Court Opinion

ID: 3880941
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 09:12:27.83888+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:41:55.602553
License: Public Domain

March 23, 1918. The opinion of the Court was delivered by
Action for breach of contract; order of nonsuit; appeal by the plaintiff.
The contract is a skeleton one, in writing, and was drawn by an Atlanta broker mediately for the plaintiffs on one side and the defendant on the other. Let the evidence of it be reported. *Page 467 
The question in the case is the meaning of the contract. Under it the defendant shipped to the plaintiff 155 bales of linters, and that was confessedly the total output of the oil company for the season. The defendant says that was a performance of the contract. The plaintiff says that the defendant was bound by the contract to operate the oil plant, and in order to supply the plaintiff with 400 bales of linters; and the plaintiff sues for the failure of the defendant to furnish 245 other bales. And that is the issue to be decided. It is true that if the defendant agreed with the plaintiffs to sell to them 400 bales of linters at all hazards, then a failure to do so is a breach of the contract for which the defendant has rendered no lawful excuse. But the instant case is not of that character. It is manifest from the face of the contract, and it must have been so manifest to the plaintiffs, that the defendant's chief business is the crushing of cotton seed, and that the making of linters is a by-product of that business. It is altogether plain that the defendant did not by express words bind itself to operate the plant throughout the whole season. If, therefore, it was bound to do that, in order to produce 400 bales of linters, such an obligation rested in an implied contract to do so. It is true that:
"Whatever may fairly be implied from the terms or nature of an instrument is in judgment of law contained in it." 6 R.C.L., p. 856.
Bishop states the rule thus:
"From an express undertaking, the law will also imply whatever the parties may be reasonably supposed to have meant, and what is essential to render the transaction fair and just." Bish. on Con., p. 37.
It was said by a New York Court that an implied agreement "is to be raised only to enforce a manifest equity or to reach a result which the unequivocal acts of the parties *Page 468 
indicate that they intended to effect." Genet v. Presidentof Delaware  H. Canal Co., 136 N.Y. 609, 32 N.E. 1082, 19 L.R.A. 127.
So the inquiry is, Did the cotton oil company reasonably intend to bind itself to operate its mill at all events in order to turn out a by-product? Its chief business was to crush seed and make cotton oil and cake. So much is not said in the testimony, but it is a matter of common knowledge, about which we will not profess ignorance. It took a ton of seed to make 60 or 70 pounds of "linters;" a bale of linters contained 500 pounds (see contract and testimony of Spier). The cotton oil company would, therefore, have had to crush about 3,000 tons of seed to produce 400 bales of linters. It is not to be reasonably supposed that the cotton oil company intended or would have bound itself against all odds to crush so much seed in order to supply a by-product of linters; for producing linters was but an incident to the business of crushing cotton seed. It is not sufficient that the buyers intended so much; the seller must also have reasonably intended it. So much for the implications of the contract, and we now turn to the expressions of it.
The books say "there can be no implication as against the express terms of the contract." 13 C.J., p. 559. And "the implication must be found in the language of the contract."Maryland v. Railroad, 22 Wall. 111, 22 L. Ed. 713. And "there is a well recognized distinction between the expectation of the parties to a contract and the duty imposed by it." Knox v. Lee, 12 Wall. 457,20 L. Ed. 287. The expressions in the instant contract leave small room for implications. The rule by which to interpret a contract phrased like the instant one is well stated inBrawley v. United States, 96 U.S. 172, 24 L. Ed. 622, a case cited by and relied upon by the appellants. The Court there stated the rule in these words: *Page 469 
"Where a contract is made to sell * * * certain goods, identified by reference to independent circumstances, such as * * * all that may be manufactured by the vendor in a certain establishment * * * and the quantity is named with the qualification of `about' * * * the contract applies to the specific lot."
That opinion plainly makes for the respondent. The words in the instant case, "about 400 bales," are controlled and qualified by the more specific words "season's output," so that the buyer must have taken the season's output even though it should measurably exceed 400 bales.
So much was decided in the Texas case cited also by the appellant; the controlling words there were held to be output, and not a suggested number of bales. Loeb v. WinnsboroCotton Oil Co. (Tex.Civ.App.), 93 S.W. 515. If the buyer must take the "output" though it exceeds the estimate, he must also be content with it though it falls short of the estimate. The buyer is bound to take the output, because he agreed to that; the seller is not bound to furnish more than the "output," because he has only agreed to furnish that much.
It is suggested by the appellant that the contract must be mutual. But that is not so where the parties have agreed otherwise, and where the nature of the agreement rebuts a notion of strict mutuality. Bish. on Contracts, sec. 589. In the same case of Brawley v. United States, the Court uses this language: "So where a manufacturer contracts * * * at a certain price all the articles he shall make in his factory for the space of two years, `say a thousand to twelve hundred gallons of naphtha per month,' the designation of quantity is qualified not only by the indeterminate word `say,' but by the fair discretion or ability of the manufacturer, always provided he acts in good faith. This was the precise decision in Gwillim v. Daniell, 2 Cromp., M.  R. 61, where Lord Abinger says: `The agreement *Page 470 
is simply this, that the plaintiff undertakes to accept all the naphtha that the defendant may happen to manufacture within the period of two years. The words, "say from one thousand to twelve hundred gallons (per month)" are not shown to mean that the defendant undertook, at all events that the quantity manufactured should amount to so much. If by fraud the defendant manufactured less than he ought to have done, the breach should have been shaped accordingly. Here it does not appear that, in the ordinary course of his manufacture, the defendant ought to have produced a larger quantity than he has done; and we cannot, therefore, say that he has broken his contract.'"
The cases are numerous, and the contracts they construe are of great diversity, and the Courts conclude variously; it would be an idle task to review a fraction of them. It is sufficient to say our judgment is against the view of the appellant, and with that of the Circuit Court. See Bautovichv. Great Southern Lumber Co., 129 La. 857, 56 So. 1026, Ann. Cas. 1913b, 848; Burt v. Garden City Sand Co.237 Ill. 473, 86 N.E. 1056; Little Rock Cooperage Co. v.Gunnels, 82 Ark. 286, 101 S.W. 729, 12 Ann. Cas. 294.
A possible modification of this conclusion is suggested in the Brawley case and the English case which it quotes. If the cotton oil company for sinister reasons had concluded not to operate its plant, it might not lawfully shelter itself from liability behind that act of bad faith. But the testimony does not make such a case, and there is no warrant to decide it. The appellant thinks that issue ought at least to have been sent to the jury. The testimony, though, leaves only one reasonable conclusion thereabout. The plaintiff proved that the reason the plant was not operated was for the lack of money and the inability to borrow it, and the plant would have been operated if money could have been had. There is not a suggestion to the contrary. It is contrary, too, to the reason of the case, that the cotton *Page 471 
oil company would forego crushing seed and making oil and cake in order to curtail its by-product of linters.
The judgment of the Circuit Court is affirmed.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE GARY and MESSRS JUSTICES WATTS and FRASER concur.
MR. JUSTICE HYDRICK dissents.