Court Opinion

ID: 6516910
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-19 18:27:30.391298+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:55:02.927544
License: Public Domain

BRICKELL, C. J.
The complaint contains two counts. The first alleges an agreement made by the defendants to sell and deliver to the plaintiff at a specified place, “a lot of shoes, to-wit, 865 pairs, for which plaintiff promised to pay, which said lot of shoes defendants failed to sell and deliver.” The second count alleges an agreement by which the defendants ‘ ‘promised to sell to plaintiff a lot of merchandise, consisting of '865 pairs of shoes, for which plaintiff promised to pay, which said lot of merchandise defendants failed to sell.” The defendants demurred to the entire complaint and to each *667count, assigning numerous causes. It would serve no useful purpose to notice the causes of demurrer separately. The more material are directed to the inquiry, whether either count states with sufficient certainty, the promise or agreement of the defendants alleged to have been broken. In actions of assumpsit at common law, and the present action corresponds to the action of assumpsit, the general rules of pleading require that the contract and its consideration must be fully stated. — 1 Chit. PI., (16th ed.), 277. The author says further: “All those parts of the contract, which are material for the purpose of enabling the court to form a just idea of what the contract actually was, or which are necessary for the purpose of providing the jury with a criterion in the assessment of damages, should be stated with certainty and precision.” — lb. 310. Applying these rules, each count of the complaint is insufficient in its description or statement of the agreement of the parties. The promise of the plaintiff to pay, was the consideration of the promise of the defendants to sell and deliver alleged in the first count, and of the promise to sell alleged in the second count. That promise is an essential part of the agreement; as essential as the agreement of the defendants — the two constitute the agreement, and the one cannot be severed from the other. The counts ought to have stated what the plaintiff promised to pay, and the time and mode of payment. Less than this is not a statement of the material facts of the agreement; will not inform the court what it really was ; nor provide the jury with the necessary criterion for the assessment of damages. There was error in overruling the causes of demurrer addressed to the insufficiency of the complaint in this respect. In other respects the complaint is not demurrable.
There was no error in ' the exclusion of the correspondence passing between Daniels and the defendants, subsequent to the transaction Daniels had with the plaintiff. The correspondence originated from and had that transaction for its subject, but was not contemporaneous with it, and as to the plaintiff was essentially res inter alios acta.
The abstract purports to contain all the evidence and it is free from conflict. In such state of case, it is the duty of the court, on the request in writing of either *668party, to charge the jury directly and affirmatively upon the effect of the evidence. — Code of 1886, § 2754. Each party requested such an instruction, and it was given at the instance of the plaintiff, and refused the defendants. The rulings of the court in this respect, form the matter of the remaining assignments of error.
As the case was presented in the court below, and as it has been argued here, the point of controversy is whether the evidence shows a complete agreement for the sale of the shoes, or a mere proposal by the plaintiff to purchase them, of which there was not acceptance by the defendants. It is not matter of controversy, that the writing the plaintiff delivered to Daniels to be forwarded to the defendants is, in its form and essence, a proposal addressed to the defendants for the purchase of the shoes at specified prices and on specified terms as to the payment of the prices. The rules of law, by which the case is controlled, are well settled. The mutual assent — the coming together of the minds of the parties — is of the essence of every contract or agreement. In Benjamin on Sales, section 38, it is said : “To constitute a valid contract of sale, the assent of the parties must be mutual. A mere proposal by one man, obviously constitutes no bargain of itself. It must be accepted by, another, and the acceptance must be unconditional.” ^The response, and the only response, the defendants made, was, an acknowledgment by postal card of the receipt of the order or proposal, accompanied by the expression, “the same shall have prompt attention;” and it is this response, it is insisted, constituted an acceptance of the proposal, converting the proposal and acceptance into a contract of sale. Unless these words, “the same shall have prompt attention,” are deflected from their natural, ordinary meaning, they cannot be construed into an acceptance of the proposal of the plaintiff, converting the two into a concluded or completed contract. The operative words are attention and prompt. The latter when read in connection with the term of the proposal that the shoes should be shipped on the succeeding 15th of June, signifies, and was intended to signify, no more than that attention would be given in time to meet this term. If given within that time, it was speedy as the nature or necessities of the transaction required. Promise to give the proposal attention, *669was not a promise of acceptance ; it was not an assent to it. It was no more than a courteous promise to give it consideration, and this we do not doubt is the sense in which it is generally, if not universally, employed in transactions of this character. Attention, according to Webster, signifies “the act or state of attending or heeding, ’1 and further, ‘ ‘notice ; exclusive or special consideration.” And of the meanings attached to it in the Century Dictionary, are, “consideration; observant care; notice; as your letter has just arrived, and will receive early attention.” In the interpretation of all writings, whether contractual or not, the relation of the parties and the subject matter must be considered.
The words and phrases of the writing must be referred to the subject matter and these relations, for they give rise to the occasion for their use or employment. The plaintiff was negotiating for the purchase of the shoes, stating the terms upon which he was willing to purchase. There was no legal duty resting upon the defendants to enter into the negotiation ; they could have been silent, and silence would have been refusal to become parties to it. They could have become parties to it, and converted it into a contract, by an absolute, unconditional acceptance of the proposal of the plaintiff. But it was by 'such an acceptance only, the proposal could have passed the stage of negotiation; there could have been no change or variation of the terms of the proposal; such change or variation would have involved further negotiation. Considering that the parties were standing in these relations, and the subject matter of the proposal of the plaintiff; referring the words 'of the response of the defendants to them, it would contravene the intention of the defendants, drawing them into legal relations they did not intend to assume, if those words were rendered contractual, and not as indicating that the proposal of the plaintiff would receive consideration ; that it would not pass unheeded.
It has not been insisted, and in view of the evidence could not have been, that the transaction between Daniels and the plaintiff was a sale. All that was contemplated, was an order from the plaintiff addressed to the defendants for their acceptance or rejection. The result is, the court erred in the instruction given at the instance of the plaintiff, and the refusal of instruction requested by the defendants.
*670■ For the errors pointed out, the judgment must be reversed and the cause remanded.
Reversed and remanded.