(After stating the facts.)
That a promise by one, with nothing in return, is void, is axiomatic. Bishop on Contracts (2d ed.), 35. Difficulty has been -found* however, in the application of this axiomatic, elementary -principle in certain cases, because of the peculiar facts of the cases •which either took or seemed to take the peculiar case from out the -■operation pf the rule. But in the present case, so far as it is sought ■to have the instrument under consideration declared a valid and 'binding contract of purchase and sale, there are no facts to prevent -the application of the rule. If Simpson & Harper, who are now .seeking to enforce the alleged contract, had for any reason seen fit-to decline to order shingles manufactured at the defendants’ mill, the defendants could not have compelled them to receive and pay -for the shingles, for the very simple reason that they had never .-.agreed or promised to do so.
In Black v. Maddox, supra, it was held that a consideration of one dollar, the instrument relied on being under seal, was sufficient to support the option. And in Mathews Slate Co. v. New Empire Slate Co., 122 Fed. 972, it was said, “This court is of the opinion that if two persons enter into a contract in writing under seal, by which one party, in consideration of $1, the payment of which is acknowledged, agrees to sell and convejr to the other party within ..a specified time certain lands and premises, on payment by the other party of a specified consideration, such contract is valid and binding.”
The instrument sued on in the present case, the same being under ■seal, contains the following language: “The consideration of this Agreement is .as followsone dollar cash in hand this day paid, the receipt of which is'hereby acknowledged by the party of the first part, and the faithful performance of the agreement hereinafter ■specified and which is hereby made a part of this contract. Said party of the first part hereby sells their entire shingle output [local wagon trade excepted] from March 1st to September 1st, [1905], 'for No. Is at $2.00, and March 1st to October 1st, for No. 2s at 75
It may be that the terms of the instrument are not perfectly clear us to when the orders for shingles were to be given, and the time within which the offer was to remain open. But if the instrument be ambiguous in this respect, parol evidence, which does not take from or vary the terms of the writing, is admissible to show the meaning put upon it by both parties at the time of its execution, and the court will also hear evidence as to the attending circumstances, in order to explain the ambiguity. Civil Code, §§3673, 3675; Armistead v. McGuire, 46 Ga. 232 ; Novelty Hat Co. v. Wiseberg, 126 Ga. 800 (55 S. E. 923). And if the instrument, embracing the proposal or offer to sell, is silent as to the time given for acceptance, the offer will be construed to remain open for a reasonable time. Stone v. Harmon, 31 Minn. 512 (19 N. W. 88) ; Larmon v. Jordan, 56 Ill. 204 ; Fitzpatrick v. Woodruff, 96 N. Y. 565.
Special demurrers as well as general demurrers were filed by the defendants; but it i^ inferable from the order passed in the case that ■only the questions raised by the general demurrer were decided by the court below, and we have not undertaken to pass upon the.questions made by the special demurrers, and in remanding the case have left open such questions as were made by the special demurrers to be determined.
Judgment reversed.