delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is an action of assumpsit, based upon a contract between the Virginia Coal and Iron Company (of which the plaintiff, the Stonega Coke and Coal Company, is the assignee) and the defendant, the Louisville and. Nashville Eailroad Company.
The case made by the last amended declaration, briefly stated, is that the Virginia Coal and Iron Company was the owner of very large and valuable coal mining lands in Wise county, which extended from Big Stone Gap to Norton, a distance of about twelve miles; that the Louisville and Nashville Eailroad Company had extended its line of road through the said property with the hope and expectation of transporting coal and coke which it expected would be mined and manufactured on the land; that the Virginia Coal and Iron Company had purchased the property, which was wholly undeveloped, as an investment, and was entirely indifferent about commencing its speedy development ; that after the railroad company had built its road it frequently importuned the coal and iron company to commence the development of its property and made divers propositions as to freight rates, etc., which it would give in case the coal and iron company did speedily develop its property, the result of which was that in the spring of 1895 the railroad company and the coal and iron company entered into a contract (whether in writing or not does not appear) which is set out in the declaration as follows: “ . . . whereby the said defendant company agreed that if the said Virginia Company would commence the development of the said property by opening coal mines and building coking plants thereon (and would continue to mine coal thereon and manufacture coke therefrom, either directly or by and through its lessees or assignees, and would build and maintain, or cause to be built and maintained, a con
The declaration further avers that acting upon the said agreement, the coal and iron company did, on its lands on the waters of Callahan creek (which do not exceed ten thousand acres), open coal mines, erect coke ovens and build a connecting line of road from the same to the railroad company’s main line at Appalachia, a distance of about four miles; that the coal and iron company afterwards, in the year 1902, built a branch line to another coking plant also located on the waters of Callahan creek; that from the time the said agreement was made, in the year 1895, until May 1, 1902, coal was mined and coke manufactured which was hauled free of charge by the railroad company to its main line from the coal mines and coking plants of the coal and iron company, as provided for by the said agreement; that in May, 1902, the coal and iron company leased to the plaintiff, the Stonega Coke and Coal Company the prop
To recover damages for this alleged breach of the contract, this action was instituted. The Circuit Court sustained a demurrer to the said amended declaration, and rendered a final judgment in favor of the railroad company. From that judgment this writ of error was awarded.
The first question to be considered is whether under the contract between the parties the defendant had the right to terminate the arrangement into which they had entered, upon reasonable notice. If it had, there can be no recovery in this case, and the demurrer was properly sustained.
The contract sued on was one for the rendition of services on the part of the railroad company There is nothing said in the agreement as to the time during which it should continue. Does it, when considered in connection with the circumstances under which it was made, furnish the means of determining its duration? This is essential, because when a contract calls for the rendition of services, if it is so far incomplete as that the period of its intended duration cannot be determined by a fair inference from its provisions either party is ordinarily at liberty to terminate it at will on giving reasonable notice of his intention to do so. This is the statement of the general rule as made by the court in Miss. Riv. Logging Co. v. Robson, 69 Fed. Rep. 773, 779, one of the cases chiefly relied on by the plaintiff to sustain its contention, and is sustained by the authorities.
While the court, in construing a contract, may take into view the circumstances under which it was made, yet when a breach
If it were admitted, as was said by Judge Strong in Coffin v. Landes, 46 Pa. St. 426, 432, “that neither of the parties contemplated a severance of the relation formed by the contract, at the will of the other party, it does not follow that we are at liberty to treat the agreement as contáining a covenant against it. That would be to make an expectation of results equivalent to a binding engagement that they should follow.” That was a case where one as agent of another contracted to sell lands of the latter in consideration of one-half the net proceeds of the sales, and there was no stipulation in the contract as to its duration. It was held that the principal had the right to terminate it at will.
In the case of Barney v. Indiana Ry. Co. (Ind.),
Baldwin v. Kansas City, &c., Ry. Co.,
See the following cases, where the principle controlling the courts in the cases cited above is recognized: Willcox, &c., Co. v. Ewins,
The cases chiefly relied on by the plaintiff to sustain its contention on the question under consideration are: Miss. Riv. Logging Co. v. Robson, supra, and Great Northern Ry. Co. v. Manchester, &c., Ry. Co., 5 DeGex, McNaughton & Gordon 138, 7 Eng. & Irish App. 550. The former of these cases, so far as it sustains the plaintiff’s contention, is in conflict with the weight of authority in this country, and besides was based largely upon the fact that the contract in that case was a settlement of past differences between the parties, and if the contract, the court said, could be terminated at pleasure by either party, it
The case of Great Northern, &c., Ry. Co. v. Manchester, &c., Ry. Co., in which the decree of the lower court was affirmed by the House of Lords, does not, as it seems to us, sustain the plaintiff’s contention. The agreement in that case,' which it was held was permanent and not determinable by either party upon notice, was a contract between two railway companies, by which it was provided that one of them should have running powers over the lines of the other,, subject to certain regulations. The chief consideration for the agreement was an advance of money by the company acquiring the running powers. The grounds ■upon which the House of Lords based its decision were that while there was no express contract as to its duration, all the provisions of the agreement showed that it was a permanent and not a terminable agreement; that the running powers acquired by it might have been obtained through the Boárd of Trade under the English railway act without the consent of the other company, which powers when obtained would have been continuing and could not have been terminated; and that the agreement in no way resembled contracts of partnership or of hiring and service.
We are of opinion that there is no error in the judgment complained of and that it must be affirmed.
Affirmed.
