66 N.J.L. 388 | N.J. | 1901
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The plaintiff, being about to bid for a contract to build a music pavilion in Atlantic City, submitted the plans and specifications to the defendant for an estimate as to the price at which the latter would do the metal work required, and on March 31st, 1899, received a letter from the defendant saying that it would do the work for $2^50. Accordingly the plaintiff put in his bid for the construction of the building, and, after the making of some changes, not affecting the metal work,( the job was awarded to him and the contract was signed on April 5th, 1899. During the next morning the plaintiff telephoned to the defendant’s manager
The ease is governed by the rule established in Water Commissioners v. Brown, 3 Vroom 504, 510, where Mr Justice Elmer, speaking for the Court of Errors, said: “If it appears that the parties, although they have agreed on all the terms of their contract, mean to have them reduced to writing and signed before the bargain shall be considered as complete, neither party will be bound until that is done, so long as the contract remains without any acts done under it on either side.” • The conversations over the telephone between the plaintiff and the defendant’s manager, as well as the testimony of the plaintiff himself, make it clear that a written contract was expected by both parties. Indeed, it cannot reasonably be determined that the parties had agreed upon all the matters which they would expect to have included in their bargain, for the time allowed for the beginning and completion of the work and the mode of payment are generally provided for expressly in such arrangements, 'and on these points their negotiations had been silent, awaiting probably the outcome of the plaintiff’s proposal for the erection of the building.
The judgment is reversed.