97 Ark. 522 | Ark. | 1911
(after stating the facts). First. In May, 1908, after S. N. Clement had operated the mill-under the contract for some tíme, he made an agreement with Ammons and Clement by which they were to operate the mill for an indefinite time under the contract he had with the lumber company. S. N. Clement, in consideration that Ammons and Clement would carry out the contract for him with the lumber company, agreed to give them all the proceeds of the contract except fifty cents per thousand; in other words, agreed to let Ammons and Clem•ent have $3 per thousand for performing his contract with the Ford Lumber Company. S. N. Clement told Ford to pay Ammons and Clement the proceeds of the -contract for their services under it except fifty cents per thousand. The residue of fifty cents per thousand for the logs sawed was to be retained by the company on the debt that S. N. Clement owed it. This agreement was entered into between S. N. -Clement and Ammons and Clement with the consent of the company. There was no new contract made by the company with Ammons and Clement, and no releasing of S. N. Clement from the contract he had made with the company. He still retained his interest in the contract, and Ammons and Clement were but subcontractors under him. We are of the opinion that the preponderance of the evidence does not show an assignment of the contract by appellee .to Ammons and Clement, but does show that he had subcontracted with them for a certain per cent, of the proceeds, to carry out his contract with the company. S. N. Clement obtained the consent of the company to this arrangement, but there was no agreement between him and the company and Ammons and Clement whereby the rights and obligations of S. N. Clement under the contract were to be transferred from him to Ammons and Clement, and whereby the company was to release him from the obligations and liabilities of the contract. There were no eontractural relations whatever between Ammons and Clement and the Ford Lumber Company. Page on Contracts, § 1255.
S. N. Clement was the party in interest. Any liability of the lumber company for a breach of the contract was to him, and not Ammons and Clement. Ammons and Clement were neither necessary nor proper parties. But, as they were only made parties by consent, no error was thereby committed to the prejudice of appellants.
Second. It is alleged that appellants, after the contract was made, disposed of part of the timber they had agreed to. deliver under the contract, and moved their log camp and teams elsewhere, and wholly .abandoned performance of the contract. E. M. Ford, for the 'company, bought from Young the timber called for in the contract “as logs in section 16-10-8.” There were about 5,500,000 feet of this timber. Ford was to pay Young for this timber on the 10th of each month after the logs were sawed by S. N. Clement. Ford refused to carry out the contract with Young, and to take the logs from him on section 16-10-8, and to furnish same to appellee. On the contrary, Ford agreed to a rescission of his contract with Young, and permitted Young to dispose of these logs to other parties. In this way Ford virtually parted with one-half the timber that he had contracted to deliver to appellee. Ford in his testimony stated that the contract between the Ford Hardwood Lumber Company and Young “was cancelled by reason of the inability of S. N. Clement to saw the logs that Young hauled to the mill yard, and that if S. N. Clement had properly sawed the logs brought to the mill the contract with Young on section 16 would not have been cancelled.” But Young testified that the contract was rescinded because Ford did not pay for the logs, and that it was not on account of any delay of Clement to saw the logs into lumber. Aind W. J. Driver testified: “That he was the attorney for J. R. Young in 1908 to enforce the collection of a claim due J. R. Young from E. M. Ford on account of timber removed from section 16-10-8; that they met in the office of Mr. Ford in the Randolph building in Memphis. Mr. Ford stated to Mr. Young that he was unable to carry put the terms of the contract because of his inability to dispose of the timber and collect the purchase price therefor; that he delivered lumber to the Thompson Lumber Company, and that it was unable to pay for it. After' consultation it was mutually agreed by the parties that the contract would be rescinded.”
There is, therefore, a clear preponderance of evidence showing that Ford failed to furnish the logs according to his contract with appellee because of “inability to dispose of the timber and collect the purchase price therefor,” and not because -of any failure on the part of appellee S. N. Clement to perform his contract. The failure on the part of the company to furnish nearly'half the logs specified in the contract, unless excused by some language of the contract itself, would constitute a breach of contract that would entitle appellee to damages.
The rescission of the contract between the lumber company and Young, which rescission resulted in depriving appellee of the right to saw about 5,500,000 feet of lumber, occurred in March, 1908. The appellant company, however, continued to furnish logs under the contract, and appellee continued to saw them into lumber until December 15, 1908, when, as appellants confess and as the uncontroverted evidence shows, appellant company ceased to furnish logs under its contract. On or about the date last mentioned the company moved its logging camps and teams to another job about one mile away and “went to logging there.” Ford testified that neither Ammons and Clement nor S. N. Clement made any objection, or manifested any willingness to go on with the contract. “Ford further testified that it was not the intention of the company to stop supplying the mill permanently. Robert Clement testified concerning this that “he went to the mill to run and carry out his father’s contract,” that “he quit sawing because they had no more logs, and about the time they quit the lumber company moved its outfit to another job and went to lumbering there. Mr. Ford said he had to go down there and get some timber off before the first of the year, said his time was out on the other job the first of the year, and said at the present price of lumber he was not making enough out of it, and said he did not know when he would be able to log any more.” The witness continued as follows: “I then asked him, told him that I would like to have some definite understanding in regard to when he intended to return; that if he was not going to furnish logs for the mill I would remove my crew to Mississippi; and he said he could not get any definite information right then. He never gave any definite information, and I moved our men away about two weeks afterwards.”
While there is some conflict, a finding that appellee had performed his part of the contract is not against the clear preponderance of the testimony. Therefore the lumber company is without excuse for failing to perform its part of the contract unless it was justified in so doing by the following language of the contract, towit: “the first party agrees to use his best endeavors to keep the said mill supplied with logs.” In the first clause of the contract the first party “agrees to have them (logs) delivered to second party’s mill.” The contract contained covenants for reciprocal services. There is no clause requiring only “best endeavors” on the part of appellee in performing his part of the contract.
Having entered upon the performance of the contract, he could not be excused from his failure to perform on the ground of “best endeavors” and thus be relieved of liability for damages resultant to the other party to the contract. Neither can the lumber company be excused from its failure to perform on such ground. To so construe the “best endeavor” clause would make it repugnant to the first and last clauses. The effect of such construction would be to only hold the lumber company to its covenants with “a rope of sand.” To carry out the contract on the part of appellee necessarily involved large expenditures. Appellee testified that he had expended about $7,000. He had to spend a considerable sum ($3,000) before he could get ready to saw at all. He had “no other source of supply except the logs” the lumber company was to furnish. The cost of the operating expenses was $27.50 per day. Therefore it could not have been in contemplation of the parties by the “best endeavor” clause to require the lumber company to furnish logs only when it could sell the lumber output, or only when it could sell to some one from whom it could collect, or only when it could sell at a profit. The last clause of the contract reads: “This contract is for all logs suitable for sawmill purposes on above mentioned land,” etc. This clause, as well as the first, imports an absolute obligation on the part of the lumber company to supply appellee the logs mentioned in the contract. The contract must be construed as a whole, and its various clauses given that construction that will make them consistent with each other if possible. Where the interest of the parties to the contract conflict under a clause of doubful purport, it should be construed most strongly against the party who prepared the contract. Gulf Compress Co. v. Harrington, 90 Ark. 256.
“Courts may acquaint themselves with the persons and circumstances that are the subject of the statements in the written agreement, and are entitled to place themselves in the same situation as the parties who made the contract so as to view the circumstances as they viewed them, and so as to judge of the meaning of the words and of the correct application of the language to the things described. Wood v. Kelsey, 90 Ark. 272. Construing the contract in the light of these familiar rules, the “best endeavor” clause was but giving emphasis to the obligation upon the part of the lumber company, expressed in other clauses, to supply appellee with logs, and, in addition, promising to supply them so that they could be “readily handled.”
It follows that the failure of the lumber company to supply the logs in section 16-10-8, and its failure altogether to furnish logs after December 15, 1908, were breaches of contract. For the latter breach the appellee had the right to treat the contract as rescinded and to sue the company for the consequent damages; for the company, by moving its teams and logging camp elsewhere and not indicating any purpose to return, manifested the intention of abandoning the contract. If it in fact did not intend to abandon the contract, it should have so informed the subcontractors when they asked for explanation of such conduct. A concealed purpose to return, under the circumstances, was as if no such purpose existed. Appellee could not be expected to keep his plant idle, at great expense, awaiting a return which might never occur. Timé was at least so far of the essence as to not make it incumbent on appellee to wait an indefinite time. He was entitled to some definite information as to when the lumber company would return if it intended to return at all. As the company had committed the first breach, the duty devolved on it to explain. Its conduct was tantamount to a refusal to perform its contract. Spencer Med. Co. v. Hall, 78 Ark. 336; Jno. A. Gauger & Co. v. Sawyer & Austin Co., 88 Ark. 422; Harris Lumber Co. v. Wheeler Lumber Co., 88 Ark. 491; Singer Mfg. Co. V. W. D. Reeves Lumber Co., 95 Ark 363. See Anvil Mining Co. v. Humble, 153 U. S. 540.
Third. Ford was liable for the amount of the judgment against the corporation. The corporation was insolvent. It was not shown that the company had any assets, and it owed, besides appellee’s claim, more than $3,000. Its capital stock was $30,000. Ford had subscribed for $29,600 of this, for which he claimed to have paid by transferring real estate and other property to the corporation. But there is no evidence that any such transfer was ever made. Ford, as president of the corporation, could not accept property from himself in payment of his stock, without express authority to do so from its managing board. The directors had not given him any such authority. 2 Cook on Corporations, 716; Simon v. Sevier Association, 54 Ark. 58; Potts v. Wallace, 146 U. S. 689, 705, 706.
Besides, the evidence does not warrant the conclusion that Ford had transferred any property to the corporation. No deeds were executed to the corporation. Under the proof in this record it must be held that he was indebted to the corporation for the full amount of his subscription to 4he capital stock. In equity, he was liable for the claim of appellee against the corporation. 1 Cook, Corp., § § 204-205, and notes; Walter v. Merced Academy Assn., 126 Cal. 582; Harrell v. Blount, 112 Ga. 711; Cornell’s Appeal, 114 Pa. St. 153. See also Fletcher v. Bank of Lonoke, 71 Ark. 1.
Fourth. “Where plaintiff entered into a contract to perform certain work for the defendant, which he was prevented from doing by the fault of defendant, plaintiff is entitled to recover the profits which the evidence makes it reasonably certain that he would have made had defendant carried out its contract.” Beekman v. Kittrell, 80 Ark. 228; Hurley v. Oliver, 91 Ark. 427; Singer Mfg. Co. v. W. D. Reeves Lumber Co., 95 Ark. 363. See also Spencer v. Hall, 78 Ark. 336; Border City Ice & Coal Co. v. Adams, 69 Ark. 219.
The evidence tended to prove .that the cost of sawing the logs into lumber would be between $1.35 and $2.00 per thousand feet. The quantity of lumber appellee and subcontractors had manufactured amounted to about 2,000,000 feet. The lumber company agreed to supply about 11,500,000 feet. The quantity of lumber appellee did not get to saw therefore by reason of the failure of the lumber company to carry out its contract was 9,500,000 feet. Even at a cost of $2 per thousand, the profit to appellee, if the contract had been fully performed, would have exceeded by several thousand dollars the amount of the decree.
The record does not disclose any error for which the judgment should be reversed, and it is therefore affirmed.