101 P. 957 | Idaho | 1909
This action was instituted by the appellants for the recovery of $1,060, claimed to be due them as a balance for certain merchandise sold to the respondent between October 10th and November 17, 1905. The defendant denied the indebtedness and the ease was tried to the court without a jury, and findings and judgment were entered in favor of the defendant. The appeal is from the judgment and an order denying a motion for a new trial. This action is the result of a dispute which arose between the appellants and respondent over the purchase of a bill of machinery. The facts essential to the determination of this case are as follows:
In the month of October, 1905, the appellants furnished respondent with a list of tools and machinery for a planing-mill and sash and door factory, which they proposed to sell to respondent for $2,825 f. o. b. Portland. The respondent on the same day appears to have accepted the offer. Later, and on November 3d, respondent’s manager, George Clithero, wrote appellants at Portland ordering a 48-inch three drum sander at $1,250 f. o. b. Portland, to come with the car of machinery previously ordered. Clithero, as manager for the respondent company, seems to have been figuring on the purchase and installation of machinery for operating a mill and factory in Boise, and subsequent to the previous orders appears to have concluded that they would need still other machinery, and that it would also be necessary to change the previous order as to some of the machinery, getting different and heavier material in some instances. He accordingly prepared a list of the tools, machinery and furnishings his company wanted to purchase, and went to Portland and called on the appellants’ salesman at their place of business, and submitted the complete list, which included most of the articles and machinery covered by the previous orders and such changes as were desired. This list contained some fifty or sixty items. He requested the appellants’ salesman to go over the list ■ and give him the total price for which appellants would sell respondent the entire bill of goods. On the afternoon of November 17th, appellants’
“Nov. 17, 1905.
“Coast Lumber Co., George Clithero, Mgr., Boise, Idaho.
“Dear Sir: Your order for machines and extras as it now stands with us comprises the following list of machinery:
“The above equipment totals approximately $5,134.80. On our original contract we estimated and charged you for 24,000 lbs. of freight to bring same f. o. b. Boise. The additions which you have just made will bring the weight approximately 40,000 lbs. but whatever the exact weight is in excess of the 24,000 we will charge you at the carload rate.' We would suggest that you pay the freight at your end of the line as goods arrive, thus obviating any chance of a misunderstanding, and when it comes to settlement that you charge us back with the 24,000 lbs. of freight at 79c. Any points that are not entirely clear.to you should be glad to have you take same up at any time.
“Yours truly,
“TATUM & BOWEN.
“By M. R. C.”
Clithero testifies that he asked Colby at the time what he meant by the use of the word “approximately,” and Colby answered: “The only thing we cannot figure out is the size of the pulleys.” That he thereupon asked Colby: “How much difference will that make?” and Colby answered: “From three to four dollars.” Clithero thereupon replied: “That is all right; you can ship these goods.” Clithero returned to Boise, and on December 13th received one carload of machinery. The other carload was received in Boise on December 28th. On December 18th, five days after the first carload of machinery reached Boise, Clithero received several invoices from Tatum & Bowen, aggregating about the sum of $6,194.84. Clithero testifies that he did not take the time to figure up these several invoices to see if they corresponded with his contract until sometime from
“Boise, Idaho, Dec. 23, 1905.
“Messrs. Tatum & Bowen, Portland, Oregon.
“Dear Sirs:
“Please find our check for..............$3,890.09
“Discount at 3 per cent................ 120.51
“Freight on 24,000 lbs. at 79c.......... 189.60
4,200.00
“Total credit to our account, $4,200.00. There seems to be an overcharge in your invoice. Please refer to your estimate of November 17th. As soon as you get this straightened out and the balance of machinery, etc., here we will send you balance of our account.
“GEO. CLITHERO, Mgr.”
It would seem from the reply of Tatum & Bowen under date of December 27th that Clithero or his company must have also written appellants on December 22d. The reply of December 27th is as follows:
“Portland, Oregon, Dec. 27, 1905.
“Coast Lum. Co., Boise, Idaho.
“Gentlemen: We beg to acknowledge receipt of your letter of the 22d and 23d inst., and have placed to your credit the several items aggregating $4,200.00.
“In regard to our estimate of November 17th would state that we have looked the same over and it is evident that our Mr. Colby did not get all the items, or what we think by reference to his papers which he has kept, is that he made an error in his addition when making up the approximate price as per ours of the 17th uf November. If you will refer to our invoices you will find that we have not charged you with anything that does not belong there and that the prices charged are those agreed upon and quoted you. The invoices were made from the original entries and therefore cannot be wrong. We think if you will look everything over you will see that our invoices were correct. Our letter of*477 the 17th of November in any event was only an approximation.
“As regards the rate, the correct rate to Boise is 85e. 79c. is the rate Mr. Colby obtained to Caldwell and we think he must have made an error as he told you the rate to Boise was the latter amount.
“Yours truly,
“TATUM & BOWEN.
“By E.
“F. F. S.”
In answer to Tatum & Bowen’s letter of December 27th, Clithero wrote them on December 30th in part as follows:
“Boise, Idaho, Dec. 30, 1905.
“Tatum & Bowen, Portland, Oregon.
“Dear Sirs: In your letter of the 27th inst. you state that if we will refer to your invoices, we will find that you have not charged us for anything that does not belong there, and at prices agreed and quoted us. Now the fact is that you never quoted us on but two or three machines in the entire purchase. In the first bill sold to us by Mr.. Colby, I did not know the price of a single machine. I asked Mr. Colby to carry out the prices but he refused to do so and said that he was making me better prices than he would if he had to itemize the bill.....”
The letter from Tatum & Bowen of Dec. 27th appears to have heen written by someone other than Colby. Later all the papers and correspondence appear to have been referred to Colby, and on January 2, 1906, he wrote Mr. Clithero personally a letter of considerable length, parts of which are as follows:
“Portland, Ore., Jan. 2, 1906.
“Mr. George Clithero, Manager Coast Lum. Co., Boise, Idaho.
“Dear Sir: The firm has turned over to me the letters and papers pertaining to the goods which the writer sold you in an effort to trace out the very unfortunate mistake which was evidently made in closing with you the time you were in Portland. It of course goes without saying that we on both sides did everything possible to have the matter thor*478 oughly understood, and so many of the items were changed or altered and heavier machines substituted to meet conditions which arose after the original contract was signed that we used special pains to keep the matter straight. We have taken all the papers pertaining to this subject which fortunately we had kept from my first estimates to you at Boise down to our final signing at Portland. We have gone over these papers carefully from beginning to end and find that the mistake lies undoubtedly in the fact that the writer made mistake in his addition, not carrying a certain figure to the next column when we should.....”
The appellants have prosecuted this action on the theory that their salesman, Colby, made a mistake in computing the prices of the various articles included in the bill, and that instead of being $5,134.80, it should have been $6,194.80, and that on account of such mistake the minds of the contracting parties never met' on the contract price, and that' respondent was therefore liable to pay appellants the price at which the machinery was invoiced to- it. Respondent, on the contrary, contends that an express contract was entered into whereby the bill of goods was to be sold to it for approximately $5,431.84, and that it was thoroughly understood that the word “approximately” as used in this contract should not make a difference or variance of more than “three or four dollars.” It is also worthy of note at this point to observe that Colby does not absolutely deny stating to Clithero that by the use of the word “approximately” he did not mean that there would be a difference of more than “three or four dollars.” He testifies, however, that he does not remember making such a statement. Counsel for appellants, in support of their contention, place special reliance on Mummenhoff v. Randall, 19 Ind. App. 44, 49 N. E. 40, Mitchell v. McBee, 1 McMull. (S. C.) 267, 36 Am. Dec. 264, and Rupley v. Daggett, 74 Ill. 351.
In the first ease above cited, Randall wrote Mummenhoff Co. from Oxford, Michigan; quoting prices on vegetables, and, among other things, quoted potatoes at fifty-five cents per bushel. The stenographer, however, who took the dictation,
In Mitchell v. McBee, a firm in South Carolina ordered goods from a New York firm. When the goods came they were not all of the class or kind of goods that had been ordered. At the time of the receipt of the goods, the purchasers also received an invoice stating the prices charged for the articles. The purchasers received and accepted the goods, and the court held that having received the goods and appropriated them to their own use they would be liable for the goods at the invoice price.
In Rupley v. Daggett, the parties were attempting to make a trade for a horse. The owner of the horse asked the purchaser $165 for the horse. The purchaser understood him to
In the Indiana and Illinois cases the owners of the property never in fact quoted the price to the purchasers for which they sought to hold the goods. In the one case the stenographer had misquoted the price to the purchaser, and the purchaser was so informed before receiving or accepting the goods. To have received them after being informed of such mistake and retained them without paying the true price quoted would have been a fraud on the vendor. In the other case, the owner of the horse actually quoted the price at $165, and he was not responsible for the vendee’s misunderstanding, or not wanting to understand, the price as really given.
In the South Carolina ease the purchasers received and accepted the goods, and appropriated them to their own use, although they were not the goods ordered. They were held bound by the invoice price, the court saying that they might have returned the goods if they did not want them at the invoice price, but that they would not be allowed to compel the owner to part with his goods at a price unsatisfactory to him.
In the case at bar the appellants’ salesman, who stood in the place of appellants themselves, actually quoted the price to respondent, and the contract was made on the figures
This action is not prosecuted for the correction of a mistake in a contract, but is rather brought on the theory that the contract was not actually made, and that the goods were rather sold by appellants and received by respondent on general invoice. The evidence, however, shows that they did make a contract, or at least attempted to make one, and the decisive question to be determined here is: Did their minds meet on the price of this order of goods? For the purposes of this case it may be conceded that a mistake was made by appellants’ salesman in computing the prices of the several items, and that had he discovered the mistake at the time, he would have quoted a higher price than the price given on November 17th. It must also be admitted that the respondent was not aware of any mistake, and had no reason whatever to suppose that any error or mistake had been made by the appellants or their salesman.
Prof. Lawson, in his article on contracts, 9 Cyc. 394, says:
“A mistake of one of the parties only in the expression of his agreement, or as to the subject matter not known to the other, does not affect its binding force and is no ground for its rescission even in equity, unless it is such a mistake that there is a complete difference in substance between what is supposed to be and what is taken, so as to constitute a failure of consideration.”
In Stienmeyer v. Schroppel, 226 Ill. 9, 117 Am. St. 224, 80 N. E. 564, 10 L. R. A., N. S., 114, the vendor of lumber in footing up the different items of a bill, made the total $1,446, instead of $1,867, which it would have been had he correctly added the amounts. His bookkeeper copied the list on one of the company bill-heads without giving the prices of each item, and at the bottom of the list wrote the following words: “Above for $1,446.” The lumber was
“A mistake which will justify relief in equity must affect the substance of the contract, and not a mere incident or the inducement for entering into it. The mistake of the appellants did not relate to the subject matter of the contract, its location, identity, or amount, and there was neither belief in the existence of a fact which did not exist or ignorance of any fact material to the contract which did exist. The contract was exactly what each party understood it to be and it expressed what it was intended by each. If it can be set aside on account of the error in adding up the amounts representing the selling price, it could be set aside for a mistake in computing the percentage of profits which appellants intended to make, or on account of a mistake in the cost of the lumber to them, or any other miscalculation on their part.”
In Brown v. Levy, 29 Tex. Civ. App. 389, 69 S. W. 255, the Texas court of civil appeals held, quite recently, that where a person makes an offer to erect a building for a certain amount, and the other party accepts it, there is a consummated and binding agreement, although the bidder in adding up the items of his estimates made a mistake in the total, and consequently made the bid $10,000 less than it should have been.
Bonney v. Stoughton, 122 Ill. 536, 13 N. E. 833, was substantially a similar ease, and the court held that the contract was consummated and binding. These cases proceed on the theory that a purchaser has a right to know the price he is expected to pay for an article before accepting it, so that if he considers the price higher than he can afford to pay or than he wants to pay, he may decline to accept it. A purchaser cannot be made to suffer or be held responsible because a vendor has committed an error or mistake in computing the value of his goods or the expected profits to be derived from the sale thereof. A rescission of the contract has sometimes ¡been allowed where the purchaser was informed of the error
In the latter authority, the text, in dealing with the right of a court of equity to reform a contract on account of such a mistake, says:
“In order that a mistake may come within the cognizance of a court of equity, it must be shown to be: First, material, or the moving cause of the complaining party’s action; second, mutual, or shared in by both parties to the transaction; third, unintentional; and, fourth, free from negligence.”
Contracts are the deliberate and voluntary obligations of parties capable of contracting, and they must be accorded binding force and effect. Those who enter into them must understand that they have a meaning and that they cannot be lightly tampered with. If a vendor can be heard to come into court and repudiate his contract on the ground that it had never been really consummated, for the reason that he made a mistake in computing the prices of the various articles involved in the transaction, he might with equal reason insist that he had made a mistake in computing the profit he expected to realize out of the transaction. No such proposition can be tolerated. The owner of property is supposed to know what it is worth, and at least know what he is willing to take for his property. The purchaser may likewise exercise his free will and choice as to whether he will purchase property at a given price. After he has received the property, understanding that he is to pay a fixed price for it, he cannot be compelled to pay a different and greater price simply because the vendor was careless or negligent in the transaction of his own business.