Griese-Traylor Corporation, plaintiff below, appeals from the summary judgment in favor of the three defendants, The First National Bank of Birmingham (the “Bank”), Consolidation Coal Company (“Consol”), and Stoll & Stoll, Inc. (the “Stolls”). The lawsuit arose out of competing negotiations by Griese-Traylor and the Stolls to acquire an option on certain mineral interests in Tennessee from the Alabama Bank. Griese-Traylor alleges that after an oral agreement had been reached, the Bank broke its promise and entered into a contract with the Stolls. The complaint seeks compensatory damages from the Bank for breach of contract (Count V), and compensatory and punitive damages from all three defendants for intentional interference with Griese-Traylor’s contractual (Count IV) and business (Count III) relations and for conspiracy to tortiously interfere with business (Count I) and contractual (Count II) relations. We affirm the district court’s grant of summary judgment on all counts.
I. Background
The facts, as derived during extensive pretrial discovery and viewed in the light most favorable to Griese-Traylor, are as follows:
In October 1973, plaintiff Griese-Traylor learned from Henry Long, a Bank trust officer, of the possible availability for purchase of mineral rights in a 15,875 acre tract of land in Tennessee. Griese-Traylor offered to enter into a one-year option agreement for acquisition of the mineral rights, at an option price of $1.50 per acre and a purchase price of $15 per acre. In January of 1974, plaintiff had its attorney send the Bank a proposed option contract agreement. Long knew that Griese-Traylor proposed to sell part of its option rights to AMAX Coal Company, as it had in prior transactions with the Bank.
Around the same time, the Stolls learned that the mineral rights were for sale. The Stolls offered to buy the rights for Consol. Consol took no action on the offer until February 1974, when it learned that AMAX, its competitor, was acquiring mineral interests in property around the Bank’s property. At that point, Consol entered into an agreement with the Stolls, which called for the Stolls to purchase the mineral rights from the Bank and immediately lease them to Consol for a profit. The Stolls began negotiating with the Bank. On February 18, 1974, the Stolls presented a check for $40,000 as earnest money and a conditional sales contract (which the Bank had told the Stolls it preferred to an option contract), calling for $2.50 per acre for a one-year option and $20 per acre as the purchase price.
Long told Griese-Traylor that he had a higher offer than Griese-Traylor’s offer, and invited plaintiff to make a better offer. On February 26, Long talked with plaintiff on the telephone and Griese-Traylor offered a one-year option price of $4 per acre and purchase price of $25 per acre. This proposal was subject only to the approval of AMAX, and it was agreed that plaintiff would notify the Bank of AMAX’s decision by March 22. Long accepted this oral offer with the condition precedent. This oral option contract is the crux of this case.
On March 18, Long told Traylor that he would mail him an acceptable form of contract. This was in the form of a conditional sales contract, rather than an option. The
II. Breach of Contract (Count V)
The district court correctly held that the oral contract between Griese-Traylor and the Bank is unenforceable because the statute of frauds requires option contracts for the sale of land to be in writing. This is true, regardless of whether the Tennessee or Alabama statute of frauds applies.
Since this is a diversity case, the federal district court is required to follow the conflict of laws rules of the state in which it sits, here Alabama.
Klaxon Co. v. Stentor Electric Manufacturing Co.,
Whether the Alabama or Tennessee statute of frauds is applied, however, the result will be the same. Under both states’ statutes of frauds, an oral option contract involving realty is unenforceable.
The Alabama statute of frauds provides that “every contract for the sale of lands, tenements, or hereditaments, or any interest therein” is void unless such agreement is in writing. Ala.Code tit. 20, § 3(5). The Tennessee statute, Tenn.Code Ann. § 23-201(4), is to the same effect. In both states, a contract for the sale of a mineral interest is a contract for the sale of an interest in lands, tenements, or hereditaments, and thus covered by the statute.
Riddle v. Brown,
The district court ruled that Tennessee, if presented with the question, would follow the majority of decisions which hold that an option to buy real property comes within the proscription of the statute of frauds. See 37 C.J.S. Statute of Frauds § 117. Griese-Traylor has not, before this Court or below, challenged the district court’s interpretation of Tennessee law.
Griese-Traylor contends, however, that Alabama would not follow the majority rule. In plaintiff’s view, an oral option on realty is not subject to the Alabama statute of frauds, since an option does not create an interest in land under Alabama law. In support of its position, Griese-Traylor cites
Fullenwider v. Rowan,
A transaction between two, may be, (1) a sale of lands; (2) an agreement to sell lands, or, (3) what is generally called an option. . . . “The first is an actual transfer of the title from the grantor to the grantee by appropriate instrument of conveyance; the second is a contract to be performed in the future, and if fulfilled, results in a sale; it is preliminary to the sale, and is not a sale. . The third, an option, originally is neither a sale nor an agreement to sell. It is simply a contract by which the owner of property agrees with another, that he shall have the right to buy the property at a fixed price within a time certain. He does not sell his land; he does not then agree to sell it; but he does then sell something, viz.: the right or privilege to buy at the option or election of the other party. The second party gets in praesen-ti not lands, or an agreement that he shall have lands, but he does get something of value, that is the right to call for and receive lands if he elects. The owner parts with his right to sell his lands (except to the second party) for a limited period. The second party receives this right, or rather from his point of view, he receives the right to elect to buy. . .”
. [An option] is not an estate in land and an option is not a contract of sale. .
Fullenwider
was subsequently cited by the Alabama Supreme Court in
Neely
v.
Denton,
The indication in
Neely
is consistent with Alabama decisions in the analogous area of mortgage redemptions. By statute, Alabama gives a two-year period to redeem a foreclosed mortgage. The parties may
An agreement to allow redemptions after the statutory period has expired is an agreement to convey an interest in land and is within the provisions of the statute of fraud.
Thompson
v.
Suttle,
From these cases, it appears that contrary to plaintiff’s argument, Alabama, as well as Tennessee, follows the majority view that options for the sale of an interest in land must be in writing to be enforceable. Since the contract between Griese-Traylor and the Bank was not in writing, it is unenforceable.
Before the district court and in its brief on appeal, Griese-Traylor called its oral agreement with the Bank either an option or an oral agreement to enter into a written option contract. The alternative characterization would not change the result here, for Alabama law is clear that if the contract must be in writing, an agreement to enter into such a contract must also be in writing.
Alabama Mineral Land Co. v. Jackson,
The Bank is, therefore, not liable for breach of contract. The district court was correct in granting summary judgment to the Bank on Count V.
III. Intentional Interference with Contractual Relations (Count IV)
The district court properly granted summary judgment in favor of defendants on the tort claim for intentional interference with contractual relations contained in Count IV of the complaint.
In tort cases under the Alabama choice of law rule, the law of the place where the wrong was committed applies.
See, e. g., Pound v. Gaulding,
This Court recently examined the applicable Alabama law and concluded that proof of fraud, force, or coercion is an essential element of proof in an action for tortious interference with contracts:
We have independently reviewed every discoverable Alabama case dealing with tortious interference with contracts. Our research leads us to conclude that in that jurisdiction there is no action for tortious interference with contract in the absence of fraud, force, or some form of coercion. See, e. g., Erswell v. Ford,208 Ala. 101 ,94 So. 67 (1922); Sparks v. McCrary,156 Ala. 382 ,47 So. 332 (1908); United States Fidelity and Guaranty Company v. Millo-nas,206 Ala. 147 ,89 So. 732 (1921); McCluskey v. Steele,18 Ala.App. 31 ,88 So. 367 (1920). But see, also, Alcazar Amusement Company v. Mudd & Colley Amusement Company,204 Ala. 509 ,86 So. 209 (1920), and Louisiana Oil Corporation v. Green,230 Ala. 470 ,161 So. 479 (1935), in which the latter case declared that the former was “not authoritative”.
Volz v. Liberty Mutual Insurance Co.,
Griese-Traylor questions the holding in
Volz,
contending that it conflicts not with any subsequent Alabama cases, but with a prior decision of this Court,
Kelite Products, Inc.
v.
Binzel,
The evidence simply shows that Griese-Traylor and the Stolls were competing with each other to acquire the mineral rights from the Bank. Since the district court found that “there is a complete absence of evidence from which one might infer ‘fraud, force, or some form of coer
IV. Intentional Interference with Business Relations (Count III)
Under Alabama law an affirmative or threatened act of interference, as distinguished from a refusal or failure to carry out a particular promise, is an essential element of a cause of action for tortious interference with business relations.
Alabama Power Co. v. Thompson,
It is thus obvious that defendant Consol was entitled to summary judgment on Count III, since Griese-Traylor does not allege that Consol engaged in any affirmative act of interference. Consol was not a party to the Stolls’ contract with the Bank, nor is it alleged that the Stolls acted as Consol’s agent.
The Bank likewise cannot be held liable for interference with Griese-Traylor’s business relations with the Bank itself. The Bank merely refused to carry out an unenforceable agreement. Plaintiff cannot convert the Bank’s failure to carry out an unenforceable contract into a valid tort claim by calling it an interference with business relations. Nor can the Bank be held liable for interfering with Griese-Traylor’s business relations with AMAX, since any such interference was indirect and incidental. Any interference with the Griese-Traylor/AMAX relationship was caused by Griese-Traylor’s inability to acquire the mineral rights from the Bank.
Summary judgment was also proper as to the Stolls, In Alabama, a defendant will not be liable where it acted for a legitimate economic reason.
Bona fide
business competition is a justification for intentional interference with a competitor’s business.
Thompson
v.
Allstate Insurance Co.,
The district court found that “the undisputed evidence is clear that [the Stolls] acted for legitimate economic reasons and were motivated by genuine competitive interests.” The Stolls were competing for the purchase of mineral rights to be used in connection with its legitimate business, and in fact did purchase such rights. Summary judgment for the Stolls, therefore, was proper.
Thus all three defendants were entitled to summary judgment on Count III.
V. Conspiracy to Interfere with Business and Contractual Relations (Counts I and II)
Under Alabama law the gist of an action for conspiracy to interfere with business and contractual relations is not the conspiracy itself, which furnishes no cause of action, but the alleged wrong committed by the conspirators.
O'Dell
v.
State,
Since the defendants are not liable for interference with Griese-Traylor’s contractual or business relations, there are no “actionable wrongs” to support the conspiracy counts. Summary judgment for de
VI. Conclusion
Viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to Griese-Traylor under the applicable Alabama and Tennessee law, we affirm the summary judgment in favor of defendants on all five counts of the complaint.
AFFIRMED.
