Crystal Paper Co. v. Robertson Co.

289 F. 15 | 6th Cir. | 1923

KNAPPEN, Circuit Judge.

On November 11, 1915, plaintiff’s predecessor (whom we shall call plaintiff) gave defendant a written order for— -

“15 to 20 carloads (40,000 pounds to car) No. 1 bleached white sulphite waxing tissues [three different specifications of weight, each at a different price], shipments as may require during calendar year of 1916.”

This order was accepted by defendant with the modification:

“Shipments are to be made in approximately equal monthly installments during 1916, and you are to furnish us with specifications SO days in advance of the shipping date. This contract is subject to the usual delays caused by conditions beyond our control.”

The first shipment under the order (only 5,722 pounds, or about one-seventh of a car) was made by defendant and received by plaintiff about February 19, 1916. On March 8, 1916, before defendant had made further shipments, plaintiff notified defendant by letter that “we want the full 20 cars on account of this contract,” and asked “shipment of a full car of 40,000 pounds at least every 10 days, until further advice.” Defendant at once denied plaintiff’s right to require 20 cars, saying, however, “when conditions become more settled, if you then decide to take the additional 5 cars, we will give you shipping dates, and will do the very best we can on delivery.” Plaintiff continued to insist on its right to 20 cars. In the course of the year defendant shipped plaintiff about 15 cars (a trifle over 600,000 pounds), and on October-25, 1916, in terms denied its obligation to ship, and' refused to ship, the whole or any part of the remainder of nearly 200,000 pounds. Upon trial of this action for damages for refusing to furnish this remainder, plaintiff recovered verdict under an instruction of the court that, as matter of law, the contract gave plaintiff (the buyer) an optional right to take 20 cars, and that the option was exercised within the time required by law.

The questions presented here relate only to the correctness of thfese two holdings, defendant contending that it alone had the option to determine whether more than 15 carloads should be furnished, hut that even if plaintiff had such option it was not seasonably exercised. Not only the contract, but all the dealings were by written correspondence, and it is properly conceded that the construction of the contract is one of law and thus for the court.

In the absence of express contract provision therefor, there is no hard and fast rule that the seller, merely because he is such, nor, *17on the other hand, that the buyer, simply because he is the buyer, has the option to determine the amount to be supplied. The ultimate question is one of intention, to be determined largely upon the facts and circumstances of each particular case. The practical question is: “For whose protection was the option reserved?” One of the rules sometimes applied (but not the only one) is that the party who is by the agreement to do the first act under the contract has authority tq make the choice, in order that he may do that first act. 2 Mechem on Sales, §§ 1170, 1171; De Grasse Paper Co. v. Northern, etc., Coal Co., 190 App. Div. 227, 179 N. Y. Supp. 788, 791, where .a number of pertinent authorities are cited; Southern Pub. Co. v. Clements Paper Co., 139 Tenn. 429, 201 S. W. 745. And see notes to last above case, L. R. A. 1918D, 583 et seq.

We think the most prominent authorities relied upon by defendant are in harmony with, even if they do not in terms express, the rule above stated. In Wheeler v. Railroad Co., 115 U. S. 29, 5 Sup. Ct. 1061, 1160, 29 L. Ed. 341, the contract provided for the sale by the railroad company of “1,000 tons old rails” by August 1st, and for “200 to 600 tons” -during a period succeeding August 1st. The option as between 200 and_ 600 additional tons was held to be in the railroad company (the seller), for the reason that “the company was selling old rails. It knew that by August it would have 1,000 tons. It did not know how much more they would have by October 1st. It intended to secure the sale of what it might have, between 200 and 600 tons.” The option was thus clearly for the protection of the railroad company.1 Had the seller been a manufacturer of new rails for consumption by the purchaser different considerations would have been presented. Indeed, in Minneapolis, etc., Ry. Co. v. Rolling Mill Co., 119 U. S. 149, 151, 7 Sup. Ct. 168, 30 L. Ed. 376, involving the purchase by the railway company from the rolling mill company of “2,000 to 5,000 tons 50 pound iron rails, March, 1880, delivery” (presumably to be manufactured by the rolling mill company for use by the railway company) the court said:

“This offer, while it remained open, without having been rejected by the plaintiff or revoked by the defendant, would authorize the plaintiff to take at his election any number of tons not less than 2,000 nor more than 5,000, on the terms spedfied.”2

Pennsylvania Sugar Co. v. Czarnikow, etc., Co. (C. C. A. 3) 245 Fed. 913, 158 C. C. A. 201, does not satisfactorily sustain defendant’s contention as applied to the facts of the instant case. True, in that case, *18which involved a cargo contract for sugar to be imported, it was said that but for a provision for a “cargo” a contract for “25,000 to 30,OCX) bags” of sugar would give the seller an option as to amount between those limits. But the seller was neither, a grower nor a manufacturer, but only an importing dealer. Nothing remained to be done by the buyer before shipment, and contracts for goods to be imported have some features not found in the ordinary contract between domestic consumers and manufacturers, having in mind the dominating question of intention. But, apart from these considerations, the force of the decision in the Pennsylvania Case as an authority for defendant in the instant case is, so far as that court is concerned, practically overthrown by its recent decision in Taggert v. Brimfield, 281 Fed. 830 (participated in by two of the three judges who sat in the earlier case), that a contract for the purchase and sale of gravel of specific type, in the minimum of 10,000 tons and maximum of 25,000 tons, within an agreed time and at an agreed pricé per ton, gave the buyer (who apparently was to use'the gravel for manufacturing purposes) the option of determining the amount within the stated limits.3

We'think the District Court correctly concluded that upon the facts of the instant case the plaintiff buyer was vested with the option in question, at least to the extent of its requirements. The defendant was a manufacturer of paper tissues; the plaintiff was a consumer thereof in the manufacture of a waxed product. Plaintiff made the order in question, and defendant accepted it without reservation as to amount. It is not important that defendant solicited plaintiff to malee the order; when made the order became plaintiff’s proposal. In the absence of contract provision, fact or circumstance, indicating the contrary (and we think there is such absence), there is a natural presumption that the reservation of option was made for plaintiff’s protection. It was vitally concerned in obtaining such amount of material as it should need, and was presumably uncertain as to its exact maximum requirements. This consideration does not fail of importance because the contract was not necessarily for plaintiff’s entire requirements for a given period, without reference to such amount as it might receive or for which it was under contract with other manufacturers. Defendant knew what it could normally produce. It protected itself from failure to furnish through causes beyond its control by special provision therefor. *19De Grasse Paper Co. v. Northern, etc., Co., 190 App. Div. 227, 179 N. Y. Supp. 791.

So far as the doctrine of “first actor” may be thought important, it is to be noted that shipments were not to be made upon defendant’s initiative, but not until plaintiff should furnish the specifications, “30 days in advance of the shipping date,” which date was to be determined by the provisions “shipments as we [plaintiff] may require during the calendar year of 1916,” subject only to the limitation that they be made “in approximately equal monthly installments.” We think the conclusion we have reached is supported by abundant and considered authority. The following citations, in addition to those already discussed, are valuable and in point: Southern Pub. Co. v. Clements Paper Co., 139 Term. 429, 201 S. W. 745, L. R. A. 1918D, 580; De Grasse Paper Co. v. Northern, etc., Coal Co., 190 App. Div. 227, 179 N. Y. Supp. 788, 791; Farquhar v. New River Mineral Co., 84 N. Y. Supp. 802; DuPont v. United Zinc Co., 85 N. J. Daw, 416, 89 Atl. 992; Douglas Fir, etc., Co. v. Comyn (C. C. A.) 279 Fed. 203, 207, 208. And see Dambmann v. Lorentz, 70 Md. 380, 17 Atl. 389, 14 Am. St. Rep. 364. We have not attempted to discuss all the authorities cited by defendant. Those to which we have not referred are either not persuasive or are distinguishable in their important facts from the. case before us. Some of them are discussed in certain of the cases we have cited.

We think the option was exercised “within the time required by law,” which means within a reasonable time. The facts were undisputed, and there was no room for differing inferences therefrom. The question was thus one of law. Defendant contends that plaintiff’s notice of option was unseasonable because not made before the commencement of the period during which shipments were to be made, and counsel cite Xenia Gas, etc., Co. v. Gardner, 26 Ohio St. 584, and Topping v. Root, 5 Cow. (N. Y.) 404. Assuming, for the purposes of this opinion, that these decisions are correct upon the facts involved, they are not persuasive as applied to the situation here. In the cases cited the shipments were to extend over short periods, two months in one case, three months in the other. In one of them the seller had the right to deliver the entire product on the first day of the first month, but the option was not exercised until the buyer had received and paid for practically the full minimum. In neither case was the seller to await shipping orders as to amounts or otherwise. In the instant case not only were the shipments to continue over a period of a year, but nothing was to be shipped except on plaintiff’s specifications made from time to time during the year, to meet plaintiff's requirements, and only 30 days in advance of shipping dates. We think it clear that the contract did not contemplate exercise or notice of option before the beginning of the year. Compare Farquhar v. New River Co., 87 App. Div. 329, 84 N. Y. Supp. at page 804; Taggart v. Brimfield, supra. Moreover, we agree with the District Judge that if earlier exercise of option would otherwise have been required, such exercise was waived by defendant through its entire failure to make any shipment in January, by its failure to make the full contract shipments in February, its acceptance of *20plaintiff’s standing specifications of weight of paper made on March 2d, and its failure to object to the notice of option given on March 8th as not seasonably made.

The judgment of the District Court is affirmed.

In McKell v. C. & O. Ry. Co., 186 Fed. 39, 47, 108 C. C. A. 141, we expressly recognized the ground of, the decision in the Wheeler Case as just stated in this opinion. -Some reliance was also placed in the latter case upon the fact that as the railroad company was bound to do the first act in performance of the contract, by delivering the iron, it had the option, if there was one, while the purchaser was never in condition to exercise such option.

While this language was in a sense obiter, it is not without significance. Not only was the opinion unanimous (thus including the justice who wrote the opinion in the Wheeler Case), but the writer in the Rolling Mill Case had concurred in the opinion in the Wheeler Case less than,two years before.

The court said: “Contracts of this general type are common, where a manufacturer has to provide in advance for a supply of some needed material, the exact amount of which he cannot then specify. In' this uncertainty, he names a minimum, which on his part he positively agrees to take, and he names a maximum up to, but not beyond, which the seller is bound to furnish. In this way, both parties are protected. The seller has insured an absolute sale of a definite, minimum amount, which the buyer is bound to take, no matter whether he needs it or not. So, also, in consideration of such present minimum sale, which the seller then makes, he agrees on his part to furnish a further quantity up to the maximum, if the buyer requires it. So, in construing the present contract, every provision of it is given effect, and the obligation of Brimfield to sell up to the maximum and of Taggert to buy up to the minimum stand on a plane of reciprocal equality.”

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