Court Opinion

ID: 7954274
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-08 23:46:42.535098+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:34:15.696465
License: Public Domain

Brickley, J.
(concurring). This case presents for the first time in this state the question whether the Uniform Commercial Code, MCL 440.1101 et seq.; MSA 19.1101 et seq., and its Statute of Frauds, MCL 440.2201; MSA 19.2201, are applicable to a distributorship agreement, and whether the Statute of Frauds’ quantity requirement can be satisfied by a writing stating that one party is a distributor of another’s products. I would answer yes to both questions._
*618I
In July of 1972, plaintiif Lorenz Supply Company was engaged in a family-owned and operated business selling "in the wall” plumbing items, such as pipes and valves, in the Detroit area. Defendant American Standard, Inc., a major manufacturer of diversified products, was planning to close out a heating and plumbing distribution outlet in Troy, run by its Amstan supply division.
Plaintiffs president, Robert Lorenz, desirous of expanding his plumbing line to "out of the wall” fixtures, such as sinks and faucets, entered into negotiations with defendant’s local management. These negotiations resulted in an agreement whereby Lorenz would purchase $420,000 worth of inventory from defendant’s Troy warehouse and take responsibility for its outstanding delivery orders. As part of the inducement for the inventory sale, Lorenz was to be made a "preferred” distributor of defendant’s products. Plaintiffs president testified at trial that defendant promised to use its best efforts to supply items on a regular basis as they were needed and that plaintiff could distribute defendant’s products for as long as it desired.
The arrangement for the inventory sale was reduced to a specific writing which set forth the details for transfer of the goods. The goods were to be transferred from the defendant’s warehouse in August 1972. When Mr. Lorenz inquired as to the distributorship part of the arrangement, he was advised that it was the policy of defendant not to have written distributorship agreements. However, in the following month plaintiff received a confirmation letter from an official of defendant corporation. It expressed "happiness with the way our whole negotiations turned out with regard to your *619purchase of the Amstan inventory and, more importantly, to welcome you to the numbers of American Standard distributors across the country”. Lorenz immediately began to enlarge his facilities and augment his staff in preparation for the distributorship and its expected enhancement of his business.
Unfortunately, happiness did not become a hallmark of the relationship. Lorenz first became concerned that defendant was not honoring the terms of their agreement at the time of the inventory transfer in August of 1972, when he received reports that some of the fastest-selling inventory from the Troy warehouse was seen departing for destinations other than plaintiff’s business. Lorenz would later testify that some of the fastest-selling items from the inventory were sold to other distributors. Lorenz also testified that defendant overcharged him for some of the items he received from the sale, and charged for some items not received at all. Lorenz further testified at trial that, when he complained to defendant about these various errors, he was told on several occasions that restitution would be made for the missing inventory, and that he should keep track of the billing errors so that the total amount could be offset against his account at a later date.
The dispute between the parties and efforts to resolve it continued through the remainder of 1972 and into 1973. Finally, in December 1973, plaintiff, claiming that it was owed $72,000 by defendant as a result of the alleged errors, refused to pay approximately $65,000 otherwise owing to defendant.1 Defendant, disputing these assertions, ad*620vised plaintiff that it would be cut off from further products if it did not pay on its account. When the payment was not received by January 1974, defendant placed plaintiff on "credit hold”, meaning that plaintiff could receive additional products only by paying cash in advance.
Meanwhile, plaintiff filed suit for breach of contract. Defendant denied a breach and counterclaimed for the monies due according to defendant’s accounting. Robert Lorenz testified at trial that he secured additional financing, at great personal cost, in order to continue to buy essential items from defendant in cash. This in turn compounded his financial problems. Finally, in June 1974, defendant advised plaintiff that because of "restrictions placed on your orders by the credit department * * * we are cancelling all open orders as of June 15, 1974”. Plaintiff filed for bankruptcy in March 1975, and at the time of trial was a defunct corporation.
Plaintiff offered evidence at trial that it was saddled with a quarter-million dollar "dead” inventory because it was denied essential related products by defendant, both because it did not receive promised material from the Troy warehouse and because of the refusal of the defendant to continue to furnish products under the distributorship agreement. Lorenz further testified that, in spite of contracting for $420,000 worth of inventory from the Troy warehouse, he received only $260,000 worth of products.
The trial judge instructed the jury that there were "two separate issues that are at issue in this case; one, an issue with respect to the sale of the *621inventory at the Troy warehouse of American Standard, and the second issue being permitting Lorenz Supply Company to distribute American Standard’s products in the Detroit area”.
The judge then instructed the jury, in pertinent part:
"Now, we want three verdicts from you. You will have to separate on this basis and announce your verdict. One, with respect to the Amstan purchase, either find for the plaintiff — if you find for the plaintiff against the defendant, you will determine the amount of money to which you believe the plaintiff is entitled, and you will announce your verdict as being in favor of the plaintiff on the Amstan purchase and whatever the amount is. If you find there is no liability on the part of the defendant with respect to the Amstan purchase, you will announce your verdict as being in favor of the defendant no cause for action on the Amstan purchase. You will also render a verdict with respect to the distributorship agreement. Again, if you find that the defendant is liable and that the plaintiff is entitled to damages as a result of the breach of the distributorship agreement, you will consider that amount of money. Having made that determination you will announce your verdict as being in favor of the plaintiff with respect to the distributorship. Announce the money for the plaintiff against the defendant.
"If you find there is no liability, you will announce your verdict as being in favor of the defendant on the distributorship agreement a judgment of no cause of action. Then you will render your verdict as to the counterclaim for the defendant, which I stated to you shall not be any less than $65,100 nor any more than $72,106.08. You must render a verdict in these three categories.”
The jury found a breach of the inventory sale and awarded damages to plaintiff in the amount of $45,000, a breach of the distributorship agreement for which they awarded plaintiff $255,000 in dam*622ages, and, finally, contrary to the judge’s instructions directing a verdict in favor of defendant on the counterclaim, the jury found no cause of action on the counterclaim. Defendant argued that the jury’s failure to follow the judge’s instructions on the counterclaim required a new trial on all issues. However, after some expression of concern by the trial judge as to the effect of the jury’s confusion on the counterclaim,2 he ordered a new trial on that issue only. Subsequently, the parties stipulated to an amount of $69,873.40 on the counterclaim, avoiding a retrial on that issue.
Defendant argued before the Court of Appeals, as it does here, that the distributorship agreement was a "transaction in goods” under Article 2 (Sales) of the Uniform Commercial Code and, therefore, was subject to the Statute of Frauds of that article, thus making it unenforceable since the letter welcoming the plaintiff as a distributor did not satisfy the "writing” requirement.3 Defendant also contested the admission of certain evidence relating to lost profits and argued that the jury’s erroneous verdict on the counterclaim invalidated the entire verdict and should have entitled them to a new trial on all issues. Finally, defendant argues that even if it is enforceable, the distributorship agreement was terminable at will, thus precluding any damage award for lost profits.
The letter from defendant to plaintiff, which is the only written evidence of the distributorship *623aspect of the arrangement between the parties, reads as follows:
"Dear Bob:
"Now that you have officially joined the family of American Standard distributors, I want to record with you my extreme happiness with the way our whole negotiations turned out with regard to your purchase of the Amstan inventory and, more importantly, to welcome you to the numbers of American Standard distributors across the country.
"Ed and I are most enthusiastic about your ability to help us participate in larger measure in the Detroit market and I hope the opportunity will soon present itself when I can express my sincerest welcome to those other Lorenz personnel who I have not yet met but on whom we are counting for the strongest possible support in a very difficult market.
"It is a pleasure to have you with us and I trust that our association will be mutually beneficial for many years to come.
"Sincerely yours,
"Bren O’Connell.”
The Court of Appeals, 100 Mich App 600, 608; 300 NW2d 335 (1980), found that the distributorship agreement did not come within the purview of the UCC since the "agreement did not require Lorenz to buy a certain quantity of goods or, indeed, to buy any goods from the defendant in the future”. Rather, they said, "[t]his agreement envisioned an ongoing economic relationship”. The Court did allow that "Lorenz was granted the status of a 'preferred distributor’ who would be entitled to purchase plumbing fixtures manufactured by the defendant in the .future”. Based on that relationship — that plaintiff need not buy but defendant must sell — the Court found the distributorship agreement to be outside of the Uniform *624Commercial Code and its Statute of Frauds and therefore enforceable.
The Court of Appeals further said that even if it had found the UCC to be applicable, the letter from the defendant to the plaintiff was a "sufficient written memorandum of the previous oral agreement to satisfy the requirements” of the Statute of Frauds. The Court further stated that "Lorenz never undertook to buy any of defendant’s products, so the $500 statutory amount was never triggered”. Finally, it said, "[although the quantity term is omitted, in the context of a distributorship agreement such an indefiniteness is inherent to the relationship and would not defeat the validity of the contract where the parties agreed. See MCL 440.2204(3); MSA 19.2204(3), MCL 440.2306(1); MSA 19.2306(1).” The Court did not deal with the counterclaim verdict question.
I disagree with both the analysis and conclusion of the Court of Appeals.
Dealing first with the Court of Appeals dictum that the $500 limit of the Statute of Frauds was not triggered, I see nothing in the record or arguments of the parties that would indicate that there was to be a $500 limit on what was to be covered by the distributorship agreement. To the contrary, the record reflects that thousands of dollars’ worth of products were sold by defendant to plaintiff. The other two points of the Court’s holding, that the UCC was not applicable to this type of distributorship agreement and the question of the satisfaction of the quantity term, are important issues, largely novel to our jurisprudence.
II
On the applicability of the UCC, the Court of Appeals did not distinguish between the "transac*625tion in goods” criteria for the general application of Article 2 and the more specific finding of a "contract for the sale of goods”, critical for the applicability of the Statute of Frauds. Instead, the Court of Appeals opined that the distributorship agreement did not fit the Statute of Frauds "contract for the sale of goods” definition and therefore held that the UCC, seemingly in its entirety, does not apply.
Appellants argue forcefully that such an interpretation would leave a major and fast-growing type of commercial activity outside the code. I agree.
Section 2-102 of the UCC, MCL 440.2102 et seq.; MSA 19.2102 et seq., provides "[u]nless the context otherwise requires, this article applies to transactions in goods” (emphasis added), whereas the Statute of Frauds of the UCC, MCL 440.2201; MSA 19.2201 provides:
"[A] contract for the sale of goods for the price of $500 or more is not enforceable by way of action or defense unless there is some writing sufficient to indicate that a contract for sale has been made * * *. A writing is not insufficient because it omits or incorrectly states a term agreed upon but the contract is not enforceable under this paragraph beyond the quantity of goods shown in such writing.” (Emphasis added.)
MCL 440.2106; MSA 19.2106 defines "contract for sale” as both a "present sale of goods and a contract to sell goods at a future time.”
"Transaction in goods” is a broad term and on its face would seem to cover an agreement that has as its purpose the ongoing transfer of title to goods between the parties. The UCC is to be "liberally construed”, MCL 440.1102; MSA 19.1102, and is designed to "provide its own machinery for expansion of commercial practices. It is *626intended to make it possible for the law embodied in this act to be developed by the courts in the light of unforeseen and new circumstances and practices.” UCC § 1-102, Official Comment 1.
The predominant holdings among those states which have considered this issue are to the effect that a distributorship agreement is subject to the UCC, although there is anything but a consistent rationale for the holdings. Because cases involving distributorship agreements have involved different sections of Article 2, the courts have variously focused on the words "transaction in goods”, "contract for the sale”, or "goods”. We have found nowhere a case which is precisely on point with the facts of this case, nor has our research disclosed a case with the exact legal analysis which we think is required to properly resolve the issue before us.
Our conviction that Article 2 itself contemplates a distributorship agreement is buttressed by our observation that sections of Article 2 other than the Statute of Frauds quite clearly include distributorship agreements within their scope. Section 2-306, MCL 440.2306; MSA 19.2306, which validates contract terms which measure quantity by the output of the seller or the requirements of the buyer, clearly encompasses agreements that contemplate ongoing commercial arrangements such as are involved in a normal distributorship. Indeed, Official Comment No. 1 to this section states that "[i]t applies to such contracts of nonproducing establishments such as dealers or distributors as well as to manufacturing concerns”. Similarly, § 2-309, MCL 440.2309; MSA 19.2309, which deals with a "contract * * * for successive performances [that] is indefinite in duration”, clearly lends itself to a distributorship arrangement.
Cases from other jurisdictions support this con-*627elusion. For example, in Zapatha v Dairy Mart, Inc, 381 Mass 284; 408 NE2d 1370 (1980), where the issue was the right to terminate a franchise agreement, the Massachusetts court held that the agreement was a "transaction in goods” and was therefore subject to the UCC. Again, where the issue was termination of a service station franchise the New York Supreme Court in Division of Triple T Service, Inc v Mobil Oil Corp, 60 Misc 2d 720, 727; 304 NYS2d 191 (1969), held the franchise to be covered by the UCC:
"At first blush one might assume that the Uniform Commercial Code does not reach franchise or distributorship agreements * * *. However, the courts have not been reluctant to enlarge the type of commercial transactions clearly encompassed within the spirit and in-tendment of the statute”.
In accord with the holding of these cases and for the other reasons stated, I have no difficulty in finding the distributorship agreement in question to be subject to Article 2 of the UCC.
The more difficult and separate question is the applicability of the Statute of Frauds, MCL 440.2201; MSA 19.2201, to the distributorship agreement. I see it as a separate question because the term "contract for the sale of goods” is clearly more restrictive than the term "transaction in goods”.
The prevailing authority clearly favors holding a distributorship agreement to be a "contract for the sale of goods”. In Leibel v Raynor Mfg Co, 571 SW2d 640, 642. (Ky App, 1978), the Kentucky Court of Appeals disagreed with a lower court decision that a garage door distributorship was not covered by the UCC. It held:
"Article II of the Uniform Commercial Code applies *628to transactions involving goods and merchandise. 'A contract between an automobile manufacturer and automobile dealer is a contract of sale since it is apparent that its overall purpose and object is to effect the sale of the automobiles manufactured by the manufacturer, and the fact that it may speak in terms of franchises does not change its true character.’ 1 Anderson, UCC (2d ed), .§ 2-101:5, p 201.”
The section of the UCC in question in Leibel dealing with termination, § 2-309, only uses the word "contract”, unlike those sections, including the Statute of Frauds, that refer to a "contract for the sale of goods”. Nonetheless, the Kentucky Court of Appeals did not make that distinction and held implicitly that a distributorship is both a "transaction in goods” and a "contract for the sale of goods”. In Artman v International Harvester Co, 355 F Supp 482 (WD Pa, 1973), a federal district court, applying Pennsylvania law, held that an oral heavy-duty truck franchise was subject to the UCC and its Statute of Frauds and was therefore unenforceable because there was no writing signed by the party to be charged.
In DeFilippo v Ford Motor Co, 516 F2d 1313 (CA 3, 1975), cert den 423 US 912 (1975), the Third Circuit Court of Appeals, also applying Pennsylvania law, held that an auto dealership was a "contract for the sale of goods” and therefore subject to the Statute of Frauds of the UCC. The court’s discussion in that case focused on its observation that the distributorship arrangement encompassed more than merely the sale of goods, such as the providing of related services. The DeFilippo court rejected the argument that the UCC no longer applies if the arrangement involves both goods and services, holding:
"[if], viewed as a whole, it can be concluded that the *629essential bulk of the assets to be transferred qualify [sic] as 'goods’, then it is appropriate to consider the transaction a 'contract for the sale of goods’. To insist that all assets qualify as 'goods’ would substantially thwart the intentions of the drafters of the Uniform Commercial Code; it would sanction the absurd.” DeFi-lippo, supra, p 1323.
The DeFilippo court held the contract at issue in that case to be unenforceable for lack of a signature.
The opposite result was reached in Tile-Craft Products Co, Inc v Exxon Corp, 581 SW2d 886, 889 (Mo App, 1979), where the Missouri Court of Appeals held that a distributorship for cabinet parts was not encompassed in the "cover” provisions of UCC § 2-712, stating:
"Tile-Craft seems to take the position that the entire distributorship entity was the 'goods’ which the seller failed to deliver, * * * but we do not believe that a distributorship is contemplated within the U.C.C. definition of 'goods’.”
A year later the Eighth Circuit, in Vigano v Wylain, Inc, 633 F2d 522, 525 (CA 8, 1980), applied Missouri law in declining to hold an oral distributorship agreement unenforceable as violative of the Statute of Frauds:
"Wylain contends as a matter of law that plaintiffs claims are barred by the Statute of Frauds provision in Article 2 of the Uniform Commercial Code * * *. The clearest indication of Missouri law on this question, however, is to the effect that distributorship agreements are not covered by Article 2 [citing Tile-Craft, supra].”
However, the court then added the following footnote:
*630"We are inclined to disagree with this position as a matter of commercial law. Article 2 applies to transactions in goods, and the modular homes in question, seem clearly to fit the § 2-105(1) definition of goods. Moreover, § 2-106(1) defines 'contract for sale’ to include both a present sale of goods and a contract to sell goods at a future time. Thus, the distributorship agreement would seem under the general view to be within the scope of Article 2. Corenswet, Inc v Amana Refrigeration, Inc, 594 F2d 129 (CA 5, 1979).”
In the only case applying Michigan law to the issue, the federal district court, in Warner Motors, Inc v Chrysler Motors Corp, 5 UCC Rep 365 (1968), found that an auto dealership was within the definition of a "contract for sale” under § 2-725, the Statute of Limitations of Article 2 of the UCC.
Finally, in a case most factually analogous to the one at bar, Cavalier Mobile Homes, Inc v Liberty Homes, Inc, 53 Md App 379, 394; 454 A2d 367 (1983), the Maryland Court of Special Appeals found that a mobile home sales distributorship was a "contract for the sale of goods” and therefore subject to the Statute of Frauds. In finding that the agreement was in violation of the Statute of Frauds, the court stated:
"[UCC § 2-106] defines 'contract for sale’ to include both a 'present sale of goods and a contract to sell goods at a future time’. It follows therefrom that dealership or distributorship contracts fall within the sales provisions of the UCC * * *. It also follows that the Article II Statute of Frauds, found at § 2-201, applies to such agreements.”
The court proceeded to hold the agreement unenforceable because neither conforming writing relied upon by the plaintiff stated any quantity term.
*631"Our view of this distributorship is that each time Cavalier ordered a home from Liberty, a separate contract of sale was entered into by the parties. This series of contracts, evidenced by invoices, does not indicate that a requirements contract existed, i.e., that there was a contract to fill Cavalier’s requirements. Each invoice solely reflects the terms and quantity of individual transactions. There is no indication that quantity is to be measured by requirements. Accordingly, this course of dealing cannot supply the quantity term to satisfy the Statute of Frauds.” Cavalier, supra, pp 395-396.
My observation of the conflicting views represented in the above cases is that the majority of holdings implicitly say that a distributorship agreement is subject to the Statute of Frauds because it is a contract dealing with the sale of goods (or, stated differently, a contract for the sale of goods once removed). The minority view, adopted by our Court of Appeals in this case, says that, because the distributorship does not itself bind the parties to a specific transfer of specific goods, it is not a "contract for the sale of goods”; rather, as defendant characterizes it, it is "akin to an umbrella underneath which there were a series of commercial transactions between merchants”.4
I think it wise when interpreting a uniform act, *632to join what is developing as a clear majority on this question, especially because of our previously mentioned conviction that it furthers the overall intent and scope of the UCC, and to consider the arrangement a contract for the sale of goods.
Ill
This does not end the inquiry, however. The key factual question in this case is whether the letter from defendant’s agent to plaintiff’s president satisfied the quantity requirement necessary for a contract to be enforceable under the Statute of Frauds.
In Cavalier, supra, the majority view of the Statute of Frauds is applied for the first time in combination with the "quantity” requirement of the Statute of Frauds with the result that unless a distributorship agreement writing specifies a quantity it is unenforceable.
I cannot, as did the Court of Appeals, completely dismiss the quantity requirement even though I agree that "in the context of a distributorship agreement such an indefiniteness is inherent in the relationship”. 100 Mich App 609. Indeed, if the quantity term was construed to require a numerically specific quantity of goods, the net result would be that most distributorships by their nature could never comply with the Statute of Frauds. It would indeed be an anomalous result to hold such contracts subject to the UCC and its Statute of Frauds and then proceed to hold them all unenforceable for lack of a sufficiently definite quantity term._
*633The code obviates such an interpretation in § 2-306, which provides:
"(1) A term which measures the quantity by the output of the seller or the requirements of the buyer means such actual output or requirements as may occur in good faith, except that no quantity unreasonably disproportionate to any stated estimate or in the absence of a stated estimate to any normal or otherwise comparable prior output or requirements may be tendered or demanded.”
While this provision does not specifically refer to § 2-201, it would be difficult to argue that it does not impliedly define quantity as it is used in §2-201. As previously noted, the official comment to § 2-306 states specifically that it applies to "contracts of nonproducing establishments such as dealers or distributors as well as to manufacturing concerns”.
In Kubik v J & R Foods of Oregon, Inc, 282 Or 179, 187-188; 577 P2d 518 (1978), the Oregon Supreme Court, in interpreting an exclusive dealing contract, stated:
"As noted, ORS 72.3060 [the counterpart of § 2-306] is a statute designed, among other things, to define 'quantity’ — as that item is required by the UCC’s own Statute of Frauds — in those situations in which, because of the nature of the contract, a particular quantity cannot be identified in advance with certainty.”
I may not go so far as to suggest that § 2-306 is intended to define quantity in § 2-201, but I think it indicates at least that Article 2 of the UCC does not contemplate any rigid definition of the term quantity as it is used anywhere in Article 2, including §2-201. If it did not refer to the word quantity in § 2-201, then § 2-306 would be without purpose.
*634Traditional restrictions on requirements contracts and the need to have the quantity term ascertainable have been based on the need to supply consideration in such contracts. The UCC, particularly § 2-306, makes it clear that the code intends contracts to be upheld even where the terms are indefinite by reading into such contracts "good faith” requirements, thus allowing a quantity term as imprecise as an agreement to furnish the distributor with his needs.5
The obvious purpose of the Statute of Frauds is to require the understanding of the parties regarding the quantity of goods involved to be spelled out in the writing. Even if the quantity is as imprecise as an agreement to furnish the goods that the plaintiff needs to serve his customers, it is important to have that understanding in writing. As the Maryland court stated in Cavalier Mobile Homes, supra, p 395:
"The Statute of Frauds requires that even where the quantity term is not numerically stated, there must be some writing which indicates that the quantity to be delivered under the contract is a party’s requirements.”
The letter in question was signed by the party "against whom enforcement is sought” — an agent of the defendant. The only question remaining is whether the language of the letter shows that the parties intended that defendant was obliged to supply plaintiff with its requirements, indefinite though it was.
The letter from defendant to plaintiff stated, "[n]ow that you have officially joined the family of American Standard distributors”, and "more importantly, to welcome you to the numbers of *635American Standard distributors across the country”, and "Ed and I are most enthusiastic about your ability to help us participate in larger measure in the Detroit market”.
It is perfectly clear from this writing that plaintiff was to be a distributor for defendant, who would supply plaintiff with products to sell "in the Detroit market”; it is equally obvious that in a distributorship the manufacturer must furnish the distributor with sufficient goods to be a successful distributor. The specific quantity of goods to be delivered under the distributorship agreement could have been determined only by the demand generated, and could not have been calculated in advance. Rather, the quantity term was as specific as necessary under these circumstances. The only thing left unsaid in the letter are the words "we will supply those goods necessary for you to represent us in your area”. It would have been redundant to do so because the words of welcome to the "family of American Standard distributors” told it all. The word distributorship means the practice of a manufacturer furnishing its distributor with the products it needs to fill its orders. The parties have never, throughout the course of this litigation, disputed the fact that the defendant was required to furnish those goods ordered by the plaintiff, subject to certain conditions. The disagreement is over whether the defendant was justified in cutting off the plaintiff from further deliveries because plaintiff refused to pay its bill.
I conclude that the agreement between the parties was a contract for the sale of goods under the UCC and its Statute of Frauds and that there was a writing satisfying the quantity requirement of that statute. The distributorship agreement should be enforceable.

 Plaintiff was to pay defendant $420,000, in six $70,000 monthly installments, for the inventory in defendant’s Troy warehouse. Plaintiff was also purchasing additional materials from the defendant under the distributorship arrangement. The record is not clear as to *620precisely how much of the disputed credits or debits between the parties was attributable to the inventory sale as opposed to ongoing purchases of non-inventory merchandise. It is likely the accounts were combined.

 In his decision on defendant’s motion for a judgment notwithstanding the verdict or a new trial, the trial judge commented, "[d]id the jury, by its conduct in refusing in following the instructions given to them by the court, taint the entire verdict because of its not following the instructions of the court? It was not following the instructions of the court. This is what has disturbed the court all of this period of time.”

 The appellants are not contesting the $45,000 verdict for breach of the inventory sale.

 We are not troubled by the relatively indefinite nature of most distributorship agreements; we believe that both the requisite consideration and mutuality can be found to exist despite the inherently imprecise terms. The UCC, with its provisions for successive performances, MCL 440.2309; MSA 19.2309, and indefinite quantity terms, MCL 440.2306; MSA 19.2306, envisions very loose arrangements that are reinforced by the code with its requirement of "good faith”. MCL 440.1203; MSA 19.1203. See J W Knapp Co v Sinas, 19 Mich App 427; 172 NW2d 867 (1969). Furthermore, in the typical distributorship arrangement, an agreement by one party to sell without a corresponding agreement by the other to buy, as the Court of Appeals suggests exists in the instant case, is usually accompanied by other forms of consideration, such as exclusive territories, best efforts by the distributor to market the manufacturer’s products, and the like. As such, these arrangements are distinguishable from those agreements whose quantity term is totally unascertainable.
*632"The Michigan court does not enforce contracts calling for the purchase or sale of such goods as may be 'desired’, 'ordered’, or 'wished’. Such contracts are distinguishable from the usual output or requirements contracts because the promisor is not bound to deliver or accept any sufficiently definite quantity.” MCLA 440.2306 practice commentary, p 247.

 See fn 4.