Court Opinion

ID: 6831846
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-23 19:55:11.520097+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:04:35.133586
License: Public Domain

WALKER, Circuit Judge.
This is an appeal from an order setting aside an order of the referee allowing a claim of the appellant against Walker Grain Company, a bankrupt. The claim was based on contracts for the future delivery of corn. Part of the corn, called for by a contract of February 15,1918, was shipped by the appellant. The remainder of appellant’s claim was for the difference between the contract price and the market price of com contracted for, but not shipped; the contracts therefor having been canceled because of the bankrupt’s defaults. The claim asserted was included among those which were passed on in the ease of Walker Grain Co. v. Gregg Grain Co. (C. C. A.) 268 F. 510. It may be assumed, without being decided, that, notwithstanding the decision in that ease, the claim in question is still subject to be contested by creditors of the bankrupt who were not parties to the proceeding when the same claim was formerly unsuccessfully contested.
The contract of February 15 was for 10,000 bushels of corn at $2.12 per bushel, “shipments within last half March.” The bankrupt’s confirmation of that contract contained the following: “Bill as follows: Walker Grain Co., Fort Worth, Texas.” Appellant shipped the corn during the last half of March. When the com reached Fort Worth, the market price had declined considerably below the contract price. The bankrupt refused to pay /drafts for the com, and claimed that it should not have been shipped without shipping instructions from it. We think that the evidence adduced required the conclusion that in the grain trade the last above quoted language meant shipping instructions, and justified shipping by the seller without further instructions from the buyer. On April 10, 1918, a representative of the appellant went to Fort Worth and had an interview with the president of the bankrupt with reference to the com shipped. That interview resulted in the signing of the following instrument:
“Fort Worth, Texas, April 10, 1918.
“This agreement, entered into by the Walker Grain Company, of Fort Worth, Texas, and the A. J. Brunswig Grain Company, of St. Joseph, Missouri.
“Party of the first part agrees to extend contract on the following ears: 310348 GTP, 106344, GT38802, MP110368, Q. 52519, CCC & STL. 61656, LSMS. 25296, AB & A. 38666 RI — until such time as he is able to supply corn to his customers, about 30 days, with the understanding that, if conditions are such as to demand it, time is to be extended 15 days longer. It is further agreed to accept cars of com with freight, demurrage, storage, and interest included, with interest up to and including the time bill of ladings are delivered to us.
“The party of the second part is to unload said com into the Fort Worth Elevator Company, Fort Worth, Texas, and [the word 'and’ is marked out with pencil] keep same in a'merchantable condition; also the party of the first part agrees to pay such expenses as necessary to keep corn in condition.
“Walker Grain Company.
“A. J. Brunswig Grain Company.”
When that instrument was signed, the appellant had complied with its obligations under the contract of February 15 by shipping the com, and the bankrupt had breached the contract by failing to accept the com and pay for it. The terms of the instrument do not purport to evidence the substitution of another contract in the place of the one of February 15. The continued existence of that contract was recognized by the provision whereby the bankrupt “agrees to extend contract,” etc. The instrument evidences the appellant’s acquiescence in the bankrupt having further time to comply with its obligations. The bankrupt added nothing to its already incurred obligations by agreeing to accept the corn and to pay the freight, demurrage, storage, and interest charges. No consideration moving to the appellant supported its agreement to extend time of payment, to unload the corn into an elevator, and to keep it in a merchantable condition.
The appellant’s right to be paid for the corn having already become vested, that right was not impaired by its consenting, without consideration, to have the com stored in an elevator, to keep it in merchantable condition, and to extend the time *306for the payment of the agreed price. So far as the instrument purported to evidence an addition to appellant’s obligations, it was unsupported by any valuable consideration moving to it and was unenforceable. Frankfurt Barnett Co. v. William Pryn Co., 237 F. 21, 28, 150 C. C. A. 223, L. R. A. 1918A, 602; 13 Corpus Juris, 598. The circumstances attending the execution of the above set out instrument make it plain that the appellant, in signing it and in having the corn unloaded into an elevator, did so for the benefit and accommodation of the bankrupt, and did not thereby lose its right to be paid for the corn shipped pursuant to the contract.
 The contracts under which com was not shipped provided for the buyer giving shipping instructions. Before the expiration of the specified time for shipping and thereafter the seller requested the buyer to give shipping instructions. The buyer did not comply with such requests, the last of which was made on May 1. At that time the seller had been carrying the unshipped corn at a charge of 2 cents per bushel per month, and had been doing so since April 15, but without any agreement to continue to do so for any definite time. On June 22 the seller canceled those contracts and charged the buyer with the difference • between the contract price and the market price at that time. The fact that, when the seller’s letter of May 1 was written, it was carrying the unshipped com for an agreed charge, did not relieve the buyer of the duty of complying, within a reasonable time, with the seller’s requests for shipping instructions.
In behalf of the buyer it was claimed that the seller was not entitled to cancel the contract on June 22, without notifying the buyer of its intention to do so. At that time the buyer had long been in default, both as to the com which had been shipped and as to that which had not been shipped, had failed to pay for corn shipped to it by other sellers, and its license had been canceled by the Food Administration. It well may be inferred from the evidence that if, prior to June 22, the seller had given formal notice to the buyer of an intention to cancel, the buyer would have continued to fail to take and pay for the com at the contract price, which was greatly more than the market price at that time. The buyer’s long-continued failure to comply with its contract obligations after repeated demands to do so amounted to such a repudiation of its obligations as entitled the seller to treat the contracts as at an end and to sue for the breach of them. Hinckley v. Pittsburgh Steel Co., 121 U. S. 264, 7 S. Ct. 875, 30 L. Ed. 967; Roehm v. Horst, 178 U. S. 1, 20 S. Ct. 780, 44 L. Ed. 953. We do not think that the record now before us discloses any good reason for reaching a conclusion different from that reached in the case of Walker Grain Co. v. Gregg Grain Co. (C. C. A.) 268 F. 510, in which it was decided that the cancellations now in question were proper.
We think that the court erred in disallowing appellant’s claim. Its order to that effect is reversed.