Rozier v. St. Louis & San Francisco Railroad

147 Mo. App. 290 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1910

GOODE, J.

This plaintiff is receiver of the Ste. Genevieve Quarry & Construction Company, having been appointed and duly qualified during the October term, 1906, of the circuit court of Ste. Genevieve county. Late in February, 1907, he entered into a contract with defendant to furnish and deliver to it all the dirt and stone he could take out of the quarry of the company of which he was receiver, from and after the date of the contract until December 31, 1907. The petition alleges the railroad company agreed to pay plaintiff twelve cents a cubic yard for the dirt and sixty cents a cubic yard for the stone, hut plaintiff himself testified there was no specific agreement about the price of the dirt, as what the railroad company wanted was the rock and it agreed to take the dirt in order to get the rock. Plaintiff testified he told J. H. Elliott, superintendent of the railroad company, plaintiff could take out from ten to fifteen cars of material a day and, too, that each carload would average about thirty cubic yards of material. Elliott said the roadmaster, Kelly, would arrange about the price of dirt. Plaintiff stated to Elliott as follows: He (plaintiff) did not desire to go to the expense of opening the quarry and buying machinery for it unless there was a certainty of the company taking the output. A lease on the quarry until December 31, 1907, was the only asset of the Ste. Genevieve Quarry & Construction Company. It would take a great deal of money to prepare to get out the material and plaintiff would have to advance it. Elliott told him not to be uneasy, for the company would take all the rock and dirt plaintiff could get out. A witness who was present during the conversation testified substantially as plaintiff, only he said nothing about the agreement between plaintiff and Elliott referring to dirt, as well as stone; that plaintiff said he wanted the railroad company to take the rock which would be quarried and furnish cars for it. This witness’ testimony will be shown best by this excerpt: “Mr. Rozier says, ‘I cannot go ahead with *296this unless I have the assurance you will take this rock,’ and Mr. Elliott says, ‘Sure, we need the rock and I will take it,’ ” further saying the company had about $30,000 to spend for such material, but he would have to divide the amount with another quarry, but would give plaintiff the major part of it; Elliott said: “I am satisfied I can give you a majority; I will take all you can get out.” Elliott denied making the contract as testified, and the substance of his version was he only agreed to take such quantity of stone as he wished. Plaintiff equipped the quarry, began to operate it early in March, and from then on until the latter part of. September, furnished material consisting of dirt and stone to the company, and it accepted the material as it was taken from the quarry to the amount of $11,000. Elliott then notified plaintiff the company would take no more, and as plaintiff said, gave him “about fifteen minutes to quit work” just when the dirt had been stripped from the quarry and plaintiff had got down to the rock and was ready to work it. Plaintiff said he did not “intend to fool with dirt” from that on, did not need to handle any more dirt; further saying his claim in this case was for rock and not for dirt. He estimated the cost of getting the rock out was forty cents a cubic yard, which would net him a profit of twenty cents. The purpose of this action is to recover the profit which would have been earned by performing the contract from the time defendant refused to take any more material to the date of the expiration of the contract on December 31st.

In the instructions granted for plaintiff, the jury were authorized to return a verdict in his favor if they found defendant had agreed to take and pay for all the rock and dirt taken out within the period mentioned, furnished and delivered to defendant from the quarry of the Ste. Genevieve Quarry & Construction Company at an agreed price per cubic yard, and further found defendant refused, before the expiration of the time, to take rock and dirt, and by reason of this refusal to *297take and pay for rock and dirt, plaintiff bad sustained damage. Tbe other instructions also proceeded on the theory that the contract was for both rock and dirt.

The jury returned a verdict for plaintiff, assessing his damages at $3500 and judgment having been entered for that sum, defendant appealed.

Defendant’s counsel strike at the foundation of the judgment, contending the alleged agreement declared on lacked mutuality and was too indefinite to constitute a valid contract, for which reasons it is nonenforceable. The supposed want of certainty consists of failure to state what quantity of material was to be furnished and taken and the price of the dirt. We regard the agreement as sufficiently certain to be a valid contract. The term during which material was to be supplied was fixed and ran from the date of the agreement in February to the expiration, December 31, 1907, of the leasehold plaintiff held. The price of rock was fixed at sixty cents a cubic yard, and though no price was agreed on at first for the dirt, the parties by their conduct fixed that price at twelve cents a cubic yard. The quantity to be furnished and accepted was all the material, or, in any event, all the rock plaintiff could take out of the quarry during the period mentioned; possibly subject to the exhaustion of the money available for the purchase of such material. Moreover plaintiff estimated with Elliott the output of the quarry, fixing it at twenty to twenty-five carloads a day of thirty cubic yards each. The other element said to be lacking and needed to give the agreement enforceable certainty and also to give it mutuality of obligation, was a stipulation by plaintiff binding himself to supply a minimum quantity of material. It is .argued he was not bound to furnish any ; not “a pebble-stone or a spade full of dirt.” counsel for defendant say. This argument, the facts considered, is more specious than sound. Elliott, as superintendent of defendant company, had been taking material from that quarry before the Quarry Company *298passed into tbe bands of a receiver and was well aware of its average output. In fact wbat tbe receiver was trying to do after be took charge, was to get a renewal of tbe arrangement, wbicb bad been previously carried out between defendant and tbe Quarry Company. At tbe time tbe contract was formed, both parties knew wbat quantity of material would be taken out and plaintiff became bound by bis agreement to turn out wbat be could by reasonable diligence and defendant bound to take the output. [Excelsior Wrapping Co. v. Messinger (Wisc.), 93 N. W. 459.] Moreover, when plaintiff was notified in September defendant would take no more material, tbe quarry bad been worked by plaintiff and deliveries from it made to defendant for more than six months, and its capacity thereby demonstrated, a fact wbicb likens this case to Louisville, etc., R. R. v. Coyle, 8 L. R. A. (n. s.) 433, wherein it was held a contract wbicb might have lacked mutuality at first became binding by performance. That case is very like this, as is also Herrick v. Wardwell, 58 Ohio St. 299, wbicb was decided on tbe same principle. There is not present here tbe fact of either plaintiff or defendant having tbe right or option to make tbe quantity of material furnished or accepted as small as might be wished, down to nothing. It is rather tbe instance of two parties who are perfectly familiar with tbe capacity of a business, agreeing with each other and one undertaking to furnish tbe product up to capacity, and tbe other to take and pay for it, wbicb agreement bad been largely carried out before one party elected to stop performance. We think by tbe weight of modern authority such an understanding is a valid and effective contract, and cite as relevant though not so much in point as the two cases last cited, tbe following: National, etc., Co. v. National, etc., Co., 155 Fed. 77, 11 L. R. A. (n. s.) 713; Loudenbeck v. Phosphate Co., 121 Fed. 298; Wells v. Alexander (N. Y.), 15 L. R. A. 218; Cold Blast, etc., Co. v. Bolton Nut Co., 57 L. R. A. 692; Lumber Co. v. White *299Breast Coal Co., 160 Ill. 85; Great Northern R. R. Co. v. Withan, L. R. 9 C. P. 16. The case in hand is to he distinguished from Campbell v. Am. Handle Co., 117 Mo. App. 19, 94 S. W. 815, where there was no agreement to sell the whole yield of the factory, hut simply to sell and deliver to the defendant timbers of certain length without in any way designating the quantity.

Just what the terms of the contract entered into by the parties were must be determined by the triers of the fact, and it is material to determine them accurately. If Elliott’s testimony is true, he only bound himself to take material at his pleasure, with the right to cease taking it when he wished. If this was the agreement, there can be no recovery of damages, for defendant might stop taking at any time. The evidence for plaintiff presented the possibility of the agreement having been made in either of two forms of different consequences. It might be inferred from the testimony of some of the witnesses for plaintiff, that though Elliott agreed to take what rock could be quarried during the stipulated period, he qualified his agreement with the proviso he would only take from plaintiff material to the amount of the major part of $80,000 which he had on hand to expend for dirt and rock. If this was the understanding, inasmuch as Elliott actually took $11,-000 of material and paid for it, he was only bound thereafter to take a quantity, the price of which would exceed $4000 by any sum. If, hoAvever, as other testimony, went to prove, he agreed to take all the material plaintiff could get out during the period, he was bound to do so even though he mentioned he would divide the available funds in his hands between plaintiff and another quar-ryman.

All the instructions for plaintiff proceeded on the theory defendant was obligated by the contract to take all the dirt and rock taken out of the quarry by plaintiff, though the latter testified he made no claim for future profits which might have been earned on dirt. We are *300asked to bold this was harmless error because plaintiff testified he had the rock stripped of dirt and thereafter would have tendered only rock. The testimony was not uniform to that effect. Some of plaintiff’s witnesses gave testimony which looked the other way. One of them said when work was stopped in September, the quarry was in pretty good shape to get out stone as a great deal of the bluff had been cleared up; that they did not get out all the dirt before the quarry stopped, but the quarry was in pretty good shape. Another witness testified a great deal of dirt had been stripped off and there would have been little to handle when the quarry was closed down. In view of such testimony we are unwilling to hold defendant could not have been prejudiced by authorizing the jury to assess damages “for the net profit Avhich he (plaintiff) lost by reason of defendant’s refusal to accept and pay for dirt and stone in compliance with his contract.” The court further instructed “net profit” meant the difference between the contract price “of said stone and dirt and the cost of quarrying and delivering the same on board defendant’s cars.” The verdict was for a considerable sum, and we are unwilling to say in the face of the instructions, the jury allowed nothing as damages for the profit they believed plaintiff would have made on dirt after September, but assessed damages only for the profit he would have earned on rock.

The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.

All concur.