225 N.W. 218 | S.D. | 1929
This action was brought to recover $'820.44 as damages for breach of a, contract for the purchase by defendants of 420 barrels of flour at $9.80 per barrel in bulk. The contract was dated January 26, 1925, and broken M'arch 18, 1925. The damages are claimed' under and computed on the basis of a provision of the contract as follows: “As to any of the above wheat flour remaining unshipped by reason buyer’s breach or default, seller shall recover from buyer liquidated damages as follows: (a) a sum equal to 4c multiplied by the number of bu. of wheat required to make such unshipped flour, figuring 4% bu. to the bbl. of flour; plus (b) a sum: equal to ic multiplied by the said number of bu., which such shall be calculated for each 30 days, or fraction
The nature of the contract is- disclosed by a clause reading: “This is a contract to sell goods which, (except as to grain contracted for, if any) are to be manufactured.”
Defendants admit signing the contract, but deny its delivery. They say they are extensively engaged in the bakery business; that agents of plaintiff -called- at their store in Mitchell to sell them flour the day before the contract was made; that the contract was executed in reliance upon negotiations with plaintiff through its
■ As bearing on the validity of this oral agreement with Kelly, it should be noted that the contract provides: “Only authority of seller’s salesman is to sign this contract for, and transmit same to seller (for acceptance or rejection by it).” Kelly did not hold the
At the close of the case the trial court directed the jury to return a verdict in favor of plaintiff for $820.44, the amount claimed by plaintiff computed as provided by the contract. From a judgment entered thereon, and an order denying a new trial, defendants appeal.
The assignments of error present two. questions: First, was there a valid delivery and consummation of the contract? Second, are the provisions of the contract relating to damages for breach valid and enforceable?
What appellants term a conditional delivery of the contract would seem to be more accurately described as a delivery of the contract to, and its acceptance by, respondent in the expectation that it would bind all parties and be carried1 out, with an oral agreement that, if the price of flour declined 30 cents a barrel, Kelly would cancel the contract and charge appellants with the loss occasioned by the decline. To effect this, Kelly was to keep the contract on his desk, so that he might cancel it and give effect to the stop loss agreement. It would be idle to make such elaborate provisions to secure a stop loss if there was no binding agreement by. which a loss'could occur. Appellants admit liability for loss to extent of 30 cents per barrel, $126, but deny liability for more. In other words, they admit the contract subject to an oral modification, made at the time and as a part of the agreement.
It is elementary that a written contract, complete in respect to a matter, cannot be contradicted and altered ¡by proof of a contemporaneous oral agreement. Our Code, section 860, R. C. 1919, provides: “The execution of a contract in writing, whether the law requires it to be written or not, supersedes all the oral negotiations or stipulations concerning its matter, which preceded or accompanied the execution of the instrument.” See, also, Black Hills Nat. Bank v. Kellogg, 4 S. D. 312, 56 N. W. 1071; Dean v. First Nat. Bank, 6 Dak. 222, 50 N. W. 831; Lewis v. R. Co., 5 S. D. 148, 58 N. W. 580; Schmitz v. Hawkeye Gold Min. Co., 8 S. D. 544, 67 N. W. 618; Rosholt v. Woulph, 40 S. D. 269, 167 N. W. 158; Anderson v. Matheny, 17 S. D. 225, 95 N. W. 911; Bowen v. Mutual Life Ins. Co., 20 S. D. 103, 104 N. W. 1040; Schriner v.
Appellants cite De Rue v. McIntosh, 26 S. D. 42, 127 N. W. 532, to support their position that oral testimony of the parol agreement is admissible. That was a suit to recover the price of digging an artesian well. And the defense was that the well did not produce the water agreed to be furnished. Plaintiff agreed to drill a “flowing well” to be drilled to “artesian flow.” This court held that parol evidence that the well was for use of a large ranch,' known to the contracting parties, and that plaintiff represented that he would “furnish sufficient water for the purpose for which the defendant desired to use the same,” was admissible, saying: “The contract in this case simply provides for a flowing well but fails to, in any manner, specify the amount of water to be discharged from said well. For the purpose of understanding what the term 'flowing well’ was intended to mean in the contract it was clearly proper for the defendant to allege and prove the representations of the plaintiff, * * * for the purpose of explaining what was meant by the term 'flowing well.’ ” That case is not applicable to the facts of the case at bar. Another case cited by appellants, Koester v. Northwestern Port Huron Co., 24 S. D. 546, 124 N. W. 740, pertains to a conditional delivery, clearly distinguishable from the case at bar. Herron v. Brinton, 188 Iowa 60, 175 N. W. 831, pertains to consideration. Carpenter v. Carpenter, 141 Wis. 544, 124 N. W. 488, pertains to an escrow. None of them are in point. Appellants’ position seems to be that mere manual delivery without mutual intent to give effect to’ the instrument is not sufficient to constitute a delivery, and that the intent may be shown by parol evidence. Their law is not applicable to their case. The situation in this case does not warrant a finding that the delivery was conditional.
The other question, are the contract provisions relating to' damages in the event of a breach of the contract valid and enforceable, is perhops the more important. Appellants contend that such provisions are void under section 895, R. C. 1919; that, being void, the measure of damages is prescribed by section 1975, R. C. 1919, and, there being no evidence of damage thereunder, the evidence is insufficient to support the verdict. .
Declaratory of that general common-law rule is section 895, R. C. 1919, which provides: “Every contract, by which the amount of damages to be paid, or- other compensation to- be made for a breach of an obligation, is determined in anticipation thereof, is to that extent void, except as expressly provided by the next section.”
The next section (896) provides: “The parties to a contract may agree therein upon an amount which shall be presumed to be the amount of damage sustained by a breach thereof, when, from the nature of the case, it would be impracticable or extremely difficult to fix the actual damage.”
It is not apparent that these sections do, or were intended to, modify the common-law rule. If they do not, then the validity of such provision is to be determined by its character. If the provision can be said to provide only fair compensation for the loss incurred by the injured party, it is valid. But if it appears to provide a penalty in fact, although in the guise of damages, it is void. If the damages contracted to be paid are in fact fair and compensatory only, then the provision should be enforced. If not, so far as such damages exceed fair compensation for loss incurred, they should
The flour ordered by appellants was known as respondent’s “Robin Hood” brand. It is said the Robin Hood brand of flour is a mixture of wheats, and that there is no evidence it is made of Northern Spring No. I, the qualit}' of wheat upon which the computations are based. That may be so, and yet the fluctuations in the price of Northern Spring No.'i on the Minneapolis open market may fairly reflect the fluctuations in the several kinds of wheat that go into the manufacture of that brand of flour. The difficulty in ascertaining the prices of the different wheats from1 day to day on the market argues in favor of a fixed, standard, if that fairly reflects the fluctuations. The parties familiar with the business having contracted that such method does fairfy fix the actual loss in the event of a breach of contract, we cannot say that it does not .in the absence of proof. The flour was never manufactured, and
The right to so contract has been upheld in a number of cases involving almost the identical contract involved here. The Supreme Court of Ohio in Sheffield-King Milling Co. v. Domestic Science Baking Co., 95 Ohio St. 180, 115 N. E. 1014, held that, where parties to a contract deem it advisable, they may stipulate what the measure of damages shall be in event of a breach by either. And in construing the contract, the question whether a penalty is imposed, or liquidated damages contracted, the court will in the absence of fraud or circumvention look to all the terms of the contract, and the language used to express the intention of the parties. A provision very similar to the one under consideration ■by us was by that rule upheld in that case.
Practically the same contract was before the Supreme Court of Wisconsin in Sheffield-King Milling Co. v. Jacobs, 170 Wis. 389, 173 N. W. 796, and upheld in a well-reasoned case. The same result was reached by the Supreme Court of Michigan, in New Prague Flouring Mill Co. v. Hewitt Grain & Provision Co., 226 Mich. 35, 196 N. W. 890; by the Appellate Court of Illinois, First District, in Christian Mills v. Berthold Stern Flour Co., 247 Ill. App. 1; and by the Supreme Court of Missouri in Yerxa, Andrews & Thurston v. Randazzo Macaroni Mfg. Co., 313 Mo. 927, 288 S. W. 20. In all of those cases substantially the same contract provision was under consideration that is now before us, and the same question was involved.
Appellants have not called our attention to any case in point to the contrary. In a number of cases cited the court mentioned the measure of damages where there was no agreement in reference thereto. Those cases are not in point. In Russell Miller Milling Co. v. Bastach, 70 Or. 473, 142 P. 355, no contract provision was involved, -but plaintiff was seeking a recovery on another basis on the ground that the contract was a sale of goods to be manufactured. The court said: “For aught that appears in this pase, the plaintiff could have gone into open market and purchased flour
As to the items (a) and (b) in the provision for damages, respondents suggest that the provision for 4 cents per bushel of wheat (item a) amounts to about 19 cents per barrel of flour, and is intended to cover the net profit to be made in manufacturing the flour, while the 1 cent (item b) per bushel of wheat for every 30 days the contract continued before its .breach is intended to- cover carrying charges on the wheat, such as storage, insurance, and interest. Those are all legitimate elements of damage on breach of such contracts, and we can see no reason why? the parties may not contract for a method of calculating such elements, so long as the method employed reaches .only a fair compensatory- result. There is no evidence that such was not the result. On the contrary the result is 19 cents per barrel net profit for manufacturing the flour, the amount of wheat purchased being 1,995 bushels, equaling 4% bushels of wheat to the barrel for making 420 barrels of flour. It is not contended that less wheat would- have been sufficient. The carrying charges amount to $39.90 for two months on an investment of more than $3,500, including insurance and storage of the wheat. To this is added the loss on the wheat by decline in price from $1.89% on January 26th, the date of the contract, to $1.45^ on March 17th, the date the contract was canceled. The result would seem to be as near the actual loss as could wdll be ascertained. Northern Spring- No. 1 wheat, on which the decline is
In their reply brief appellants complain that the contract is long, involved, technical, hard to understand, printed in very fine print on a single sheet of paper, impossible to- read without great effort and time, and in effect that it is not entitled to respect as a mutual contract between understanding parties. Whether this arraignment of the contract is justified or not is immaterial, for appellants do not claim they did not understand or know its contents. Evidently they knew there might be a loss, for they sought by an oral agreement to limit the loss to 30 cents per barrel. Their failure to incorporate the stop loss clause in the written contract seems to be the cause of the greater loss they are now compelled to pay.
Rinding no error in the record, the judgment and order appealed from are affirmed.