92 W. Va. 111 | W. Va. | 1922
This suit was instituted for the purpose of recovering damages for the breach of an alleged contract to construct a side track for the plaintiffs. Upon the trial of the case the court directed the jury to return a verdict in favor of the defendant, upon which verdict the judgment complained of on this writ of error was rendered.
Prior to the 6th of April, 1912, the plaintiffs owned a sawmill in the city of Elkins. They were also the owners of a considerable body of timber situate about eight miles from said city of Elkins. It was their practice in the conduct of their business to haul their logs from this timber tract at Meadows Station to Elkins'over the defendant company’s railway. The plaintiffs had built a private railroad from the defendant company’s main line.out into their timber tract, and a switch connected this private logging railroad with the defendant company’s main line. The cars for the purpose of hauling the logs were delivered by the defendant company upon this private railroad of the plaintiffs, and taken by them to the place in the woods where they were to be loaded with logs, and after being loaded they were returned by the plaintiffs to the defendant company’s main line, where they
The defendant contends that the court below properly struck out the plaintiffs’ evidence and directed a verdict in. its favor, for the reason that it appears from the showing-made by the plaintiffs that they never had any valid and binding contract requiring the defendant to construct this-side track; that it was the understanding that in order that the arrangements made on the 17th of May, 1912, should constitute a valid and binding contract the same-should be reduced to writing and signed by the parties; that before that their arrangements were only tentative and not. mutually binding upon either of the parties; and that even though they are mistaken about, this proposition, still that by the subsequent negotiations, on a new basis, the parties rescinded whatever contract they had in 1912, and not having come to any agreement upon a new basis, the- plaintiffs are entitled to no relief.
It is very well established, of course, that where parties enter into negotiations and come to a conclusion, or a tentative conclusion, and it is understood that their agreements shall not be binding upon them until after the same have-been reduced to the form of a writing and executed by the parties,_ there is no valid and binding contract until that has been done. But it is just as well established that where they have fully agreed upon all of the matters about which they are negotiating, and have fixed their reciprocal obligations and rights so that the same cannot thereafter be changed without mutual consent, there is a valid and binding contract, notwithstanding the parties may agree that these agreements and understandings shall be subsequently reduced to writing to be signed by the parties. Western Roofing Tile Co. v. Jones, 26 Ok. 209, 109 Pac. 225, 23 Am. & Eng. Anno. Cas. 127; Sanders v. Pottlitzer Bros. Fruit Co. 144 N. Y. 209, 43 Am. St. Rep. 757; Drummond v. Crane, 159 Mass. 577, 23 L. R. A. 707; Rankin v. Mitchem, 141 N. C. 277, 53 S. E. 854; Jenkins & Reynolds Co. v. Alpena Portland
The second proposition insisted upon by the defendant to defeat this cause of action is that even though the parties did enter into a valid and binding undertaking in May, 1912, they subsequently rescinded this in 1915, and this contention is based upon the fact that the plaintiffs agreed to negotiate in regard to the construction of the siding upon the basis that it was new business. It is insisted by the defendants that simply by entering into negotiations for the construction of the siding upon any other basis than that contemplated by the original contract the plaintiffs abandoned and rescinded the original contract. To this proposition we cannot agree. If the parties had entered upon subsequent negotiations, and had come to an agreement different from that which they had made originally, and which was intended to take the place of the original agreement, then, of course, the original agreement would be no longer binding, but the subsequent agreement would be the one upon which the parties must rely. Under the evidence in this case, however, they
Our conclusion is that under the evidence submitted the-court could not say as matter of law that it was a prerequisite to the.validity of the original contract that it should be reduced to writing, or that it had been abrogated by the subsequent negotiations of the parties. It follows that the judgment complained of will be reversed, the verdict of the jury set aside, and the cause remanded for a new trial.
Reversed and remanded.