81 F. 282 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Washington | 1897
This is a suit to compel the defendants to specifically perform an alleged contract whereby they promised, in consideration of receiving, free of expense to them, a right of way for their line of railway through the city of Spokane, to give to the people of Spokane and vicinity the benefit of transportation of through freight from the east at terminal rates. The bill of complaint avers that after some preliminary and preparatory work on the part of Mr. James J. Hill, a high official of the defendant companies, by representations made to citizens of Spokane there was a meeting between Mr. Hill and a large number of representative citizens, at which meeting Mr. Hill formally offered to locate the line of the Great Northern Railway through Spokane, and to build said •line, and, when completed, to carry freight by said line from its eastern terminal to Spokane at terminal rates, if the people of Spokane would furnish a right of way through the city free of expense to the railway companies; that the complainants and others accepted
T will not volunteer an opinion upon questions which were argued, bu t which I find do not necessarily have to be considered in arriving at my conclusion. My opinion is adverse to complainants on two points, and on these grounds the demurrer must be sustained. In the first place, I find that the contract as pleaded is not. enforceable, because it is too indefinite and uncertain as to parties, and as to the service promised on the part of the railway companies, and for want, of mutuality. The fundamentals of a legal contract are’ parties, subject-matter, consideration, and assent. There can be no contract if any one of these elements is lacking, and, to enforce a contract by legal proceedings, it is necessary to set forth the contract with precision and certainly, so as to show a complete contract. Xow as to parties. A i»romise made to everybody is not a promise to any person; and a promise by a multitude, or an indefinite and unidentified number of individuals, to jointly do a particular tiling, cannot be enforced. In such a case the promisee will not be permitted to proceed against selected persons to compel them to do by them-sell es what thev have only promised to assist others in doing. Then, to make a valid contract, it must be assented to; that is, there must be a meeting of minds, so that each party bound gives his assent to the same thing. It is necessary, therefore, that the extent and limitations and conditions of the offer made on one side and accepted on the other shall be defined, so that it may appear that something definite lias been agreed to by all the parties. And a contract, to be enforceable, must have the quality of mutuality; for one or several persons who could not be compelled to perform a promise may nor compel others to fulfill a promise1 dependent upon such non enforceable promise. To whom did Mr. Hill promise that the railroad would carry freight at terminal rates, and who agreed to furnish the right of way? We must look to the bill of complaint to find the answer io these questions, and there we can only find that the sev