Opinion by
Defendants made a written contract with Clover-dale Spring Co. on January 17, 1941, in which defendants agreed, inter alia, to furnish to seven named distributors, one of whom was the plaintiff, “all of their requirements of bottled Pepsi-Cola”. The contract was silent as to its duration and the sole question involved in the case is as to the period of the contract.
*540 For many years prior to 1941 Cloverdale Spring Co. had granted the defendant bottling rights on a royalty basis, retaining however, the right to sell Pepsi-Cola to wholesalers and distributors in a certain area. On January 17, 1941, Cloverdale and Confair entered into a written agreement by the terms of which Con-fair paid Cloverdale $22,500. in lieu of all royalty payments previously contracted for and Cloverdale gave up its distribution rights in Confair’s territory, thereby making Confair the exclusive bottler and distributor of Pepsi-Cola in the Williamsport area.
In order to protect Cloverdale’s old customers, the contract provided: “3. The Bottler further agrees to sell to the above mentioned seven (7) distributors all their requirements of bottled Pepsi-Cola at the price of sixty cents (60^) per case delivered to the distributors’ premises or at the distributors’ option at the price of fifty-seven cents (57$) per case at the Bottler’s platform in Williamsport, plus the prevailing deposit, contingent upon the above mentioned seven (7) distributors selling Pepsi-Cola for the same price and subject to the same terms and practices as the Bottler.”
The contract contained no provision as to the period of time defendants would provide plaintiff and other distributors “all of their requirements of bottled Pepsi-Cola”; and the contract did not require plaintiff to purchase any specific number of cases or bottles of Pepsi-Cola annually or to continue their purchases from the defendants for any period of time whatsoever. Furthermore, the plaintiff paid nothing and gave no consideration for this contract.
Defendants furnished all of plaintiff’s requirements during 1941. Plaintiff claimed that by January 1, 1942 and ever since he had built up his requirements to 100 cases of Pepsi-Cola per week. The retail selling *541 price was fixed by defendants at 80(5 a case, which, plaintiff claimed gave him a clear profit of 20‡ per case, alleging that his overhead was in no way increased by handling Pepsi-Cola and that he had no expenses in connection therewith. In 1942 defendants began reducing deliveries to the plaintiff and assuming plaintiff’s requirements were 100 cases a week, plaintiff would have been entitled to 2540 additional cases up to July 18, 1945.
On July 13, 1945, defendants notified plaintiff they would not furnish him any bottled Pepsi-Cola thereafter. On November 13, 1946, the defendants increased the retail price of Pepsi-Cola from 80(5 to 96(5 per case. This was necessitated by the war and rationing and the scarcity of materials and labor and the increased cost of materials and labor facts which were not only well known to everyone, but were proved in this case. The lower court found that the contract was not terminable at will, but remained in full force and effect so long as defendants “were situated as they then were, viz: on January 17, 1941”. The court thereupon awarded plaintiff damages at 20(5 a case for all the cases defendants had failed to deliver to plaintiff, based on plaintiff’s requirements of 100 cases a week from January 1, 1942 to November 13, 1946, or $3848.50, with interest and costs.
The lower court concluded that the situation of the defendants had changed on November 13, 1946, at which time they raised the retail selling price from 80(5 a case to 96(5 a case. Plaintiff thereupon took an appeal, contending that the contract which is silent as to its duration, is a contract for his life; that he is 69 years of age, with an expectancy of 12.11 years, so that until he is 80 years of age he is entitled to recover additional damages of 20(5 a case (with no deduction for overhead or expenses) for 100 cases a week for *542 an additional period of 12.11 years. Fortunately, the law is not so unjust.
While
Slonaker v. P. G. Publishing Co.,
Although plaintiff, as we have seen, gave no consideration for the contract on which he is suing as a third party beneficiary, and although he never contracted to purchase any cases or even bottles from defendants for any time whatsoever, he nevertheless contends that the defendants are bound to supply him with all his requirements for the balance of his life, although the contract contains no such provision. For this proposition he relies on
Nolle v. Mutual Union Brewing Co.,
We find no intention of the parties in the present case to compel the defendants to supply the plaintiff with all of plaintiff’s requirements of Pepsi-Cola for the balance of his life.
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
Italics ours.
