54 So. 203 | Ala. | 1911
This is an action for tbe breach of two several executory contracts for tbe sale and purchase of 100 bales of cotton. In two counts tbe contracts are set out in baec verba. In other two they are alleged according to their supposed legal effect. Touching tbe points in controversy, the language of those. counts ■which set out tbe contracts in verbis is repeated in those counts which set them out according to their supposed legal effect, so that identical questions are raised
There were two independent contracts and the meaning of each is to be determined upon consideration of its own terms without reference to the other, though they have much in common. On the face of the contracts alleged, whether alleged in haec verba or according to their supposed legal effect, it appears that the parties have agreed upon no price for cotton of a grade below strict low middling. It is conceded by appellants, and properly so, as we think, that in every executory contract of sale the price to be paid must be fixed or some mode provided for its ascertainment, or else the contract is unenforceable. A complete statement, therefore, of the first ground of demurrer required the
To repeat the language of counts 2 and 4, it is: “Grades below Strict Low Middling at differences to he mutually agreed upon at the time of delivery.” The difference between this and the language of the contract alleged in counts 1 and 3 is the difference between affirmation and negation. There is no guide to the intention of the parties but the language used. The marked difference in the language of the two contracts seems to make necessary a difference in the conclusion to he reached in respect to the intention thereby expressed. No language is to he found here which re
Another defect, attributed by the demurrer to all the counts, is that the two contracts declared upon, idenical in this respect, are incapable of enforcement because they inadequately describe the subject-matter of the sales agreed upon. The contract is for the sale and future delivery of one hundred bales of cotton at a specified price the pound. If the parties had contracted with reference to specific bales of cotton then ascertained and set apart as the subject-matter of the contract,, or to be ascertained and set apart in some agreed way subsequently and in advance of the time for actual delivery, as were the facts in the cases cited by appellants,, there could be no difficulty about the enforcement on the score of uncertainty. Computation in that case would settle every term. But that is not the case alleged. Nor do we know, in the absence of averment, how much cotton the parties intended when they used
We are of opinion that the judgment of the trial court should be affirmed.
Affirmed.