149 Tenn. 18 | Tenn. | 1923
delivered the opinion of the Court.
The chancellor decreed in favor of the defendants, holding that no contract had been consummated between the parties. This defense will be first considered, since, if sound, it is determinative.
The cloth article known as denim is manufactured by complainant Canton Cotton Mills, located in Canton, Ga., and is used by defendants, located in Knoxville, Tenn., in the manufacture of overalls. The product of the Canton Mills is handled by the Parish Company, commission merchants, located in New York City, and having in Knoxville a traveling agent, R. E. Gettys. This was the situation of the parties in December, 1918, and the early months of 1919, when the transactions which are the subject of this litigation took place. In previous years defendants had purchased and used in their business of malting overalls the product of the Canton Mills, dealing with the same agencies, it being the custom of the defendants to contract in the winter months for their spring supply, these future delivery contracts, at prices fixed in advance, being essential to the prudent conduct of the business of all
It seems to be conceded that the facts developed by the proof are to such an extent identical in their application to both the defendants as that the result in either case would control the other, and we shall therefore, for convenience in statement, use mainly the dealings with Little Bros. Company.
Qn December 19th, pursuant to authority from Canton Mills, the Parish Company wired Gettys at Knoxville to offer Canton 2.20 denims at 35 cents and 2..40 denims at 32% cents, for weekly deliveries, beginning the first week in March and running through June. On the morning of the 20th Mr. Gettys showed this telegram, which covered certain other details not now necessary to mention, to Mr. Little, representing the defendant, who indicated a desire to contract for as much as two hundred bales of each of the numbers, and thereupon Gettys wired Farish to this effect. Oh the following morning, December 21st, Farish wired Gettys instructing him to confirm the sale to Little of two hundred bales of each of the numbers. On the same morning, before the receipt of the telegram of confirmation from Farish, Gettys had written and mailed to Little a letter reading as follows:
“Enclosed please find memo, of the nice order you gave me for Canton denims. This was wired to the Farish Company and just as soon as they advise" me disposition of it I shall be glad to send you final confirmation.”
It appears that upon receipt of the telegram from the Farish Company Gettys telephoned notice of this acceptance to defendant Little Bros. Company, and notation
, Now, nothing more appearing, it would seem that the wire of confirmation of December 21st from the Parish Company, and its communication through Gettys to the defendant, would have closed a contract. However, it is insisted on behalf of the defendants that this was not the construction at the time placed upon these communications by the Parish Company, agents of complainant, but that the further dealings on the part of the Parish Company clearly indicate a purpose to treat these communications as in effect negotiations only, and that complainant is now bound by this construction given by its agents at the time. This insistence is based upon the following
“We are pleased to inform you of the acceptance hy Canton Cotton Mills of your valued order of the 20th ulto., for the following:
“200 hales Canton 2.20 denims at 35^; 200 bales Canton 2.40 denims at 32y2$.
“Shipment equal weekly shipments March 1st to July 1st, 1919. Buyer agrees to accept up to 25% seconds of 2.20’s and 15% of 2.40’s if mill can’t supply first at 114^ less.
“We thank you for the business and solicit a continuance of your favors.”
There follows a provision covering strikes and other contingencies and the signature of Parish Company. By the same mail, and according to the weight of the evidence, in the same envelope, the Parish Company sent the defendants the following letter:
“Your order of the 2Qth ult. for 200 bales Canton denims, approximate value $151,750, has come to the writer for his attention.
“We are accepting this order with the understanding that it will be subject to a line of credit which will be hereafter assigned to your firm. This line of credit, of course, will be determined largely by the showing made in your latest financial statement, which we presume will be as of the 1st inst., and this being the case, are writing to request that you favor us with a copy of this financial statement as soon as it is ready.
“Thanking you in anticipation of an early reply, we are.”
Following receipt of these communications of January 2d Little Bros. Company, on January 9th, transmitted to the Farish Company a copy of its financial statement of September 30, 1918, stating that this represented conditions existing at the close of its fiscal year, “which we trust you will find satisfactory.” On January 18th receipt of this statement was acknowledged by the Farish Company, saying that-“The writer has not as yet had an oppor
Meanwhile defendants, beginning with January 7th, entered into correspondence with Farish Company regarding prices, requesting reductions in line with figures elsewhere obtained. This correspondence touching prices, which it is unnecessary to detail, continued until, in response to a letter declining to make any further concessions in the matter, of prices, Little Bros. Company telegraphed the Farish Company on February 20th, “Cancel all orders booked for us. Letter follows.” Much discussion is had in argument, pro and con, as to the phraseology of various portions of this correspondence, but the material substance is as stated. When the telegram of cancellation from defendant was sent on the 20th of February no advice had been received by Little Bros. Company from the Farish Company in accordance with the assurance given in the letter of January 18th, from which we have above quoted, with respect to the line of credit to be assigned.
Under these conditions it is insisted for the defendants in substance, that the action of the Farish Company in accepting these orders with the understanding that they would be subject to a line of credit to be thereafter assigned was a coupling of a condition with the acceptance, which was in legal effect a rejection by the Farish Company of the offers contained in the preceding communications, the memorandum order of December 20th having definitely provided for credit terms of as much as seventy days; that the defendants were thereby released, and that,
Although recognizing as we do. the propriety of enforcing rigorously the performance of contracts for future deliveries under conditions such as are here presented, which make such contracts necessary to successful operation, despite the hardships which sometimes follow to either one ,or the other of the parties, and the lack of formalities and nonessential details, we are constrained to concede the plausibility of the contention thus made on behalf of the defendants in this case. It is an elementary principle that until both parties are bound either may withdraw, and it is difficult to escape the conclusion that, so long as the seller withheld his definite assent to an element of the contract so vital as the matter of credit appears to have been in this case, the buyers had reserved to them the right of cancellation.
Learned counsel for the complainant earnestly and ably urge, first, that the telegraphic communications of December 19th to 21st, inclusive, ten days prior to the sending out by the Parish Company of its letters dated January 2d, when taken in connection with the memorandum order of December 20th, so consummated and closed the contracts as to definitely bind all parties, and that therefore the later attempt, if it may be so construed, of the Parish Company to attach a material condition was unwarranted and inefféctive, and should therefore be disregarded. And they further insist that these communications of January 2d from the Parish Company may
“If, during the life of this contract, the financial responsibility of the purchaser becom'es impaired, or unsatisfactory, to the Parish Company, or if bills are not paid promptly, the terms may be changed to cash terms and deliveries held up at the option of the Farish Company until satisfactory adjustment is made, without impairing the validity of the contract.”
It is quite obvious that this language is so restricted as ■ to limit its effect to conditions possible to arise after the making of the contract, pending its performance, and it cannot reasonably be construed to have application to the acceptance of the order in such a sense as to confer upon the seller a reservation of a right to hold open the proposal of the buyer pending an investigation of his then financial condition. Under this clause the seller was clearly entitled, after closing the contract, to all. reasonable information from the buyer as to his financial status, and would have been justified upon any appearance of impairment of the buyer’s resources subsequent to the making of the contract, in changing the terms to cash; but this clause assumes a contract already in effect, made under financial conditions at the time satisfactory to the seller. If the request for a financial statement had followed an' unconditional acceptance of the order, instead of accompanying it coupled with- an express condi
“The interpretation given by the parties themselves to the contract as shown by their acts will be adopted by the court, and to this end not only the acts, but the declarations of the parties may be considered.” 8 Williston on Contracts, par. 623, citing many authorities, including State v. Board of Trust, 129 Tenn., 279, 329, 164 S. W., 1151.
See, also, Chicago v. Sheldon, 9 Wall., 50, 19 L. Ed., 594; Yowell v. Life Ins. Co., 141 Tenn., 70, 90, 206 S. W., 334.
This rule may properly be extended to the construction of the facts here appearing in determining what effect shall be given to the memoranda and communications bearing upon the making of these contracts. We have already intimated our recognition of the plausibility of the contention that these memoranda and communications of December 19th to 21st, inclusive, taken together, constituted contracts. But we are met with what plainly appears to have been a different construction placed by both parties on these transactions, evidenced, first by the seller’s communications of January 2d, recognizing that
The frank testimony of Mr. Farish sustains the view that the buyer did not regard the contracts as finally closed. Referring to the letter of January 2d, expressly reserving the question of credits, he states that his final acceptance of the order was dependent on what might be thereafter ascertained to be the financial condition of the defendants, and that this letter of January 2d, accompanying the formal acceptance, was sent “as a part of the contract,” and he construes this letter as reserving the right to refuse shipments absolutely unless paid for in cash. The manifest effect, therefore, as construed and intended by 'the seller, was to suspend assent to the proposed contract, in so far as it purported to provide for seventy days’ credit terms, until further investigation could be made. The facts of this case* show this to have been a most material matter, it appearing, indeed, that the buyers were not in financial condition to meet cash terms, if the seller had finally concluded to demand cash. It follows that this reservation and conditional acceptance
The controlling rule of law is elementary, hut it is well stated in 13 Corpus Juris, 281, as follows:
“An acceptance, to he effectual, must he identical with the offer and unconditional. Where a person offers to do a definite thing, and another accepts conditionally or introduces a new term into the acceptance, his answer is either a mere expression of willingness to treat, or it is a counter proposal, and in neither case is there an agreement.”
\ Again in 6 R. C. L., 608, it is said: “In order that there may be a meeting of the minds which is éssential to the formation of a contract, the acceptance of the offer must he substantially as made. There must be no variance between the acceptance and the-offer. Accordingly a proposal to accept, or an acceptance, upon terms varying from those offered, is a rejection of the offer, and puts an end to the negotiation unless the party who made the original offer renews it, or assents to the modifications suggested.”
And to the same effect is 1 Williston on Contracts, p. 57.
These text-book statements of the rule are well supported by the authorities cited, and, applying this rule to the facts of this case, it must be held that the contracts sued on were not finally consummated.
But it is insisted that this defense of uncompleted contract should not be entertained because it is offered in violation of the rule of law which estops a party who has assigned reasons for his breach o-f a contract before
“In Ault v. Dustin, 100 Tenn., 366, 45 S. W., 981, it is shown that the ordinary application of the rule relied on is in cases where a defendant undertakes to adopt an in-' consistent position after litigation has begun, with one formerly taken by him. There is no inconsistency here.
“We think it may be said that the rule urged by the complainant is of doubtful application in any case, unless the former position 'is inconsistent with the position adopted after litigation, or unless the adverse party had been misled, or is prejudiced by the change ol: attitude. See Taylor-Baldwin Co. v. Northwestern T. & M. Ins. Co., 18 N. D., 343, 122 N. W., 396, 20 Ann. Cas., 432, and note, 438.”
“While of course one cannot fail in good faith in pre* senting his reasons as to his conduct touching a controversy, he is not prevented from relying upon one good defense among others urged simply because he has not always put it forward, when it does not appear that he has acted dishonestly or that the other party has been misled to his harm, or that he is estopped on any other ground.”
And in a suit on a contract reasoning applicable to the case at bar has been thus clearly set forth:
“But it is said that the plaintiff waived any objection as to the late delivery of the hides; and this is to be considered. The evidence is that he declined receiving them, and alleged as a reason that he had a discharge of the contract from Alva Clement, with whom the contract was originally made. This cannot be considered as a waiver of any other legal objection that he might have to the enforcement of the plaintiff’s claim. He might have considered, that one objection which he supposed fatal to the plaintiff’s claim was sufficient for him to assign. He was under no obligation to disclose all the defenses it might be in his power to make. If he disclosed a defense then which would be contradictory to his defense at this time, it might destroy it; but if both defenses could subsist at the same time, there is no contradiction, and an assignment of one defense is no waiver of. another. Thus if a note was outlawed, and the promisor, on being called up*34 on, should say that he had a discharge of the note, or had paid it, it would not preclude him from the additional defense of the statute of limitations, or that it was without consideration. There is no competent evidence of a waiver in this case.” Clement v. Clement, 8 N. H., 210-215.
And see Hughes Bros, et al. v. Ætna, Ins. Co. et al. (Tenn.), 255 S. W., 363.
Moreover, although in very general' terms, it appears that Little Bros, in at least one of its communications, the letter of March 10th, did say to the Parish Company, “We have breached no contract — we have no contract with you,” — manifestly detailed explanations of the grounds of defense are not required under any possible application of this rule. It follows from what has been said that this court is constrained to hold with the chancellor that the contracts relied on were never bindingly completed; and, this conclusion being determinative, of the case, the discussion of other questions so exhaustively and ably presented becomes unnecessary.
Affirmed.