104 So. 645 | Ala. | 1925
The first appeal is reported as Moore v. Williamson,
At the second trial plaintiff added a count for work and labor done in the sale of land, and it was sought by plea 4 to show a modification of the written contract declared upon. Demurrer was sustained to the plea. The fact of a subsequent revocation or modification of an executory contract is required to be presented by special plea, as was sought to be done by defendants. Newton v. Brooks,
The bill of exceptions declares that, as to the witness Nora Moore, the trial court declined to permit her to answer that the trade with Daniel Bros. fell through, and whether "Daniel Brothers ever asked for or received possession of the property." It is shown that the witness Markham testified:
"I heard a conversation between Mr. Williamson and Mr. Moore at the gin at Ryland about selling Mr. Moore's land to Daniel Bros. Mr. Moore said: 'Suppose them niggers throw the land back on me — you have got me and wife tied for $900.' Mr. Williamson said: 'Jim, I would be the last man to think about doing that; if they don't keep the land you don't owe me a cent.' "
The testimony of W. I. Taylor was:
"I had a conversation with Mr. Williamson, the plaintiff, about the sale of the land to Daniel Bros.; that was at the gin at Ryland, during the ginning season in 1921, I believe. The trade had been made before that; I don't know what time. We were out in the gin yard, and Mr. Williamson said it was rumored around that these negroes were going to back out on J. Z., and he said that J. Z. might want to pay, and he said he would not do J. Z. that way. By J. Z. I mean Mr. Moore. He said if they did not take the place he did not want none."
His reference to "Mr. Williamson" meant the plaintiff, and "J. Z." was one of the defendants. The plaintiff's motion to exclude this evidence was granted over defendants' objection.
Was the defense sought to be made by the plea available in bar of a recovery?
The question as to a subsequent verbal waiver unsupported by any stated consideration was propounded without answer on former trial. It is now necessary that we consider the special instances as to what has been held to constitute a sufficient consideration for a secondary contract.
In New Farley Nat. Bk. v. Montgomery County,
In Maness v. Henry,
From the foregoing authorities the question now for consideration is involved in the difficulty in making application of the general rule obtaining in the premises. There are many authorities to the effect that any unperformed contract, bilateral in the advantages and obligations given and assumed, by mutual assent, before a breach of it has occurred, may be modified or altered within the law, without any new, independent, or distinct consideration for the change, other than that of mutual assent. This is illustrated by the decisions in George v. Roberts,
"While it may be true that a liability manifested by a contract in writing cannot be discharged by a mere parol executory agreement, it is equally true that a contract in writing, whether under seal or not, executory in all its terms, involving mutual duties, may, by a subsequent parol agreement be modified, altered, or rescinded; and no other consideration is necessary to support such agreement than the mutual assent of the parties."
In that case the modified contract, subsequently made, and which was considered, was for the furnishing of logs to a mill for a period of eighteen months. Deliveries to be made on behalf of the defendant were to be executed by the third parties named, and relieved the defendant of that duty and liability for a breach of such third parties. *277
There are many other decisions in this jurisdiction to support the text of the foregoing authorities. For example, Elliott v. Howison,
In Mylin v. King,
"This was competent to be done, the law being that parties may, at pleasure, alter, modify, or rescind a contract, without any new consideration therefor, if the alteration, modification, or rescission is supported by their mutual assent. 3 Brick. Dig. 132, § 146; Hembree v. Glover,
In the Hembree Case (
The early cases support the announcement of the foregoing general rule. In Burkham v. Mastin,
There are authorities in this jurisdiction to the effect that a unilateral secondary or subsequent contract and modification of contract, not founded upon a consideration, is nudum pactum, for that it is an established principle that the doing or undertaking to do only that which one is already under a legal obligation to do by his contract is no consideration for the secondary, subsequent, or new agreement. Stated otherwise, the consideration required to support a new agreement by the parties to the original contract, by which they modify one or more material provisions or particulars of their former contract, or replace it with a substitute, must be reciprocal. New Farley Nat. Bk. v. Montgomery County,
The general authorities are in accord with this line of decisions of our court. The rule and applications thereof have been thus stated:
"* * * [1] The power and right of the parties to a contract to cancel, change, or replace it by a new one are beyond dispute; [2] that for the new agreement some consideration is requisite; [3] that consideration, where a contract is rescinded, may consist simply of mutual releases; [4] when it is changed in unimportant details without impairing its main obligations and purposes, nothing more than mutual consent is necessary; [5] and when it is explained, supplemented by additional matter not covered, or corrected as to errors, the original consideration is enough for the new agreement; [6] when a contract is altered in some or all of its essential features, or is supplanted by a substitute, the secondary contract must have a new consideration, which may be, of course, the release of old obligations, the lightening of former burdens, the according of new benefits or advantages, but if all the benefits are conferred upon one party, and all the burdens put upon the other, a consideration will be lacking, and the new contract will be void; [7] either party may waive any right or benefit he may have by a contract, and if the other party acts upon the faith of the waiver, the question of consideration is out of the case, upon the doctrine of estoppel; [8] if a new agreement abrogates, alters, or supplants an old one, and is fully executed by performance on both sides, inquiry into its consideration is closed; [9] as to what constitutes a consideration, especially as to what constitutes a sufficient consideration, for a secondary contract, can be understood only by a great multitude of special instances." (The division into subheadings is supplied.) L.R.A. 1915B, p. 70.
The importance of the rule, the difficulty in application, or the determination of what constitutes a sufficient consideration for a secondary contract made it necessary that we illustrate, by the foregoing special instances and circumstances on which rested our many decisions on the question, from Langford v. Cummings,
We observe that our cases have proceeded from the English rule. In the case of Cuff v. Penn (1813, Eng.) 1 Maule Selwyn's Rep. 21, the defendant had by written contract purchased of plaintiffs "300 hogs of bacon," to be delivered at fixed times and in specified quantities; after a part of the bacon had been delivered, defendant requested the plaintiffs not to press the delivery of the residue, and to which the plaintiffs assented. This was understood "as a parol dispensation of the performance of the original contract," in respect to the times of the deliveries, which was not affected by the statute of frauds. The defendant was held liable for not accepting the residue within a reasonable time. Lord Ellenborough, C. J., said:
"It is admitted that there was an agreed substitution of other days than those originally specified for its performance. * * * Suppose a delivery of live hogs instead of bacon had been substituted and accepted, might not that have been given in evidence as accord and satisfaction? So here the parties have chosen to take a substituted performance. * * *"
The contract here declared upon is set out in the report of the former appeal (
The testimony of Mr. Reed shows that the interlineation of the contract by the insertion of Daniel Bros. (and otherwise as interlined) was to make the same speak the truth, and was done before the contract was signed by the parties.
The defendants, for reply, by said plea undertook to say that, while the contract was executed, in the sense that the amount therein stated was fixed by the parties and to become due as commissions from Moore to Williams, yet that stated consideration was dependent upon the consummation of the sale of Moore's lands to Daniel Bros., and that said sale was not consummated. The true consideration may always be shown by parol, except only the character thereof may not be changed. Corley v. Vizard,
The judgment of the circuit court is reversed, and the cause is remanded.
Reversed and remanded.
ANDERSON, C. J., and SOMERVILLE and BOULDIN, JJ., concur.