138 Ala. 235 | Ala. | 1902
This action is brought to recover damaages for the breach of a contract which it is alleged was entered into between the plaintiff and defendant, whereby the latter agreed to deliver to the former .seven hundred cases of canned corn at and for a stipulated price. The important question presented is whether the minds of the parties ever concurred as to the terms of the alleged contract. In short, whether the plaintiff bound himself to receive the corn and whether the defendant was obligated to deliver it. For if there was no aggregate mentum — no meeting of the two minds in the thing to be done — neither of them was bound, and there was, of course, no agreement for a sale.
Negotiations or proposals between parties looking to a sale, are never obligatory until they are accepted. And so long as an important term of a proposal remains unaccepted or unagreed to by both parties, their minds have never met — there is lacking that element of mutual
It is scarcely necessary to point out that the plaintiff did not unequivocally say, that he would take the 700 cases. Besides he injected into the proposition made to him another important term or stipulation which had to be accepted by defendant before the latter could be held to have bound himself. That term was in substance that defendant should obligate himself to guarantee the corn to be equally as good as the sample sent him. The defendant rejected this, as he had the right to do, and can-celled the order which he had booked for the 700 cases. There was some further correspondence between them ■relating to the refusal of the defendant to enter into the contract, which, however, is not material to be here noticed, since it does not involve the making of a contract.
We feel constrained to hold that the parties never reached the point of an agreement and the plaintiff is not entitled to recover. A judgment will be here entered for defendant.
Reversed and rendered.