defendant, it was well known to both parties that plaintiff had no way of storing the coal, but on the contrary raised it from the mines and dumped it over the screens into cars, where it-was weighed and immediately billed out to the customer. It is agreed, furthermore, that plaintiff could obtain cars for the purpose of shipping only on request, which, according to the usual practice, was
It appears that all of the coal contracted for was not ordered during the months mentioned, and on January 26,1910, defendant wrote plaintiff as follows: “Dear Sirs:
‘ ‘ Since speaking to you over the telephone yesterday, I have checked over the number of orders which we have placed with your company for the month of January as follows: Orders placed 18, shipped 13, and 5 unfilled. Our contract for the month of January calls for 40 cars and after deducting 18, which is the number of orders placed for January, there is still a balance of 22 cars due and will ask that you change our order No. 370 for Galesburg, Illinois, to read 22 cars instead of 25 cars.
“You will note from the above figures that we do not consider orders placed with you in December and' shipped in January as January orders.”
This letter obviously suggests with great force that defendant understood the contracts to impose a monthly obligation on plaintiff to ship the number of cars set opposite the specified month, for it appears to concede that but twenty-two cars were due it on the January, 1910 orders, and corrected its prior order accordingly. As before said, plaintiff shipped as many of the cars of coal each month as defendant or its customer ordered, unless it be where such order was subsequently canceled, as in the letter last above quoted. Though it be that plaintiff had filled the orders as they came in monthly and though it be that defendant by its letter of January 22 had stated the account to be “still a balance of twenty-two cars due,” it appears that on January 25th it wrote plaintiff demanding shipment of 275 cars of coal under the contracts-, as though it were competent to accumulate all
It is argued that the contracts between plaintiff and defendant did not in terms require defendant to give shipping directions or order the cars of coal as needed. This may be true, but obviously such is implied when all of the circumstances of the case are considered, for it appears that the shipments were divided up in installments as by the month and no directions whatever provided as to whom the cars should be consigned. These contracts were entered into in contemplation of the contracts between defendant and the Harman Coal Company, requiring shipments from plaintiff’s mines of a like number of cars per month in accordance with shipping directions to be given by the Harman Coal Company. It is true the contracts between plaintiff and defendant did not so state on their face, but it appears from the agreed statement of facts that such was the intention of the parties. No one can doubt this to be true, for a reading of the contracts between defendant and the Harman Coal Company and those between defendant and plaintiff reveal a connecting link. Obviously the parties so intended, and this being true, all of those contracts should be read together. Furthermore, it is agreed that both parties understood plaintiff had no means of' storing the coal and that it was necessary for it to ship' it immediately upon loading the cars. Until defendant or some one for it gave shipping directions, it would appear that no obligation to load and ship accrued. Indeed, the
But it is urged that defendant requested a shipment of all of the cars of coal not theretofore shipped on its order or those of the Harman Coal Company beT fore the contracts finally expired and, therefore, a breach of defendant’s obligation appeared, for it refused to ship in all as many as 284 cars. Of this it is to be said, first, that it appears plaintiff shipped every car of coal requested during the several months mentioned in the contract, except in a few instances where the orders were canceled by defendant or its customer after they were received by plaintiff. The only reason defendant did not receive all of the coal is because neither it nor its customer ordered it shipped. In January, and shortly before the contract expired, defendant ordered 275 cars shipped at once and plaintiff declined to do so for the reason that forty cars was the number due for that month. These were shipped as the contract required. It appears from, defendant’s letter of January 22 that it, too, understood forty cars only were due for that month, for upon recapitulation, it canceled the order for twenty-five cars and merely requested “the balance due”—that is, twenty-two cars—which, when added to the eighteen theretofore shipped during the month, made up the sum total of forty cars for January. •
But though such be true, it is argued the two contracts reveal an obligation on the part of plaintiff to ship 600 cars of coal and that the monthly allotments are not to be considered as of the essence of the agree
The intention of the parties as revealed in the contract must control in every instance. In arriving at the intention of the parties to a contract, it is competent to receive and consider evidence revealing the situation of the parties at the time the contract was made and enlightening the subject-matter, so' the court may view and understand the situation and the obligations assumed, precisely as they did. The court, so far as possible, should put itself in the place of the parties to the contract when their minds met upon the terms of the agreement, and then, from a consideration of
It is true the contracts between plaintiff and defendant did not expressly set forth that the shipments of coal were to be made only in accordance with the number of cars set opposite to each month, but when all of the facts and circumstances of the case are considered, it is clear enough that such was the intention of the parties. Indeed, such contracts, when made as in the
The judgment should be affirmed. It is so ordered.