21 Ga. App. 688 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1918
This was an action of complaint by Kenan, McKay & Speir against the Dawson Oil Company, growing out of the following contract:
*689 “No. 7002. Atlanta, Ga., July 12, 1915.
Dawson Cotton Oil Company,
, Dawson, Georgia.
I have this day sold for your account to Messrs. Kenan, McKay & Speir, Atlanta, Georgia:
Quantity: Season’s output — approximately five hundred (500)
bales linters.
Quality: Cotton linters, clean mill run.
Price: Four and 00/100 cents (4c) per pound net sellers,
f. o. b. cars Dawson, Georgia.
Shipment: As produced, beginning August, 1915.
Terms: Sight draft with B/L attached.
Bules: Cottonseed Crushers Association rules to govern. Arbitration, if any, at Atlanta, Georgia, buyers paying brokerage.
Accepted: Dawson Cotton Oil Company.
G. G. Riley, Manager.
M. O. King, Broker.”
The petition shows: that on July 12, 1915, the plaintiffs entered into the foregoing contract, and by virtue thereof they purchased from the defendant its season’s output, approximately 500 bales of clean mill run linters, at the purchase-price of four cents per pound, to be shipped as produced, commencing August, 1915; that the contract sued on was made subject to the rules of the Cottonseed Crushers Association of Georgia, rule 15, section 3 thereof, which was as follows: “When a sale is made of season’s or balance of season’s output of linters, the seller must ship and the buyer must receive all the linters the seller makes to the end of the season. When estimated number of bales is stated in contract or in confirmation of sale or purchase, the buyer must ship, or may ship, whether demanded or not, 15% in excess of estimated quantity, if he makes a sufficient number of bales to enable him to do so, and buyer must receive and pay for same at contract price. Should seller not make the quantity estimated, he shall deliver the number of bales made, and shipment of 85% of the estimated quantity shall be deemed a fulfillment of the contract. The limitation of each season to be the 31st of July, so that the season’s output of linters shall include everything made up-to July 31st.” Plaintiffs also set out in their petition section 5 of said rule 15, as fol
The plaintiffs amended their petition in several respects, but the only amendments which we deem necessary for the decision of the case are as follows: “Defendant became obligated to deliver the output of its mill for the season 1915-1916, approximately 500 bales, amounting to at least 425 bales,” etc. “Had defendant’s mill been operated in good' faith during said season of 1915-1916, as it was the duty of the defendant, under the said contract, to have done, instead of discontinuing the operation of said mill during said season, and before the expiration thereof, as defendant wrongfully did, as will be hereinafter more fully shown, defendant could and would and should have produced, as the season’s output thereof, and delivered to petitioner, as defendant should have done,
The defendant demurred both generally and specially to the petition as finally amended, the demurrers were overruled, and the defendant excepted.
According to the brief of counsel for the plaintiff in error, the sole question in the ease “ultimately resolves itself into the construction of a contract, a determination of the character of the action, whether ex contractu or ex delicto.”
1. The contention of the plaintiff in error is that the petition as amended should have been dismissed upon demurrer, for the reason that the amendment added a new cause of action,' in that it was thereby attempting to supplement an ex contractu action by the addition of an ex delicto count; or that the suit as finally amended is duplicitous, being both ex contractu and ex delicto. The ground upon which this contention rests is that the plaintiffs effectually converted an ex contractu action into an action ex delicto when, by amendment, they alleged that the “defendant wrongfully and in bad faith refused to make any more linters, shutting down its mill,” etc. By reference to the petition, which is substantially set out in the foregoing statement of facts, it is obvious that the action is expressly bottomed upon a breach of contract, and the mere fact that the plaintiff by way of' amendment characterized the manner in which the defendant breached said contract as “wrongful,” or “in bad faith,” would not be sufficient to change the- form of the action. . This is not an action in tort, but an action to recover damages for a breach of contract. The action was not maintainable without pleading and proving the contract, and where it is manifest from a proper construction of the contract that the gist or pith of the action is the breach thereof, either by misfeasance or nonfeasance, it is in substance, regardless of what may be the form of the pleadings, an action ex contractu. See City of Grand Forks v. Steel, 121 Minn. 296 (141 N. W. 181, 45 L. R. A. (N. S.) 205, Ann. Cas. 1914C, 720); Whitaker v. Collins, 34 Minn. 299 (25 N. W. 632, 57 Am. R. 55).
Waiving, for the sake of the argument, what is said above, and proceeding upon the idea, as contended by plaintiff in error, that in view of the unequivocal allegations contained in the petition,
In view of the foregoing, we hold that the lower court did not err in .treating the action as one arising ex contractu, and over
2. Another contention insisted upon by the plaintiff in error is that even if the court should decide that the petition presents a cause of action ex contractu, it was nevertheless subject to demurrer for the reason that under the terms of the contract sued upon, the defendant was only required to deliver to the plaintiffs its actual output, regardless of whether the mill was operated in good faith, at its normal capacity, during the season named in the contract. This question finally resolves itself into a determination of whether the allegation in the plaintiff’s petition that the mill was closed down in lad faith before the expiration of the season named in the contract saved the petition from dismissal on demurrer, since it was clearly alleged that the defendant actually delivered the entire output of its mill up to the time it discontinued operation. Of course, had the defendant discontinued the operation of its mill for some providential cause, or for any cause or causes not in anywise attributable to it, a delivery on the part of the mill of its output up to the time it ceased to operate would be all that the law would require. However, the contention that the defendant is not liable under its contract merely because it delivered its entire output up to the time it closed down is without merit, since the petition distinctly and specifically alleges that the mill was discontinued “wrongfully” and “in bad faith” before the season named in the contract had expired, and therefore with the deliberate purpose of breaking the contract. In the case of Loeb v. Winnsboro Cotton Oil Co. (Tex. Civ. App.), 93 S. W. 515, where a contract for the sale of cotton linters stipulated that the seller confirmed the sale to the buyer of the “season’s output of linters , . . estimated at 200 to 250” bales (a contract very similar to the one under review), it was held that “the contract was for the sale of the output [italics ours], regardless of the number of bales, especially in view of the evidence that the buyer was buying linters generally, and wanted all he could get, and the buyer was required to tahe the output, consisting of 66 bales in excess of the maximum estimate” (italics ours). It will be observed that the question determined in that case was whether the contract bound the buyer to take the full amount of the season’s output, or whether he was only bound to take 250 bales, the maxi
From these decisions, and many others to the same effect, it is clear that the “output” of the defendant’s mill for the season named in the contract, regardless of the estimated number of bales to be delivered, was the subject-matter of the contract, and that the buyer was bound to take the “output” of the mill during the specified, season. This being true, certainly the seller was equally bound to operate his mill in good faith for the season or time specified in the contract, at its normal capacity, in order to make and deliver its “output” to the buyer. Otherwise we would have a unilateral contract, binding on one of the parties and without obligatory force on the other; that is to say, the Dawson Oil Company (the seller) would not be bound to operate its mill, and deliver to the plaintiffs the output of cotton linters for the period therein specified, whereas Kenan, McKay & Speir (the buyers) would nevertheless be obliged to accept the output of the mill for the season, even though in excess of the maximum estimate, if the seller so desired and elected to operate the mill for the full period. In the construction of a contract under which one of the parties is by law bound, the principle of mutuality, which is an essential element of every contract, compels a ruling that the other party shall also be bound by the terms of the 'contract, in order to make it a binding agreement. In the ease of McCaw Manufacturing Co.
It is therefore apparent to us, from the allegations of the plaintiffs that the subject-matter of the contract sued upon was the “output” of cotton, linters for a specified time or season, and an unexplained failure on. the part of the defendant company to operate its mill until the expiration of the season amounted to a breach of the contract, notwithstanding it actually delivered the “output” up to the time it ceased operation; and consequently the lower court properly overruled the demurrer insisting upon a different construction of the contract and of the allegations of the petition. A cause of action was set forth, and the court did not err in overruling the demurrer upon all of the grounds thereof.
Judgment affirmed.