Court Opinion

ID: 3221670
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 15:58:17.905513+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T12:42:09.129732
License: Public Domain

Plaintiff, appellee, recovered judgment against defendant as for damages accruing by reason of defendant's breach of a contract whereby defendant, to quote the complaint, "undertook and promised to transport for the plaintiff 3,000 tons of coal from Mobile, Ala., to Ft. Morgan, Ala., in self-propelled barges, for the sum of 40 cents per ton." Defendant in the complaint and judgment is styled and called "John Barton Payne, as agent for John Barton Payne, Director *Page 158 
General of Railroads," and, considering the acts of Congress setting up the Railroad Administration during the recent war (to be more specifically mentioned hereafter), we construe the action to be an action against John Barton Payne, as Director General, and not otherwise, and the judgment rendered to be in effect a judgment against the United States, nothing more nor less. Missouri Pacific R. R. Co. v. Ault, 256 U.S. 554,41 Sup. Ct. 593, 65 L. Ed. 1087. The parties appear to have concurred in this treatment of the cause.
It is insisted in the first place for defendant that there was no contract between the parties. The contract is to be found in the letters interchanged between the plaintiff and Theodore Brent, who, it is agreed, had full authority to act for the Director General in the premises. These letters, written in the summer of 1919, show in substance, we think, a meeting of the minds of the parties as to all the terms of the service for which the parties were negotiating and the compensation to be awarded therefor, as alleged in the complaint. The correspondence between the parties will appear in the report of the case. From it we think there must be inferred an offer on the part of defendant to transport a definite quantity of coal between definite points for a definite compensation, and an acceptance on the part of plaintiff. This was more than a mere preliminary negotiation; it constituted a contract between the parties. 1 Williston on Contr. § 27. We have said that defendant's offer was to transport plaintiff's coal from Mobile to Ft. Morgan. Defendant's letter of July 25th said: "We can quote you towage rate of 40c from Mobile to Ft. Morgan," and this, after intervening correspondence, in which defendant explained that the rate offered did not cover "loading onto barges at Mobile or unloading at Ft. Morgan," and that it would be impossible to send defendant's "unloader" to Ft. Morgan — this was the offer accepted in plaintiff's communication of July 30th. No time was fixed within which the service stipulated was to be performed, but the contemplation of the law is that it was to be performed within a reasonable time. Culver v. Caldwell, 137 Ala. 125,34 So. 13; Byrne Mill Co. v. Robertson, 149 Ala. 273, 42 So. 1008. True, plaintiff in his letter of July 30th inquired: "What rate would you furnish us from the Empire mines to Ft. Morgan, or would you make any different rating?" But this was after plaintiff had said in the same letter, "Your rate of 40 cents per ton is satisfactory," and was followed by this language, "We shall advise you in due time when we will be ready for your barges."
There is abundant authority for the proposition that a conditional acceptance which amounts to a counter offer operates as a rejection of the original offer, the reason being that the counter offer is in effect a statement by the original offeree, not only that he will enter into the transaction on the terms stated in his counter offer, but also by implication that he will not assent to the terms of the original offer. Williston, § 51, where numerous cases are cited. The rate between the mines and Mobile was fixed by law; the rate between Mobile and Ft. Morgan was the proper subject of special contract between the parties, as we shall see, since in the carriage of freight between these lastnamed points defendant was not a common carrier. Plaintiff's letter of July 30th was as if he had said: I accept your offer according to its terms; but if you will make one through rate for both land and water transportation from the mines to Ft. Morgan more advantageous to me than the aggregate of the two separate rates, viz. the rate from the mines to Mobile plus the rate from Mobile to Ft. Morgan, then and in that event I should like to have the advantage of such through rate. In view of conditions of railroad administration obtaining at the time — now a matter of history — plaintiff's inquiry was inept and nothing could have been reasonably expected of it. That, however, it is conceded, was of no particular consequence, since an inept inquiry may have disclosed the state of plaintiff's mind as to the matter at issue. The inquiry as to a different rating, quoted above, was certainly not a categorical rejection of the terms offered, nor, in our judgment, was it a counter offer — for it offered nothing different from what plaintiff had already offered — nor did it imply that, if defendant had no better terms to offer, plaintiff would not contract according to the terms of defendant's original offer, so to speak, of the total content of defendant's offer as of that date.
Nor is it of any consequence in this regard that when plaintiff got ready to deliver his coal to defendant, though defendant had in the meantime given clear indication that he considered terms for transporting plaintiff's coal to rest yet in negotiation, plaintiff, on September 2d, notified defendant that he would require defendant's barge to be loaded within the next 10 days from the Louisville  Nashville tipple — conceded to be at Mobile. There is nothing to show that the Louisville 
Nashville tipple was not a proper place for loading, nor is it contended that plaintiff delayed beyond a reasonable time. Other elements of contract being established, and no "loading spot" being contracted for, it was defendant's duty to take his cargo at any reasonably accessible place in the harbor of Mobile that might be designated by the shipper. Scrutton on Charter-parties (8th Ed.) art. 39, p. 112 et seq. We conclude, therefore, that there was between the parties a contract of definite obligation in every necessary particular.
In the next place we consider the argument *Page 159 
that, in short, defendant, as Director General of Railroads, had no authority to make the contract in question. To state the elements of the contention briefly: Defendant in transporting freight from Mobile to Ft. Morgan was operating entirely under the act of Congress in virtue of which the government took possession of the "railroads and owned or controlled systems of coastwise and inland transportation engaged in general transportation," to the end that troops, war material, and equipment might be moved to the exclusion, so far as might be necessary, of all other traffic, and such systems of transportation utilized in the performance of such other service as the national interest may require, and, secondarily, in carrying on "the usual and ordinary business and duties of common carriers." President's Proclamation, December 26, 1917. Except in so far as it might be inconsistent with the Federal Control Act, the Director General was subject to the act to regulate commerce (U.S. Comp. Stat. § 8563 et seq.), and all the rules and regulations of the Interstate Commerce Commission. He was required to publish and file with the Commission his tariff of charges which necessarily included the tariff between all points between which he operated vessels as a common carrier. "All carriers subject to the statute who extend to any shipper or person any privilege or facility in the transportation of property under federal control, except such as are specified in the tariffs on file with the Interstate Commerce Commission, violate the provisions of section 6" of the Interstate Commerce Act. 1 Roberts, Federal Liabilities of Carriers, § 253. "An advantage accorded by special agreement which affects the value of the service to the shipper and its cost to the carrier should be published in the tariffs, and for a breach of such a contract, relief will be denied, because its allowance without such publication is a violation of the act." Chicago  Alton R. R. Co. v. Kirby,225 U.S. 155, 32 Sup. Ct. 648, 56 L. Ed. 1033, Ann. Cas. 1914A, 501. For the carriage of freight between Mobile and Ft. Morgan no tariff of rates was ever filed. Ergo, defendant's conclusion stated above.
The court is of opinion that the conclusion cannot be maintained. By section 6, Federal Control Act, approved March 21, 1918 (U.S. Comp. Stat. 1918, U.S. Comp. St. Ann. Supp. 1919, § 3115 3/4f), it was provided that the President of the United States might construct barges and "in the operation and use of such facilities create and employ such agencies and enter into such contracts and agreements as he might deem in the public interest." By General Order No. 35 the Director General of Railroads appointed a Federal Manager of Mississippi and Warrior Waterways for the United States Railroad Administration to "have charge of the construction and acquisition of equipment for use * * * upon the Warrior river between the Alabama coal fields and Mobile, and in connection therewith for use upon the Mississippi Sound and connecting waters between Mobile and New Orleans, and will operate such equipment for the Director General of Railroads upon all such waters." The General Manager so appointed was empowered to enter into contracts "and for the transportation of traffic upon all such waters." 2 Roberts, p. 1772. In entering upon the contract in question, the defendant was not engaged in the business of a common carrier. He entered into a special contract for the delivery of coal to Ft. Morgan — to the government, if that makes any difference. There was no established tariff, and we must conclude that the barges used in this transportation were used in a case deemed by the President, or his authorized agent, for the public interest, in accordance with the laws of the United States and the orders of the Director General of Railroads made in pursuance thereof.
It was shown that plaintiff at the date of the trial, December 8, 1920, had delivered to the fortifications at Ft. Morgan 2,111 tons of the coal he proposed to ship in September, 1919. There seems no reason to doubt that, if plaintiff was entitled to recover, he was entitled to have assessed to him the difference between the cost of transporting 2,111 tons at the agreed rate and the cost reasonably incurred by plaintiff in procuring a substitutionary performance. But the trial court went further. It allowed plaintiff to recover damages for the amount, in excess of 40 cents a ton, that it would in the future cost the plaintiff to deliver the balance of the coal, say 889 tons. Plaintiff testified that he had procured a postponement of the delivery of this balance from the fall of 1919 until June, 1920, but that no delivery had ever been made. In this connection defendant was denied the right to show that plaintiff's contract had been canceled as to the balance of 889 tons and that no delivery would ever be made under the contract counted on. Exception was reserved to this ruling, and plaintiff's requested instruction to the effect stated above was given. On the case presented by the record these rulings were error. Plaintiff, appellee, cites a case, McFadden v. Henderson, 138 Ala. 234, 29 So. 640, in which was stated the more or less familiar rule for the assessment of damages as between vendor and vendee in case of a breach by failure to deliver. We may concede that, if plaintiff had been unable by the exercise of reasonable diligence to deliver this balance of coal to Ft. Morgan, in a proper state of the pleadings he might have recovered as special damages the profit he would have realized on a delivery according to contract. But plaintiff did not prove his inability to deliver the coal by means other than defendant's barges. The burden *Page 160 
was on plaintiff to show with reasonable certainty that the damages claimed in respect of this balance of 889 tons would result from defendant's breach of contract and their amount. Our judgment on the facts shown by the record is that the damages here in issue were speculative — not recoverable damages in any sense for the reason that plaintiff failed to offer any evidence to warrant the conclusion that they ever would or could occur. Sutherland on Damages (4th Ed.) § 121. And for the errors here indicated the judgment will be reversed; the cause remanded.
Reversed and remanded.
ANDERSON, C. J., and GARDNER and MILLER, JJ., concur.