73 So. 12 | Ala. | 1916
The original complaint in this case was for breach of a contract by which defendant agreed to take from plaintiff at a stipulated price as many heart cross-ties of certain dimensions as plaintiff could accumulate at Moss Point for 12 months after date.
This contract is set out in full in the report of a former appeal of this case (Am. Tie, etc., Co. v. Naylor Lbr. Co., 190 Ala. 319, 67 South. 246), wherein it was held that a complaint based thereon did not state a cause of action, and could not support a judgment, because the contract was void for uncertainty as to the number of ties to be delivered. From that conclusion we see no reason for now departing.
It was further declared on that appeal that if the complaint had alleged that prior to the time defendant notified plaintiff it would not further perform the contract, plaintiff had accumulated at Moss Point, under and pursuant to the contract, a certain number of cross-ties of the specified quality and dimensions, a substantial cause of action would have been stated. The complaint has now been amended by the addition of several new counts.
Count 14, after reciting compliance with the contract by both parties for several months, and alleging plaintiff’s readiness to continue to do so on and. after defendant’s repudiation of the contract on March 19, 1913, adds the following: “And the plaintiff says that at the time of the execution of said contract it was then and there understood and agreed by and between the plaintiff and the defendant that the ties stipulated and named in said contract should be furnished by the plaintiff to the defendant by the plaintiff’s going into the market in the Moss Point territory along the lines of railway adjoining Moss Point and contiguous thereto and purchasing cross-ties from various tie manufacturers
The theory of this count is that, if plaintiff, pursuant to an understanding or arrangement with defendant, went into the market and contracted with tie manufacturers for definite quantities of ties, to be appropriated to his contract with defendant, and if these ties were actually manufactured and made ready and available for assembly and delivery at Moss Point — though not actually accumulated there — this was such a performance of the contract on his part, before notice of its repudiation by defendant, as to fasten on defendants a corresponding obligation to accept and pay for such ties; and that such repudiation before their assembly at Moss Point, the place of delivery, excused plaintiff from the duty of actually assembling and tendering them to defendant at that place, ■ ...
We think the trial court did not err in sustaining the demurrer to the fourteenth and fifteenth counts, some of the grounds of which aptly point out the defects noted.
We do not overlook the arguments and citations of authority found in the brief for appellant, but will merely remark that,, though ingenious and plausible, they do not fit the instant case.
Let the judgment be affirmed.
Affirmed.