51 So. 767 | Ala. | 1910
— Appellee, a company engaged in the manufacture and sale of lumber, including cross-ties, sued appellant, a lumber company engaged in the purchase, sale, and export of lumber, including cross-ties, for a breach of an alleged contract. Issue was joined on count 3 as last amended, and counts 4 and 5 added by amendment.
The third count as last 'amended was as follows: “(3) The plaintiff claims of the defendants the further sum of one hundred and six and 39/100 dollars ($106.39) and the interest thereon, damages, for the breach of an agreement entered into by them on, to wit, July 20th, 1907, in substance as follows: The defendants agreed to purchase all of the heart ties 5 in. x 8 in. x 8 ft., meaning thereby 5 inches thick by 8 inches wide by 8 feet long, that the plaintiffs manufactured at their mill, until the defendants notified the plaintiffs to discontinue the cutting, the plaintiffs to load the ties on the cars on the railroad near the plaintiffs’ mill, at and for the infice of fifteen dollars ($15.00) per thousand feet f. o. b. cars; and plaintiffs agreed to sell to the defendants the said ties at the price and on the terms above specified. And the plaintiffs aver that they made, to wit, 7,093 feet of such ties for the defendants, and had the ties ready to load on cars, whereupon the defendants instructed, or advised, plaintiffs that they would take no more ties from the plaintiffs, and although the plaintiffs continued to have the said ties so manufactured, ready for loading, the defendants refused to accept the said ties, and to pay for same.”
The other counts were practically the same as this, except that they averred that the ties Avere ready to be delivered on board the cars, and that defendant refused to accept the ties or to allow plaintiff to load and deliver, etc.
The Supreme Court of the United States, in the case of Storm v. United States, 94 U. S. 76, 24 L. Ed. 42, speaking of a written contract something like the one in question, uses this language: “Where the defendant has actually received the ¡consideration of a written agreement, it is no answer to an action brought against him for a breach of his covenants in • the same to say that the agreement did not bind the plaintiff to perform the promises on his part therein contained, provided it appears that the promises in question have in fact been performed in good faith, and without prejudice to the
' This court, in Sheffield Co. v. Hull Co., 101 Ala. 477, 14 South. 672, in construing a contract to manufacture and sell coke, which, like the contract in this case in its inception, was optional and unilaterable, said: “The evidence is clear and free from conflict to the proof of the efforts of the coke company to induce the building of additional ovens and the manufacture of the requisite coke by the operators, as was contemplated in the agreement, and of the entire success of these efforts. Thereby the condition of plaintiff’s absolute obligation to sell and deliver the coke was met and removed, and the unilateral agreement, not binding on either party because in terms not binding on one, was converted into a mutually obligatory contract.”
The law does not favor, but leans against the destruction of contracts because of uncertainty; it will, if feasible, so construe the contract as to carry into effect the reasonable intention of the parties if that can be ascertained. — Boykin v. Bank, 72 Ala. 262, 47 Am. Rep. 408. If by the terms of an agreement an option is reserved to one party, to determine it, or to consummate it to a contract, the law will give the like option to the other, until both are bound; then it becomes a binding contract. — Eskridge v. Glover, 5 Stew. & P. 264, 26 Am.
The case was tried by the court without the intervention of a jury; the finding of the court stands for the verdict of a jury. There was evidence to support the finding of the court as to the amount of the judgment. While there may have been evidence to support judgment for a less amount, we cannot revise the findings or judgment of the court, on this appeal, because they are supported by the evidence.
We are not prepared to say that there is any reversible error, and the judgment of the lower court is affirmed.
Affirmed.