42 So. 614 | Ala. | 1906
— There is no material difference between the parties in the statement of the terms of the contract. Appellants (defendants below) were under contract with the government of the United States to construct locks 4, 5, and 6 in the Warrior river, in this state. In
.The conversation above referred to Avas thus detailed by Patton: “When the time came to haul the hay that I had cut and stacked, I had a conversation with Mr. Lowe, in which-I told him that I had a quantity of feed that I wanted to store away, and that I would take off a few weakly teams to haul that in, and that after that I would haAVi nothing further for my teams to do, and I would put the whole 15 on. I made this agreement with Mr. LoAve in the latter part of September, a feAV days before I was discharged. With Mr. Lowe’s permis
The question of prime importance presented by the record is whether, by the terms of the contract, a definite number of teams were employed by the defendants for a certain and definite time. It is, of course, necessary to a recovery that these elements of certainty should enter into the contract. While the law does not favor the discharge of contracts because of uncertainty, yet, when they are so vague and indefinite in their terms that the damages flowing from a breach cannot he ascertained, the courts will not undertake to give them effect. In Pulliam v. Schimpf, 109 Ala. 179, 19 South. 428, the parties became jointly interested in a shooting gallery under a contract providing that one should furnish the building and the other should furnish the necessary rifles, etc.', and manage and conduct the business, •and that the net profits from the business was to be
Without further citation of authorities, let us apply the principles announced in these decisions to the present contract, assuming it to be a contract. Turning to the letter of May 31st, which is said to disclose the con
Taking it in connection with the context and the situation, of the parties, it could well have been intended to mean that at any time while the work was in prog-erss they could find employment for as large a number of teams as .the plaintiff cared to- put on, but that they did not intend, by the use- of the term, to enter into an agreement that the employment should be coextensive with the construction of the locks. The contract affords no evidence that Patton ever knew what the agreement with the government was, whether the work was to be completed in three years or ten, and certainly the
The basis for the estimate of the damages under the first kind of a contract, if it could be said to furnish a basis, would be different from that under the second kind of a contract, Avhich evidently would furnish no basis at all. For if the contract was limited as to the time, and if the Avorlc was to cease when the Avater was too high, it is evident there would exist no basis on which the number of days the plaintiff would work in future could be estimated. There being nothing in the contract betAveen plaintiff and defendants to indicate whether defendant’s contract with the government was limited or unlimited as tor time, and it being evident that the contractors never intended to contract for a team longer than they had the contract, furnishes, for this reason, no basis upon Avhich damages could be estimated if it were otherwise sufficient. Granting, therefore, that the transaction amounted to a contract, it was Avholly indefinite as to its duration, and, therefore, lacked one of the elements necessary to any estimate of damages. But was it a contract? Did the contractors intend to employ a given number of teams, at the same unchangeable price during operations that might require years for their completion? And did the plaintiff bind himself irrevocably to furnish the samé number of teams for the same indefinite period, covering a number of years? It is inconceivable that contractors on public works, dependent upon contingencies such as the
In Montgomery Southern R. R. v. Mathis, 77 Ala. 357, 54 Am. Rep. 60, representations made on securing subscriptions to the capital stock of a i*ailway company to persons living along the contemplated route, as to its intended location and the time within which it would be completed to a particular place, were construed to be mere representations not affecting the subscriptions. In Birmingham Warehouse Co. v. Elyton Land Co., 93 Ala. 549, 9 South. 235, that the president of a land company, negotiating a sale of lots to a pui chaser, represented to the purchaser that the business of the land company was in close relations with several railroads of the city, that it 'was building a belt railroad down a certain street, so that it would pass within 500 feet of the lots offered, that they were now working on it, and that the engineers. were then on the lots, did not amount to a promise or engagement on the part of the land company, but were matters of opinion that had no relation to the contract. In the case of Bradfield v. Elyton Land Co., 93 Ala. 527, 8 South. 383, the bill alleged that the “Belt Line was located on Tenth avenue and was then building and operated as a permanent road, and that such representation amounted to an engagement, and formed part of the consideration for the
No contract whatever is disclosed here. It is an offer to pay $3 per day, or 30 cents per hour, for teams in good condition. The remainder of the letter consists of mere statements, as we have seen, by way of general information of the character of the work and its possible duration. It lacks the essential elements- of certainty as to the time during which the plaintiff’s teams would be employed, and discloses by all its terms that the plaintiff could have Avitlidrawn his teams Avhen-ever he sa,Av fit. Nor Avas there any change effected by the subsequent Conversation. The plaintiff in this conversation stated to- one of the contractors that he needed some of the teams for hauling hay, that he would take off a few of the Aveakly teams for that purpose, and that -after he had finished he would have nothing further for his teams to do, and would put the whole 15 on the Avork. He says that Lowe,' the partner with whom he talked, assented to this, and he construes this as an assertion on the part of the contractor that they had the right to control the teams. If the plaintiff had offered to withdraw his teams, and the contractor had denied this right, such denial might have afforded, some evidence that the contractors believed they had a right to the services. But even this co-uld not have had the effect to form, a contract, if one had not already been
It is unnecessary, in this view of the case, to consider the various rulings of the court. It being evident that the plaintiff had no cause of action, all the trial court’s rulings to the contrary were erroneous. The judgment appealed fiom will be reversed, and one will be here rendered for defendants.
Reversed and rendered.