52 Miss. 610 | Miss. | 1876

Chalmers, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The plaintiffs had verdict and judgment in the court below for $1,600. Conceiving themselves entitled to a larger sum, they have appealed' to this court. It is conceded that the verdict was ample if the construction given by the court below to the written agreement betweenjthe parties, upon which the suit was brought, was correct, so that the sole question for decision here is as to the construction of said agreement.

It was substantially a contract by which defendants, through their proper officers, obligated themselves to receive from plaintiffs cord-wood of a certain specified quality and descrip-' tion, at a particular place and at a specified price.

There was no limit as to the duration of the contract save as herein indicated, as follows : * * * “ to commence on- or before May 1, 1870, and continue as long as satisfaction be given by the contractors.” Then, after the stipulations as to what price is to be paid' by the corporation for the wood, it is provided that “the company shall retain in its possession as security for the performance of the contract, out of the price of the wood, the amount of 25 cents per cord, until the whole year’s supply shall • have been delivered.”

The court instructed the jury that under this contract the railroad company had the right to terminate the same without default on the part of the contractors, and without liability to damage to themselves, at the end of one year from the commencement thereof, and that, the corporation having assumed to terminate it before the expiration of that period, the measure of damages must be calculated as if upon a wrongful breach of an annual contract. This instruction plaintiffs insist is erroneous. Their theory is that the contract is perpetual *614and “ without end of time,” or that at least it must continue for such period as is reasonable, in view of all the circumstances of the case, and for a sufficient length of time to reimburse them for all the expenses which they were induced to incur in view of it;

With regard to the theory of perpetual duration little need be said. Perpetual contracts of this character will not be tolerated by the law, or rather, will not be enforced as imposing an eternal and never-ending burden. An agreement to-furnish a support or service, or a particular commodity, at a specified price, or to do a certain thing without specification as to time, will be construed either as terminable at pleasure, or-as implying that the thing to be done shall be performed within a reasonable time, and the obligation will cease within the same limitation. Any other theory than this would subject incautious persons — a class, it maybe remarked, which includes-the majority of mankind — into life-long servitudes, and greatly fetter and embarrass the commerce of the world. Indeed, it may be said that any other theory is a moral and practical impossibility, and, if indulged in by the courts, could not be enforced in the ordinary concerns of life. 2 Chit. on Con. (11th Am. ed.), 1062; Cocker v. Franklin Manufacturing Co., 3 Sumn., 530 ; Atwood v. Cobb, 16 Pick., 227 ; Palmer v. Vanderberg, 3 Wend., 193; McLees v. Hale, 10 ib., 426; Knowlton v. Newell, 10 Allen, 34; Butler v. Smith, 35 Miss., 451; Kirkland v. Carr, 35 ib., 584; Story on Con., § 21.

When the language of the contract does not indicate any period of termination whatever, it will be held to bo terminable either at the pleasure of either party or at such period as-the court may decree reasonable.

What is a reasonable period in such cases is said, by many authorities above cited, to be a question of law for the court,, and not a question of fact for the jury, though the court will consider the facts as affording the basis of its ruling in the-particular case. Atwood v. Clarke, 2 Greenl., 249; Hill v. *615Hobart, 16 Me., 164 ; How v. Huntingdon, 15 ib., 57 ; Jones v. Gibbons, 8 Exch., 920.

The contract in this case, then, was either terminable at pleasure or at the end of a period deemed reasonable by the court, in view of the nature of the contract itself. If terminable at pleasure, there is of course an end of the case, inasmuch as the corporation does not except to the construction which held it bound for twelve months, arid has not appealed from, the verdict rendered against it on that basis.

Has any injustice been done plaintiffs in declaring one year to be a reasonable time in this case ? Is there anything in a contract to deliver cord-wood which involves any such extraordinary outlay of time, or capital, or skill, that a longer period than twelve months is required to reimburse the contractor? Does it require a series of years to build up the business, or the education and training of skilled labor to carry it on, or the investment of a large capital in a species of property which is useless when the enterprise is abandoned ? It is a kind of business exceedingly common in the country. Conducted on a small scale, 'and for the purpose of supplying private wants, it requires the employment of a few wood-choppers and teamsters, with axes and wagons and animals. On a large scale, and for the supplying of locomotive and stationary engines, it requires machinery neither unusual nor extravagantly expensive. It is said in this case, however, that plaintiffs had been induced by the contract to buy 200 acres of wooded land, and incur very heavy expenses m getting ready for a business that promised to last for a lifetime, on a very large scale. They offered to prove that in the purchase of the land, and other preparations, they had expended more than $10,000. Having voluntarily entered into a contract which, as we have seen, is either terminable at pleasure or within a period to be established as reasonable by the law, they cannot complain if their own misconstruction of it has induced them to make outlays not demanded by the *616nature of the agreement itself. It is not pretended that the railroad company induced them to make these large expenditures, except in so far as the terms of the contract may have had that effect. Certainly they were not absolutely necessary to the carrying out of a contract to furnish wood in the quantities anticipated, for a reasonable period.

But was the period of twelve months, adopted by the court, a reasonable period, all things considered ?

We cannot accept the view urged by counsel for appellee, that the provision of the contract herein above quoted which provides that the railroad company should retain during the year 25 cents per cord on all the wood furnished for the whole year’s supply, was intended to indicate that by these terms the contract was annual in its character, and renewable from year to year at the option of the parties.

W e think it was simply intended for that which indeed it purports to be, viz., a “ security for the performance of the contract” by the contractors. It does indicate, however, that there was to be a full an<| complete settlement between the parties at the end of each year,- and is thereby valuable in enabling us to arrive at a conclusion as to what constituted a reasonable period, at the end of which the agreement might be terminated without a breach of contract.

The reasonableness of the period established by the court is strengthened by the fact that this corporation, as is generally and legally known, undergoes, according to the terms of its charter, a complete change of officers and directors at the end of each year, and its whole government is therefore annual in its character. It seems reasonable, consequently, to hold that where private persons make contracts with it wholly indefinite in their duration, and terminable by law either at the option of the parties or by the expiration of such time as the courts may deem proper, we may properly regard this annual change in the-government of the corporation as affording a data in establishing that period.

*617In view of all the circumstances of the case, and the nature •of the contract, ■ we think that the limitation of twelve months placed on the contract was reasonable.

Affirmed. ■ ■ ■

Campbell, J., having been consulted in this case, takes no part in its decision.
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