83 So. 486 | Ala. | 1919
On the trial demurrer was sustained to the complaint, plaintiff declined to plead further, and defendant had judgment final.
Directing attention to the ruling on demurrer, it is pertinent to observe that Dowling-Martin Grocery Company sued J. C. Lysle Milling Company to recover damages for the breach of an executory contract in which the former purchased of the latter certain flour, to be delivered on orders or shipping directions. The contract, made on January 8, 1917, is set out in some counts, and its legal effect is averred in others. B. R., L. P. Co. v. Littleton,
It is averred that plaintiff ordered defendant to ship the flour on, respectively, March 30 and May 8, 1917, and that the latter declined to do so on the ground of unreasonable delay in complying with the terms of the contract and ordering the shipment made; further, that there was no time limit fixed by the parties within which defendant should ship the flour, or within which plaintiff would make payment therefor and order shipment. Defendant says that, no time limit for compliance being fixed, payment or direction and demand for shipment must be made by plaintiff within a reasonable time after making the contract; that defendant was only bound to deliver within a reasonable time after compliance and request for shipment. The averred correspondence confirming acceptance of the order contained defendant's specific statement that it awaited plaintiff's shipping directions. The contract relation of the parties, when the nature of the property dealt with is considered, was that the law implied: (1) A reasonable time within which direction for delivery should be given or payment of contract price made was of the essence of the contract; (2) that seller was under no obligation to ship until buyer had given shipping directions or until payment was made and accepted; (3) that the failure or refusal of buyer to direct shipment or indicate its willingness to accept the flour within a reasonable time after the booking of its order relieved the seller of any obligation to deliver the same.
What is a reasonable time for performance of a contract is determined by the circumstances of the case, and is a question of fact or of law. McFadden v. Henderson,
"In the absence of a stipulated time for delivery, the law prescribes a reasonable time, and what is a reasonable time is a question of fact, * * * to be determined by the circumstances of each case" (Contracts, vol. 2, § 1552), and (section 1557) that, though time may be made, by express stipulation of the parties, of the essence of a contract for sale, "it may arise by implication from the very nature of the property, or the avowed objects of the seller or the purchaser."
This was the view announced (in 1840) by Mr. Justice Story in Taylor v. Longworth. 14 Pet. 172, 174 (
Our McFadden v. Henderson, supra, is relied upon by both parties here. Mr. Justice Haralson quotes approvingly from Addison's Contracts, § 578, that, "if the time appointed for delivery or payment is not of the essence of the contract, the delivery and payment must be made within a reasonable time after notice and request of performance; and if no time at all has been appointed for the performance of these acts, the vendor is bound to deliver within a reasonable period after request and tender of the price, and the purchaser must in like manner accept the goods and pay for them on delivery, or offer of delivery being made by the vendor; and if the contract is not sought to be carried into effect within a reasonable period, either on the part of the vendor or the purchaser, it is deemed to be dissolved and abandoned by mutual consent," and from Monroe v. Reynolds, 47 Barb. (N.Y.) 574, 579, that in all cases where time is not necessarily of the essence of the contract, the seller wishing to "have the contract either performed or abandoned, must go further, and by some demand, offer on his part, or notice, put the purchaser to a refusal to perform, before he can treat the contract as having been rescinded by the purchaser," and from Higby v. Whittaker,
To an understanding of McFadden v. Henderson, supra, it should be noted of Monroe v. Reynolds, supra, that the justice was discussing a case where the purchaser paid in advance a part of the purchase price, contracted to pay the residue at a subsequent date specified, and had made default in the deferred payment. Held that the failure to pay on the subsequent date, without more, was not such a breach as to authorize the other party to treat the contract as abandoned. The justice observed, "This is so in all cases where time is not necessarily of the essence of the contract. The seller, in such a case, if he wishes to have the contract either performed or abandoned, must go further; * * *" and he concluded with the excerpt hereinabove set out from the McFadden Case. In Higby v. Whittaker, supra, the question was whether, when a part of the purchase money on land was paid, and default was thereafter made in subsequent payments, the seller could rescind the contract without refunding the purchase money so paid. Time not being of the essence of the contract, that court observed that the law required some positive act by the party who would rescind (for failure of payment of the balance of purchase money) that would manifest the intention to rescind unless payment was completed forthwith. An examination of the facts of the McFadden Case will show that on November 20, 1899, defendant sold plaintiff a lot of cotton without specific stipulation as to the date of its delivery. On the date of sale in a telegram of acceptance the seller said, "Come at once we want the money out of it and the insurance stopped," to which the purchaser replied, "Man will be down as soon as possible." Under such facts, as to the time of compliance, and the nature of the commodity made the subject of the contract, held that, though no time was stipulated for delivery, the law implied that the parties should perform their respective parts within a reasonable time. As to whether the respective parties were attempting to perform their respective contract obligations within a reasonable time, it was thought important by the justice writing for the court to note that until the morning of November 24th the seller indicated his willingness to deliver the cotton, but that at 10:20 a. m. on said date defendant wired to purchaser's agent, "You have no cotton with us." To all intents and purposes the respective contracting parties were doing what they could to consummate the sale and to make prompt delivery of the cotton, or to make delivery thereof within a reasonable time. Of this state of facts the court said:
"The defendants, under these circumstances, had no right of peremptory abandonment and rescission of the contract. The plaintiffs, in the absence of fault on the part of defendants, were bound by, and could not recede from, their bargain, nor could the defendants do so, without putting plaintiffs in default."
In Elliott v. Howison,
"Where a contract is silent as to the time within which its conditions or stipulations are to be performed, time is not ordinarily deemed to go to the essence of the contract, unless it naturally follows from the circumstances of the case. And the party upon whom the duty of performance rests must be allowed a reasonable time within which to discharge his obligations under the contract."
The two passages from Monroe v. Reynolds, supra, and Higby v. Whittaker, supra, were again quoted, and the observation indulged that —
"It seems to be the rule of our court, then, that where the rescission is not by mutual consent, and the opposite party has not repudiated the contract, to effect rescission, notice of the rescission must be brought home to the opposite party and reasonable time must be given him after the notice to comply."
The averred facts thus made the subject of discussion showed a delivery or attempted delivery of "thirty-two piles shipped," and:
"That the defendant did not * * * rely solely upon the failure of the piles shipped to conform to the description in the contract as the ground for rescission, but upon the further facts averred in the pleas with respect to the deficiency of the piles pointed out to his agent on the 28th of August."
In the Elliott Case our court was dealing with rescission because of failure to deliver pilings of the quality or number stipulated under a contract where time, expressed or implied, was not of its essence. The instant case turns, not upon the question of a party's right to rescind because of failure to deliver the kind or quality of flour purchased, but upon the fact of abandonment of the contract by the parties on account of the lapse of a reasonable time within which performance was required by law; that is to say, of a case where the contract expired by the implication arising in reference thereto from the nature of the property made its subject and the avowed object of the contracting parties. Without intending to give a comprehensive definition of rescission, it may be said that rescission of a contract is dependent upon affirmative action required, under proper circumstances (Bannister v. Read, 1 Gilman [Ill.] 92, 99, 100; Bryant v. Isburgh, 74 Am. Dec. 655, 658, note), by one *495 of the parties of notice to the other that within a reasonable time thereafter the contract will be terminated for failure to deliver, discharge, perform, or do the thing or service as stipulated. If there is no such affirmative act required (by the law or the nature of the contract) to be taken, and the time as expressed therein or implied by law within which the contract must be performed expires, there is an abandonment of the contract by both parties, and no notice of treating it as such is required.
The case of McFadden v. Henderson, supra, is cited in Lowy v. Rosengrant,
"confers upon the buyer the option to either treat the contract as terminated, or waive the time limit and insist on the delivery, within a reasonable time. After the buyer has waived the time limit and insisted on delivery under the contract, he cannot put the seller in default without first giving notice of his desire to receive * * * the delivery after notice. * * * When the seller fails to make deliveries, and time is of the essence of the contract, the buyer is under no duty to give notice of his rescission for such nondelivery under the contract. * * * When a breach occurs, an election must be made as between treating the contract as dissolved in toto and insisting upon further performance. The choice is made once for all."
It will be observed that Lowy v. Rosengrant, supra, does not overlook the distinction on which the cases depend — the right of one of the parties to rescission of a contract on notice, and the discharged or dissolved obligations of the parties, where the contract is terminated by law or abandoned by mutual consent. The pertinent facts averred in the Lowy Case are that the subject of the contract was of two classes of claret staves purchased for export — red oak staves of more than $7,000 in value, required to be delivered within a reasonable time after the execution of the contract, and which were delivered and accepted, and white oak staves required to be delivered before August 1, 1914, and which before that date defendants declined to receive, retaining the purchase price of the red oak staves so accepted. That suit was not for a breach of the contract of purchase, but for the recovery of the balance of purchase price of $7,000 of the red oak staves delivered by plaintiff and accepted by defendants as part performance of the contract, a provision of which was that "the defendants should retain out of the purchase price for said red oak staves the sum of $7,000, to be held back by them until the delivery of all of the said 36-inch white oak French claret staves." The judgment for plaintiff for this balance due on the purchase price of the red oak staves was affirmed, and in that opinion this court cited with approval McFadden v. Henderson, supra, and Elliott v. Howison, supra, and used the language we have quoted.
The argument of appellant is that, although no time for performance is mentioned in the contract, and a reasonable time for performance had elapsed from the making of the contract to the date when plaintiff ordered shipment of the flour, the contract was of binding effect for the reason that defendant mill company had not notified the buyer that it had the specific quantity and quality of flour to the credit of the plaintiff, and that, unless the same was ordered shipped within a reasonable time, defendant would rescind the contract or treat it as terminated. We do not agree with this statement of the contract relation or obligation arising therefrom. Alford v. Creagh,
Construing the terms of the instant contract averred or made a part of the several counts of the complaint most strongly against the pleader (Nat. Park Bank v. L. N. R. R. Co., 74 So. 69, 79;3 Union Cemetery Co. v. Jackson,
"J. C. Lysle Milling Co., Leavenworth, Kan. Unless otherwise instructed, we would be glad when forwarding our shipments of flour, if you can consistently observe the following routing; via Southern Railway System to Atlanta, A. W. P. to Montgomery, care A. C. L., which will be very much appreciated. Dowling-Martin Grocery Co."
And the telegram of March 30, 1917:
"J. C. Lysle Milling Co., Leavenworth, Kan. Ship at once on contract two hundred forty sacks forty-eights, twelve hundred sacks twenty-fours white crest, same route. Rush shipment. Dowling-Martin Grocery Co."
Such averred facts do not show the duty and a breach thereof (B. R., L. P. Co. v. Littleton, supra, 77 So. 5734) on the part of and by the defendant to ship the flour in question on and by plaintiff's order or direction, as was sought to be insisted upon by this suit. The demurrer to the several counts of the complaint was properly sustained by the trial court.
We have not considered assignments of error based on ruling on demurrer to the amended complaint, filed July 6, 1918, attempting to set up a usage or trade, for the reason that such assignments are not sufficiently insisted on in argument. This is in consonance with the rule given expression in Georgia Cotton Co. v. Lee,
Having decided the question of merit presented by appropriate assignments of error and argument of counsel on which submission was had, it is not necessary to pass on the motion to dismiss the appeal. However, the record shows that at the first call of the division the case was docketed in this court on certificate and duly continued on motion to the June call, when the transcript was filed and submission was had on the merits.
The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.
Affirmed.
ANDERSON, C. J., and McCLELLAN and SOMERVILLE, JJ., concur.