211 F. 945 | 4th Cir. | 1914
Defendant claims that this reservation of alternative remedies to the plaintiff in the' event of the defendant’s breach destroyed the mutuality of the contract. A seller would, by the general law, have such a choice of. modes of redress. The contract merely fixes in advance the damages for delayed performance. This contention does not require further consideration.
At the trial plaintiff objected to the proof of the verbal understanding or agreement. It said that the evidence was offered in the attempt to add by parol a new term or condition to a written contract. It relied, not only on the general rules of law upon that subject, but upon an express provision of the contract sued on, to the effect that no verbal conditions or modification of it would be valid. The court allowed the evidence to go to the jury. The plaintiff contended that, even if there was a parol agreement, it was not operative beyond the latest date fixed by the written contracts for the shipment of the malt. It argued that the indulgence as to time of delivery given to the defendant at his request could not extend the life of the agreement not to sell to others. It pointed out that there was no consideration shown or even suggested to sustain a binding contract to extend, and no acceptance by defendant of plaintiff’s conditional offer of extension. Again the court overruled the objection and upheld the contention of the defendant. The court told the jury that if they believed that on the 23d of October, 1912, the defendant could have sold the malt which the plaintiff was then holding for him at a price satisfactory to himself and at which he was holding it, and that he was prevented from so doing by reason of the shipment into his territory of malt at a price below that at which he was then holding it, they must find for the defendant. They were further instructed that if, on the other hand, they found that the shipment did not prevent the plaintiff from selling, but that his inability to do so was the result of a long-continued fall in the market price, or of the shutting down of business by his customers, or for any other cause over which plaintiff had no control, their verdict must be for the plaintiff. It is to this latter instruction, and to the refusal to tell the jury that the shipment in question in itself entitled the defendant to rescind, that he makes his most serious objection. It is not every breach of a term or provision of a contract which will justify its rescission by the other party. If the breach did
Affirmed.