delivered the opinion of the Court.
The respondent-plaintiff, H. D. Hall, sued the petitioners-defendant, J. D. Hall, Jr., et al., a manufacturing partnership, for breach of an oral contract whereby the respondent-plaintiff was to represent the partnership in “developing” a theretofore untapped sales territory, consisting of approximately the northeast quarter of the United States, and selling therein at a 12% commission a principal product of the petitioners-defendant, being a door light called “Visador.” Among other defenses the petitioners-defendant pleaded paragraph 5 of Art. 3995, Vernon’s Texas Civ. Stats., barring action upon a promise or agreement “which is not to be performed within the space of one year from the making thereof” unless the same “be in writing and signed by the party to be charged therewith * * * .” The applicability of this statute to the contract in the light of jury findings presents the principal question in the case.
The trial court submitted sundry jury issues, in accordance with the foregoing theory of the case, the answers to all of which were in substance favorable to the respondent-plaintiff, including findings that the agency was terminated without good cause, and that plaintiff’s damages as to future commissions were $27,000. The issues relevant to the principal question before us are Nos. 1 and 2, which with their respective answers are as follows:
“Special Issue No. 1: Do you find that at the time of the contract between H. D. Hall and J. D. Hall, Jr., on or about October 13, 1953, it was mutually understood by them both, whether expressed in words or not, that H. D. Hall should develop and sell Visador products in the northern territory for a reasonable time thereafter, or that such arrangements could be terminated at the end of any month by either party?”
To this the "jury answered “For a reasonable time.”
“Special Issue No. 2: How long do you find from a preponderance of the evidence, after October 15, 1953, was a reasonable time for such agreement, under all the circumstances ?”
To this the jury answered “3 yrs.”
The court, following motions for judgment on and notwithstanding the verdict, gave judgment for the respondent-plaintiff for the before-mentioned item of $900 accrued commissions, but rendered judgment against him as to the item of $27,000 future commissions on the ground of Art. 3995, supra. The respondent-plaintiff appealed from this latter portion of the judgment, but the petitioners-defendant neither appealed nor filed cross-assignments of error with regard to the $900 item or otherwise.
The Waco Court of Civil Appeals “affirmed” the $900 recovery, from which no appeal had been taken. As to the $27,000
item, the Court held that the statute did not apply to the contract and that, even if it did, it was satisfied by reason of certain correspondence of the petitioners-defendant written between the date of the contract and its repudiation. The court accordingly reversed this portion of the judgment of the trial court and rendered judgment on the verdict for the respondent-plaintiff for $27,000,
Considering first the question of whether the contract was or was not within the purview of the statute, we find no authority in the briefs, or by our own research, that is very helpful. The basic rule is, of course, that, in order to fall within the statute, it must appear from the terms of the. contract that performance cannot be completed within one year. See citations and discussion in Chevalier v. Lane’s, Inc.,
His reasoning as to why the contract falls without the statute is that, since it lacks an express provision as to duration of performance, the term of a reasonable time is implied; that a contract providing a term of a reasonable time is one of uncertain duration and therefore not within the statute; that the finding of a reasonable time to be three years does not alter the status of the contract as one of indefinite duration — does not make it a contract which, by its terms, cannot be performed within one year.
Now it is doubtless true that, in contracts of the general type-of the instant one, a term of reasonable duration may be implied,
with the result that they are not void for lack of an essential provision and are not terminable at will. Erskine v. Chevrolet Motor Co.,
As above indicated, we find no case very helpful in the matter of whether an implication of a reasonable time means that, for statute of frauds purposes, the contract is to be regarded as one of indefinite duration or, to the contrary, as one in which such performance period in terms of days or years as is later found to be reasonable is fully stated in the contract. Erskine v. Chevrolet Motor Co., supra, did involve an agency situation somewhat like the instant one, did imply the duration of a reasonable time and did hold the North Carolina statute inapplicable. However, the decision does not purport to analyze the foregoing problem and does not even disclose the terms of the statute. The matter must thus be resolved largely on principle.
In the first place, and despite the strict requirement that impossibility of performance within one year must appear from the terms of the contract, we see no reason why the mere fact of duration of performance being
implied
keeps the contract from being within the statute. In the instant case, if Special Issue No. 1 and its answer had been in terms of “three years” instead of “a reasonable time,” the respondent-plaintiff would doubtless admit that the contract fell within the statute. What is implied in a contract is as much one of its terms “as though expressly set forth therein.” Cheek v. Metzer, supra,
Where the circumstances justify the law in implying any term of performance, they also justify it in defining the period in regular units of time, such as days or years. Ordinarily at least, there would be no point in supplying the particular words “a reasonable time,” because the time in days and years is what counts in any dispute, as in the instant case. Actually what the law does is to supply the term in units of time, but using the yardstick of reasonableness in so doing. What it determines in the instant case is that “the contract reasonably implies performance over three years.” The respondent-plaintiff, in seeking to uphold a recovery on the contract for commissions to have been earned in the third year thereof, necessarily asserts a contract with a performance term of three years. He could hardly expect to recover specific damages if the term were the merely abstract one of “a reasonable time.”
The fact that the court submitted the two jury issues it did obviously makes no difference as to the principle involved. The basic question is how long, in units of time, performance under the contract was to last, and any reasonably clear method of ascertaining this fact could properly have been used. The net result of both finding is that the parties made a contract for the term of three years. It was not that they made a contract of indefinite duration that in some unexplained fashion, without having been amended, was yet also a contract for three years.
The respondent-plaintiff reasons in his “Supplemental Argument” that, where a period is implied, “What would be a reasonable time would depend upon what happened after the contract was made and an important factor would be as to how long the contract ran before it was terminated. * * * If it had been terminated in six months, a reasonable time no doubt would be entirely different than where it ran for two years and a half before it was terminated.” Conceivably this reasoning would be sound if the parties themselves had expressly stipulted something such as “a reasonable period in the light of developments to occur from time to time hereafter.” But we cannot agree that this is what is implied either in the answer to
Special Issue No. 1 or in the usual case in which we imply a performance period. When the parties omit an express stipulation as to time, it is in accord with human experience and accepted standards of law for us to assume that they meant whatever term of days or years might be reasonable in the light of the circumstances before them at the date of the contract. But it is quite another thing to assume an intent on their part that the period for performance should vary thereafter from one day or month to another in accordance with unforeseen developments, so that, for example, the employer might properly terminate an employment contract within a month after its date but might not be able to terminate the same contract if he waited a year to do so. And what the developments might be that would make today’s reasonable period unreasonable tomorrow, or vice versa, opens up a vast field of complications. In Cheek v. Metzer, supra, it was said, “What is a reasonable time * * * must be determined by the circumstances in evidence surrounding the situation of the parties
As to the theory that the statute, if applicable, was satisfied, the various items of correspondence in question are set out in the opinion of the court (
Moreover, some of the documents said to reflect essential contractual provisions, such as that concerning commissions, are not shown to have been signed or to have been part of any signed document, while some fundamental items, such as the territory of the agency, are either not referred to in any signed writing or in any writing at all. Obviously there was no written statement of time of performance.
At the present stage of the litigation the respondent-plaintiff does not appear to rely heavily on the point of actual compliance with the statute, nor are the cases he cites persuasive in this connection. On the other hand, in the rather recent case of Buratti & Montandon v. Tennant,
The petitioners-defendant also complain here, and did in their motion for rehearing in the Court of Civil Appeals, of that court’s “affirmance” of the trial court’s award of $900 to the respondent-plaintiff by way of earned commissions. However, since they did not except to, file a motion for new trial concerning, nor appeal from, that portion of the judgment nor attack it by cross assignment upon the appeal of the respondent-plaintiff, but, on the contrary, prayed the appellate court unconditionally to “affirm the judgment of the Trial Court,” they cannot attack it now. See 3B Texas Jur. (Rev.), Sec. 705, pp. 65-66, and decisions there cited. The point is not one of fundamental error. See Ramsey v. Dunlops,
That part of the judgment of the Court of Civil Appeals which reverses the judgment of the trial court is itself reversed, and the judgment of the trial court is in all things affirmed.
Associate Justice Smith dissenting.
Associate Justice Greenhill not sitting.
Opinion delivered December 4, 1957.
Rehearing overruled January 22, 1958.
