283 Mass. 383 | Mass. | 1933
The plaintiff conducts in Greenfield the business of selling gasoline, oil, automobiles and automobile supplies, and a service station and repair shop. In March, 1929, it made a written contract with the Gulf Refining Company by which that company agreed to sell and the plaintiff to purchase gasoline for use in the plaintiff’s plant during a three-year period beginning in March, 1929. The defendant is engaged in the sale and distribution of gasoline and other petroleum products in New England and other Atlantic States. On June 14, 1929, a written instrument was signed on behalf of the plaintiff
The case was tried before a jury in the Superior Court. In answer to written questions submitted by the judge the jury found that Algar had authority to bind the defendant by signing the instrument in its behalf, that the plaintiff was excused by acts of the defendant from procuring a release from the plaintiff’s contract with the Gulf Refining Company as required by the plaintiff’s contract with the defendant and that the defendant broke its contract with the plaintiff, the plaintiff not being in default. The jury returned a verdict for the plaintiff in the sum of $50,083, the judge having reserved leave with the assent of the jury under G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 231, § 120, to enter a contrary verdict. On motion of the defendant the judge entered a verdict for the defendant. The plaintiff’s exception to this action of the judge is here presented by a bill of exceptions. The defendant has also filed a bill of exceptions setting forth exceptions taken by it to the refusal of the judge to give certain requested rulings and to the admission of certain testimony during the course of the trial. The defendant agrees that if the plaintiff’s exceptions are overruled the exceptions taken by the defendant become immaterial.
The instrument recites in its preambles that the plaintiff “operates a filling station at 100 Federal Street in said Greenfield, and is selling products of the Gulf Refining Company”; that the plaintiff “is at the present time under what appears to be a written contract obligating it to continue to sell Gulf products at'said filling station until approximately March, 1932”; that “the parties hereto have entered into certain negotiations with regard to sale” by the plaintiff of the defendant’s products; and that the defendant “expects to acquire land on West Main
The fact that the parties agreed in the instrument that there should be a later formal contract, while not conclusive on the question whether they intended earlier to be bound or to what extent they intended to be so bound, Donovan v. Freeman, 263 Mass. 561, tends to indicate the intent that their final contract was to be the binding expression of all their completed negotiations. Lyman v. Robinson, 14 Allen, 242, 254. Doten v. Chase, 237 Mass. 218, 220. The nature of their mutual undertakings and the circumstances existing at the time of the signing of the indenture and reasonably to be anticipated at that time point toward the same conclusion. The defendant was to give the plaintiff the exclusive right to sell the defendant’s gasoline and petroleum products within the limits of the town of Greenfield in any event for a period of five years and, at the option of the plaintiff, for five years more. The relationship which the parties proposed to create necessarily included a considerable amount of details and, during its potentially long life, substantial sums of money. The reciprocal obligations of the parties in this relationship were such that ordinarily men entering into it would require a contract with full expression of their respective duties and liabilities. Yet the instrument in terms imposes no obligation upon the plaintiff by whose attorney it was drawn. It is difficult to believe that the parties intended to leave wholly to implication the character and extent of the plaintiff’s liabilities and to provide such scanty specification or detail as to the defendant’s performance of its obligations. But, if it be assumed that the record bears some evidence of a contrary intent and that therefore there
“It is essential to the existence of a contract that its nature and the extent of its obligations be certain.” Knowles v. Griswold, 252 Mass. 172, 175. Lyman v. Robinson, 14 Allen, 242, 254. It is not enough if parties negotiating have agreed upon certain important terms if there has been no agreement on other essential elements of the undertaking, Sibley v. Felton, 156 Mass. 273, 276, although a contract is not necessarily unenforceable because the parties agree that the details of certain of its terms shall be left to be fixed at a future time or by the happening of later events. Evers v. Gilfoil, 247 Mass. 219. Kirkley v. F. H. Roberts Co. 268 Mass. 246, 252. The difficulty here is that the instrument sued on is silent as to material matters important in its interpretation for the ascertainment of the obligations of the parties and the evidence of the circumstances surrounding its making is not such as to permit by inference the supplying of the lack. “Many of the essential terms necessarily involved in the proposed undertaking are not set forth and without them no enforceable contract is shown.” Kaufman v. Lennox, 265 Mass. 487, 489, and cases cited. Young v. Titcomb, 268 Mass. 14, 19.
Because of the conclusion here reached it becomes unnecessary to consider whether on other grounds the plaintiff
Plaintiff’s exceptions overruled.
Defendant’s exceptions overruled.