19 Pa. Super. 641 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1902
Opinion by
The paper which the defendant signed was (when delivered to the agent to be forwarded to the plaintiff company in Ohio), no more than a proposition or offer to lease from the company certain threshing machinery. By the terms of the writing it could only become a contract when accepted or approved by an officer of the plaintiff company. Until approval, it lacked 'the essential element of mutuality. Until then, there was no meeting of the minds of the parties. The machinery to be leased was intended to be used by the defendant in the grain harvest to be reaped in a few weeks. It was the known intention of the defendant to use the machinery in contracts to be made with third parties in advance of the harvest. The writing bears date on June 10, 1897. It provides that the machinery shall be shipped “ if practicable on or before June 15.” This stipulation, the character of the machinery, and the time at which, and the work in which, it was to be used, together indicate that promptness by the plaintiff in the acceptance or rejection of the offer, and in the delivery of the machinery, was essential to the defendant.
It may be said generally that an offer without more, is an offer in the present, to be accepted or refused when made. There is no time which a jury may consider reasonable or otherwise, for the party to whom it is made to consider it, except by the agreement or concession of the party making it. Until acceptance it may be withdrawn at any time, though it be the next instant after the making: Vincent v. Woodland Oil Co., 165 Pa. 402; East Penna. R. R. Co. v. Hiester, 40 Pa. 57.
The trial judge, however, did not take this view of the case, but, regarding the writing as a contract, permitted the defendant to show that he was induced to sign the order for the machinery by the representation and promise of the agent of the plaintiff company that acceptance or rejection of the order by the company would be communicated to the defendant at once. This evidence was met by a somewhat feeble denial by the plaintiff’s agent. The court submitted to the jury the question, whether such representation and promise were made. The plaintiff now complains that the court below erred in admitting the testimony and in submitting the question. Assuming, then, that the paper became a complete contract, the evidence of representation and promise by the agent (who was clothed with authority to procure the order), inducing the giving of the order, was admissible, notwithstanding the statements in the paper, that the “ agreement covers all understandings pertaining to the sale. No verbal promise or agreement shall be valid as against or in addition to any of the conditions herein specified.” The representation and promise, made by the agent, neither added to, nor detracted from, the expressed terms of the order. By its terms the paper required action by the plaintiff company before it could become a contract at
The judgment is affirmed.