Lead Opinion
Thе record in this case presents but one question for determination by this court. Did the plaintiff have an agreement with the 'defendant, to share in profits, which will support an action for a breach of contrаct?
Counsel for the defendants insist that the alleged contract is too vague, indefinite, uncertain, and wanting in particularity to be enforced. Counsel for the plaintiff insist that the share due the plaintiff under his contract is a “fair share,” “reasonable share,” or “just share,” and that such terms accord with the statement contained in the plaintiff’s letter that “profits will be distributed equitably.”
Decisions of other jurisdictions have been сited by counsel for each of the parties, together with a number of texts. It could serve no good purpose, and would unnecessarily lengthen this opinion, to review or analyze the decisions cited from foreign jurisdictions. It is sufficient to note that these decisions have been examined, and while no case cited is in point on its facts with the present case, counsel for each side have cited thosе decisions from other jurisdictions tending to support their respective contentions.
*652 “A contract is an agreement between two or more parties for the doing or not doing of some specified thing.” Cоde, § 20-101. “Specify” means, “to mention or name in a specific or explicit manner; to tell or state precisely or in detail.” Webster’s International Dictionary (2d ed.), p. 2415.
In
Carr
v.
L. & N. Railroad Co.,
141
Ga.
222 (
If we could adopt the view of counsel for the plaintiff, that the terms, “fair share,” “reasonable share,” or “just share,” are сontemplated by the contract and are specific, we would be confronted with the unsurmountable hurdle of arriving at a method by which such share could be determined. The plaintiff’s proposal was in part as follows: “it being contemplated that profits will be distributed equitably between the parties concerned after taking into consideration the amount of profits and all factors and circumstances сontributing to the production of profits.” This proposal submits a plan of calculation impossible of determination by any jury or court.
How can it be determined what factors or circumstances entered into the production of profits? Were the profits acquired by reason of the skill, ability, and application of the plaintiff to the defendants’ business, or were they acquired by reason of the genius and ability оf the defendants and their other employees? Since the business engaged in was the construction and sale of prefabricated houses, could it be that the profits acquired were made by reason of the superior quality of the defendants’ product, as compared with other types of construction; or were they acquired by reason of a housing shortage in the territory of the defendants’ develoрment? If each of the factors mentioned contributed to the earning of profits, what share should the plaintiff receive in relation to each factor, or would his share be figured in the ratio his services contributed to the profits earned?
Wé have made reference to but a few of the factors and cir *653 cumstances that might enter into the earning of profits. The plaintiff did not specify what percentage or part of the profits he should receive in relation to the factors and circumstances contributing to profits. The plaintiff’s proposal, however, does not stand alone. The defendant added the condition: “Assuming that we feel your services have a large and inсreasing part in whatever we can do in that field we shall see that you have a proper incentive and opportunity to expand them and that you will be rewarded in honest proportion.” On this added сondition, suppose the defendant did not feel that the plaintiff by his services had a “large and increasing part” in whatever was accomplished in the way of profits. What share would the plaintiff then recеive?
The alleged contract does not with sufficient definiteness indicate any basis upon which the plaintiff’s share of the profits could be determined. If the plaintiff’s proposal and the defendant’s reply bе considered separately, or if they be consolidated, the result as to certainty in the terms and conditions of the contract would be the same. The correspondence is vague, indefinite, and unсertain, and is insufficient to sustain an action at law or in equity for breach of contract. Compare
Hart
v.
Ga. R. Co.,
101
Ga.
188 (
“A complete and binding contract may be made by means of an epistolary correspondence, but this result is not accomplished until there has been a definite offer by one of the parties to the correspondence, and an unequivocal acceptance of it by the other withоut condition or variance of any kind. The parties must ‘mutually assent to the same thing in the same sense.’ ”
Harris & Mitchell
v.
Amoskeag Lumber Co.,
97
Ga.
465 (3) (
In the present case the offer submitted by the plaintiff was not *654 definite, and there was not an unequivocal acceptance of it by the defendant without variance. The parties did not mutually assent to the same thing in the same sense. The plaintiff’s proposal was that profits should be “equitably distributed”; and the defendant, аfter confirming this provision, stated: “Assuming that we feel your services have a large and increasing part in whatever we can do . . you will be rewarded in honest proportion.” Profits might be earned for equitable distribution under the plaintiff’s proposal, and at the same time the defendant might not feel that the plaintiff had a large and increasing part in what was accomplished.
In
Monk
v.
McDaniel,
116
Ga.
108 (
The defendant’s reply to the plaintiff’s proposal was not idеntical with the proposal made, and no binding contract for the sharing of profits resulted from the correspondence relied upon by the plaintiff.
The court properly sustained the general demurrеr and dismissed the action.
Judgment affirmed.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting. The decision of the majority is based upon the theory that the contract in question is too indefinite to be valid, and that the petition seeking recovery, which alleges all the fаcts involved, is insufficient to withstand the general demurrer. The .contract of employment consists of a letter from the employee and a letter in reply thereto from the employer. The employеe’s letter proposes in the third paragraph thereof that he shall be employed for a period of one year at a salary of $7500 and in addition thereto a share of the profits to be determined by the employer at the end of the year, the profits to be distributed equitably between the parties concerned, considering all factors contributing to the profits, and in this respect their assoсiation should be on the basis of mutual
*655
confidence and good faith. The employer’s acceptance of these terms is made by stating in his letter in reply that they would depend and rely upon each оther, and it was then said: “Based on this principle, we confirm the third paragraph of your letter and we pledge you our good faith in being generous in our interpretation of the value of your services in relаtion to what is achieved.” The employer’s reply then goes on to say that, assuming that the employee’s services would have a large part in the success of the enterprise, the employer wоuld see that the employee had the proper incentive and adequate opportunity to expand them, and then stated: “You will be rewarded in honest proportion.” The employer stated that he must be the judge of the value of the employee’s services to the customers and to the business. If this were an executory contract, it would be difficult for me to understand how either of the parties to the contract could entertain a serious doubt as to the standard and basis for the determination of this additional compensation. This is not a case where one of the parties was given unlimited authority tо arbitrarily make a determination of the amount due the other, but instead, in authorizing the employer to make that determination, it states a plain and clearly understandable basis upon which the determination must be made. The employee describes this basis as an equitable basis. The employer accepts this basis and pledges good faith in fixing the value of his services and describes his duty again by saying, “You will be rewarded in honest proportion.” Men without business experience but with a fair conception of what is meant by fairness, by honesty, and by equity would encounter no difficulty in arriving at the amount of compensation to which thе employee was entitled. The contract, in my opinion, thus meets the required quality of definiteness prescribed by the Code, § 20-101, and
Jernigan
v. Wimberly, 1
Ga.
220,
Georgia Cane &c. Co.
v.
Corn &c. Co.,
141
Ga.
40 (
For the reasons stated I am of the oрinion that the petition in this case stated a cause of action for the relief sought and was not subject to the general demurrer.
I am authorized to state that Presiding Justice Atkinson and Justice Almand concur in this dissent.
