280 Pa. 379 | Pa. | 1924
Opinion by
Plaintiffs, vendees of a quantity of sulphate of copper, sued the vendors to recover damages for failure to deliver in accordance with the contract. The court below entered a nonsuit and assigned as its reason plaintiff’s failure to perform their part, which called for the furnishing of a letter of credit, whereupon defendants elected to rescind.
Under date of January 3, 1916, defendants wrote plaintiffs offering to sell the article in question on terms stated. These terms not being acceptable to plaintiffs, a telephone conversation with defendants was had whereby an arrangement on terms satisfactory to both was reached and embodied in a letter from plaintiffs to defendants, dated January 5, 1916, to which defendants replied under date of January 7, 1916, acknowledging receipt of the letter and advising that a letter of credit would be arranged for within three or .four days. Delay followed in procuring the credit and on January 12th defendants telegraphed plaintiffs stating they could hold the matter open no longer, to which plaintiffs replied by wire saying the letter of credit would be ready by three o’clock January 13th. At five minutes past three on that day, the credit letter not having been received, defendants wired plaintiffs: “Deal absolutely irrevocably off and renewal impossible.” On the following day plaintiffs called on defendants’ manager and remonstrated in regard to his action saying if another day’s time had been given the letter of credit would have been obtained, to which the manager replied “All right, go ahead and let us have the credit.” Pursuant thereto, on January 18th plaintiffs’ bankers wrote defendants advising they were prepared to accept a draft amounting to $31,000 against the bill of lading for the merchandise in ques
A careful analysis of the above correspondence, in the light of testimony submitted in behalf of plaintiffs, shows the original offer of January 3d, to which defendants referred in the last letter above mentioned, was not accepted because of the clause limiting the destination of the merchandise to Italy, plaintiffs desiring to buy it for export generally. The letter of January 5th indicates the goods were sold “only for export and not for domestic use” and this, with defendants’ reply of the 7th, constituted the complete agreement and eliminates the letter of January 3d from the contract. This raises the question whether the original letters of January 5th and 7th, and supplemented by the subsequent letters and telegrams which finally culminated in the modified letter of credit, under date of January 20th, embodying all the changes suggested by defendants, constituted a complete contract.
Had the matter ended with the telegram of January 13th calling the deal “absolutely irrevocably off” no question could have arisen. Plaintiffs were clearly in default at that time. The rescission was voluntarily modified, however, by defendants advising plaintiffs to “go ahead and get the credit.” The testimony of plaintiffs that they did so is fully corroborated by the two letters from their bankers. The terms and conditions imposed by defendants as the price of their waiver were fully complied with and the delivery of the revised letter of credit of January 20th, embodying all the terms stipulated, constituted a complete agreement, as the minds of
The telegram of January 13th was followed by further negotiations amounting to a waiver of the rescission. These negotiations were oral, however, and we find an absence of any further writings from defendants until the letter of January 20th, which contains nothing in itself to show a waiver of the previous rescission but leaves all negotiations leading up to the reinstatement of the contract to parol evidence. “It is a general rule that the reference, relation, or connection of the writings to or with each other must appear on their face. The writings must contain either an express reference to each other or internal evidence of their unity, relation or connection”: 27 C. J. 261, sec. 309. This general rule was recognized in Manufacturers Light & Heat Co. v. Lamp, 269 Pa. 517, where, after stating that all essentials of an agreement must appear in writing, we said further (page 520) : “If not complete in itself, and oral evidence be required to supply omissions, then the whole is reduced to parol, and, though equity might reform, it can no longer specifically enforce: Safe Deposit & Trust Co. v. Diamond Coal & Coke Co., 234 Pa. 100; Rineer v. Collins, 156 Pa. 342. It is true that the statute may be satisfied where the memorandum is made up of several papers, which together furnish the essential terms; but the separate writings must bear internal reference one to the other. In such case, oral testimony may be offered to identify and show the connection between them (Title G. & S. Co. v. Lippincott, 252 Pa. 112), but such evidence cannot be used to supply proof of the terms of the contract itself: Moore v. Eisaman, 201 Pa. 190. Illustrations of the application of the rule are found in Llewellyn v. Sunnyside Coal Co., 242 Pa. 517; Weisenberger v. Huebner, 264 Pa.
The judgment is affirmed.