DocketNumber: No. 5135
Citation Numbers: 23 F.2d 436, 1928 U.S. App. LEXIS 3187
Judges: Rudkin
Filed Date: 1/9/1928
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/18/2024
This was an action to recover the purchase price of a quantity of molasses. Under date of December 8, 1925, the plaintiff addressed a letter to the defendant stating: “In confirmation of conference with you on December 5, 1925, we are willing to enter into negotiations to contract with you for Hawaiian plantation feed molasses on approximately the following bases, detailed contract to be submitted to you after you have decided upon the basis you desire.” Then followed three separate and distinct propositions. The first covered a period of three years, from December 1, 1925, to November 30, 1928; the second, a period of one year, from December 1, 1925, to November 30, 1926; and the third, a period of two years, from December 1, 1926, to November 30, 1928. The second proposition provided for the sale of 30,000 tons, of 2,000 pounds each, at a price of $9 per ton, delivered to the barge of the purchaser alongside the distributing plant of the vendor at Crockett, California. The price stated was subject to additions and deductions for molasses containing more or less than 45 per cent, combined sucrose and reducing sugars. Deliveries were to be made upon 30 days’ notice, but the vendor did not obligate itself to deliver more than 3,000 tons in any calendar month. Thé third proposition was the same as the first, except for the period covered. All terms of payment under any contracts to be entered into, based on the foregoing propositions, were to be in form and upon conditions satisfactory to the vendor. It was further provided that all terms and conditions in any contracts that might be entered into would be similar to those shown in the usual form of sales agreement, under which the purchaser had purchased molasses from the vendor in the past.
Under date of December 17,1925, the defendant addressed a letter to the plaintiff accepting the second proposition contained in the foregoing letter, for 30,000 tons of molasses at a price of $9 per ton of 2,000 pounds, based on 45 per cent, sugar content. But it was stated in the letter of acceptance that none of the molasses would be required by the purchaser until during the month of March. The third proposition, was likewise accepted, but the acceptance was conditional upon working out the question of price to fit the alcohol price, as explained in a previous conference between the parties, and also upon condition that, if the vendor sold molasses to competitors of the purchaser for less than the price fixed by the contract, it would make a like reduction to the purchaser. Under date of December 19, 1925, the plaintiff addressed a second letter to the defendant, stating its understanding of the acceptance of December 17, 1925. In this letter, it was stated that the vendor understood that the second proposition was accepted, and that it would proceed to prepare the usual form of contract covering the transaction, and would forward same to the defendant for execution at an early date. The letter continued: “We shall appreciate confirmation of our understanding that proposition No. 2 is accepted, without relation to any further negotiations that may be pending between us. In other words, that proposition No. 2 stands upon its own feet, and that contract shall be drawn and signed immediately.”
“The preliminary negotiations leading up to the execution of a contract must be distinguished from the contract itself. There is no meeting of the minds of the parties while they are merely negotiating as to the terms of an agreement to be entered into. To be final, the agreement must extend to all the terms which the parties intend to introduce, and material terms cannot be left for future settlement; nor is there a binding contract where, although its terms have been agreed on orally, the parties have also agreed that it shall not be binding until evidenced by writing. ■* * * Generally speaking, the circumstance that the parties did intend a subsequent agreement to be made is strong evidence that they did not intend the previous negotiations to amount to an agreement.” 13 C. J. 289.
“The question whether an informal arrangement is intended by the parties to form a contract in and of itself or as only a step in the negotiations leading up to a binding contract in writing is not always easy of solution. The law undoubtedly is that an informal agreement complete in its terms will take effect if the parties so intend, though a more formal contract is expected to be afterwards made, provided that the formal contract is not to contain material provisions not contained in or to be inferred from the preliminary informal agreement.” Garrick Theatre Co. v. Gimbel, 158 Wis. 649, 149 N. W. 385.
“In determining whieh view is entertained in any particular case, several circumstances may be helpful, as: Whether the contract is of that class whieh [is] usually found to be in writing; whether it is of such nature as to need a formal writing for its full expression; whether it has few or many details; whether the amount involved is large or small; whether it is a common or unusual contract; whether the negotiations themselves indicate that a written draft is contemplated as the final conclusion of the negotiations. If a written draft is proposed, suggested or referred to, during the negotiations, it is some evidence that the parties intended it to be the final closing of the contract.” Mississippi, etc., S. S. Co. v. Swift, 86 Me. 248, 29 A. 1063, 41 Am. St. Rep. 545.
The ruling of the court below must be sustained for two reasons: In the first place, the offer of the plaintiff in error contained in the letter of December 8, 1925, was not accepted without qualification, because under the terms of the offer the plaintiff in error did not obligate itself to deliver more than 3,000 tons in any calendar month, while under the terms of the acceptance the defendant in error did not obligate itself to accept any deliveries before the month of March, and inasmuch as the offer called for the delivery of 30,000 tons before December 1, 1926, it would require at least ten monthly deliveries of 3,000 tons each to make up that quantity, and these could not be made from March to November, inclusive. The difference, of course, was not great, but the rule of law on this subject is very strict.
As said by Mr. Justice Gray, in Minneapolis, etc., Ry. v. Columbus Rolling Mill, 119 U. S. 149, 7 S. Ct. 168, 30 L. Ed. 376: “The rules of law whieh govern this ease are well settled. As no contract is complete without the mutual assent of the parties, an offer to sell imposes no obligation until it is accepted according to its terms. So long as the offer has been neither accepted nor rejected, tho negotiation remains open, and imposes no obligation upon either party; the one may decline to accept, or the other may withdraw his offer; and either rejection or withdrawal leaves the matter as if no offer had ever been made. A proposal to accept, or an acceptance, upon terms varying from those offered, is a rejection of the offer, and puts an end to the negotiation, unless the party who made the original offer renews it, or assents to the modification suggested.”
Or, as said more explicitly by Judge Hen
Furthermore, the form of the offer, the form of the acceptance, the nature of the contract and its subject-matter, the subsequent negotiations between the parties, and the construction they themselves placed upon their prior negotiations all tend to show that they did not intend to be bound until the formal detailed contract, so often referred to throughout the negotiations, was fully agreed upon and executed. Thus, in the contract as proposed and agreed upon deliveries were to be made upon 30 days’ notice, to be gradual throughout the term of the agreement, but in no ease to exceed 4,000 tons in any calendar month. This provision was no doubt inserted to settle the difference between the original proposal and the acceptance. The contract as proposed and agreed upon also provided that deliveries might be made at the place indicated in the offer, or at any place in San Francisco Bay, at the option of the purchaser, provided the latter would pay the state tolls of 15 cents per ton when deliveries were made in the bay.
Again, the contract or proposal as agreed upon contained elaborate provisions for taking samples and making tests to ascertain the sugar content of the molasses for the purpose of fixing the ultimate price to be paid. Such a provision as the latter would seem an essential one in any contract of this kind. The right of the parties to insist upon these provisions and changes was never questioned, and it clearly appears from the entire record that neither party to the negotiations intended to be bound thereby until all the details of the contract were fully "agreed upon and the formal contract itself was finally executed. The contention of the plaintiff in error that there was a contract from the beginning, or from the receipt of the letter of • December 17, would therefore seem to be an afterthought.
As said by Lord Justice James, in E'ossiter v. Miller, 5 Ch. D. 648: “On a question of construction, different minds may differ, but, for my own part, I have often felt that in eases of this nature parties have found themselves entrapped into contracts by letters which they wrote without the slightest idea that they were contracting.”
The judgment is affirmed.