Summary
In Fuchs v. United Motor Stage Co. (1939), 135 Ohio St. 509, this court recognized the business necessity for, and the legality of, requirements contracts, stating that the mutual promises of the buyer to buy and the seller to sell the requirements of a commodity are consideration one for the other.
Summary of this case from General Motors Corp. v. KosydarOpinion
No. 27415
Decided June 7, 1939.
Contracts — Injunction against breach — Requirement contract not void for uncertainty, when — Time and amount of merchandise — Mutuality of obligation and remedy not essential, when — Adequate remedy at law defined — Contract by bus company to purchase gasoline, etc., from shareholder — Cause of action for injunction against purchasing requirements elsewhere, pleaded, when.
1. A written contract which calls for continuous performance, not for a definite term in point of time but for a term dependent upon an event which is certain to occur, is not void for uncertainty as to time.
2. A contract in writing whereby one agrees to buy, for a sufficient consideration, all the merchandise of a designated type which the buyer may require for use in his own established business, is known as a requirement contract and is not void for uncertainty as to the amount of merchandise involved in the sale.
3. So long as there is consideration for the obligation of one party to purchase merchandise from another, it is not always essential that there be mutuality of obligation between them in order to give the seller a right of action against the purchaser for a breach of such obligation to purchase, and likewise under such circumstances, it is not always essential that there be mutuality of remedy as between the parties, to enable the seller to specifically enforce the obligation of the purchaser to purchase under such contract.
4. The term adequate remedy at law as applied to a breach of contract means that the legal remedy must be as efficient as the indicated equitable remedy would be; that such legal remedy must be presently available in a single action; and that such remedy must be certain and complete, taking into consideration the specific advantages to which the party to whom performance is due is entitled by the terms of the contract.
5. A petition which alleges that the plaintiff has paid to a defendant bus company the sum of $7,500 for shares of stock in such defendant company as a consideration for a contract in writing whereby the defendant company agrees to purchase from the plaintiff all its requirements of gasoline, oil and grease so long as the plaintiff continues to own such shares of stock, at a price of three cents a gallon less than the regular retail price of gasoline sold by the plaintiff; that said contract has been breached by the defendant company, by refusing to purchase and accept from the plaintiff such requirements for its business; and that the plaintiff is still the owner of the shares of stock and is ready and willing to furnish such requirements in accordance with such contract, states a good cause of action for injunctive relief to enjoin the defendant company from purchasing such requirements from persons other than the plaintiff, so long as the latter retains the shares of stock and furnishes the requirements of the defendant according to the terms of the contract.
APPEAL from the Court of Appeals of Muskingum county.
The record in this case consists of the amended petition of the plaintiff, appellee herein, originally filed in the Common Pleas Court of Muskingum county, the general demurrer of the defendant, appellant herein, to plaintiff's amended petition, and the action of the trial court in sustaining the demurrer and rendering judgment in favor of the defendant, the plaintiff not desiring to plead further. An appeal was taken to the Court of Appeals which court reversed the judgment and remanded the case to the Common Pleas Court for further proceedings according to law. The case is now in this court for review by reason of the allowance of a motion to certify the record.
The amended petition alleges that the plaintiff is the owner and operator of a gasoline station known as the Terminal Service Station and deals in gasoline, oil and grease at wholesale and retail; that the defendant is an Ohio corporation and owns and operates a fleet of automobile busses in southeastern Ohio in and out of the city of Zanesville; that on September 20, 1930, the plaintiff, Joseph C. Fuchs, paid the defendant $7,500 for fifteen shares of the capital stock of the defendant company and a contract in writing whereby the defendant company agreed to purchase from the plaintiff all the gasoline, oil and grease to be used in the busses operated by it at a price of three cents a gallon less than the regular retail price of the gasoline sold by the plaintiff, with the stipulation that this contract should continue in full force and effect so long as the plaintiff continues to own the above mentioned stock of the defendant company.
The amended petition further alleges that the plaintiff is still the owner of the fifteen shares of capital stock of the defendant company; that he has fully performed his obligations under the contract and stands ready and willing to furnish all gasoline, oil and grease required for the busses operated by the defendant company according to the contract; that he has expended large sums of money in the equipment and in providing sufficient service for the defendant under the contract; that the defendant complied with the terms of the contract until July, 1937, but since that date it has been purchasing such merchandise for use in its busses from persons other than the plaintiff.
The amended petition further alleges that plaintiff has no means of knowing the amount of gasoline, oil and grease being purchased from other persons by the defendant company; that the amount of such commodities now used and to be used by it in the future are dependent upon fluctuating conditions and other factors which are uncertain and are not susceptible of reasonable determination in a suit at law, and that as a result of such breach of contract the plaintiff has suffered and will continue to suffer great and irreparable damages; that he has no adequate remedy at law, and that he will be obliged to prosecute multiple suits at law unless defendant is restrained from a further breach of the contract.
The prayer of the amended petition is that the defendant may be restrained and enjoined from buying or obtaining, from persons other than the plaintiff, the gasoline, oil and grease necessary for its busses so long as such agreement is in force and effect.
Mr. Stanley J. Crew and Mr. John R. Allen, for appellee.
Mr. Clarence J. Crossland, for appellant.
The sole question and assignment of error presented by the record in this case is whether the Court of Common Pleas was justified in sustaining the general demurrer to plaintiff's amended petition, questioning its sufficiency to state a cause of action because of the alleged infirmities of the contract pleaded therein, and because of the character of the remedy sought. The specific claims of the defendant are: (1) That the contract is void and unenforceable because of uncertainty, (2) that the contract lacks mutuality and (3) that plaintiff has an adequate remedy at law and is not entitled to a mandatory injunction to enforce a negative covenant in the contract.
This contract calls for performance, not for a definite term, but so long as the plaintiff should own the fifteen shares of stock of the defendant company, or so long as he should continue in the business of selling gasoline, oil and grease. The contract may be uncertain as to point of time when it will terminate, but there is no uncertainty as to the event which will bring about its termination, and in this respect the law is satisfied. Words which stipulate an ascertainable fact or event by which the duration of the term of a contract can be determined, make the contract definite and certain in that particular. Pallange v. Mueller, 206 Wis. 109, 238 N.W. 815, 80 A. L. R., 1454.
There is no specific amount of merchandise to be sold on the one hand or purchased on the other. The amount is to be determined by the requirements of the defendant as demanded by its business, a matter which is within the control of the defendant and about which it is not in position to complain. This contract in character is known as a requirement contract. Such contracts are not unusual and have been upheld generally by the courts. Of course, there must be terms, conditions, or circumstances from which quantities of material or merchandise sold may be determined, or at least approximated. But when such requirements have a fixed business basis, as distinguished from the mere whim of the party making the purchase, there is sufficient certainty in this respect.
The United States Circuit Court of Appeals for this district, in Lima Locomotive Machine Co. v. National Steel Castings Co., 155 F., 77, 11 L.R.A. (N.S.), 713, gave careful consideration to a contract for furnishing "all your requirements in steel castings for the remainder of the present year." The court sustained the contract as sufficiently definite because the purchaser was engaged in an established business, the needs of which were understood by the seller. The court in the course of its opinion, at page 79, says:
"The defendant was engaged in an established manufacturing business which required a large amount of steel castings. This was well known to the plaintiff, and the proposition made and accepted was made with reference to the 'requirements' of that well-established business. The plaintiff was not proposing to make castings beyond the current requirements of that business, and would not have been obligated to supply castings not required in the usual course of that business. By the acceptance of the plaintiff's proposal, the defendant was obligated to take from the plaintiff all castings which their business should require."
Business necessities require contracts of this class, though more or less indefinite, to be upheld. Thus a hotel keeper could purchase his necessary supply of ice, a foundry all the coal needed for the season, a furnace company its requirements of iron, a manufacturer of lubricating greases its oil requirements for a period of twelve months, or a canning company partnership all the labels required in its business for a period of three years but not those required by other companies in which the individual partners may have an interest. In such cases the quantities needed may be ascertained with some degree of certainty, and the intention of the parties, it is presumed, was to contract with reference to such quantity. Klipstein Co. v. Allen (C.C.A.), 123 F., 992; Crane v. Crane Co., 105 F., 869; Manhattan Oil Co. v. Richardson Lubricating Co., 113 F., 923; T. B. Walker Mfg. Co. v. Swift Co., 200 F., 529, 43 L.R.A. (N.S.), 730, 733; Wells v. Alexandre, 130 N.Y. 642, 29 N.E. 142, 15 L.R.A., 218; 1 Page on Contracts (2 Ed.), 143, Section 100; 23 Ruling Case Law, 1266, Section 83. See also 7 A. L. R., 498, 14 A.L.R., 1300, and 24 A. L. R., 1352.
"Where the contract is to furnish a purchaser engaged in some business his requirements of a certain commodity which is used in such business, the contract will be construed to impose upon the seller the duty of furnishing the entire requirements of the buyer in that business providing the latter acts in good faith and without fraud in ordering and using the commodity. The term 'requirement' is construed in such contracts to mean the actual needs of the buyer in his business during the life of the contract. The correlative duty of the buyer under such a contract is to purchase from the seller the amount of the commodity which he actually requires for use in his business during the life of the contract. In such cases the quantity needed can be ascertained with some degree of certainty and the intention of the parties it is presumed is to contract with reference to such quantity." 9 Ohio Jurisprudence, 310, Section 80.
These uncertainties, if they may be called such, must have been in the minds of the parties at the time the contract in question was executed. They are dealt with by the deliberate covenants of the parties, and it is not the duty or function of the courts to make or unmake them.
The second claim of the defendant is that the contract lacks mutuality in that, while it is alleged in the amended petition that the defendant promised to purchase from the plaintiff all the gasoline, oil and grease required for its busses so long as plaintiff was the owner of its stock, yet there is no corresponding allegation of promise on the part of the plaintiff that he will furnish the required supplies to the defendant so long as he owns the stock, and the defendant requires or demands performance. Of course, if there is no consideration moving to the defendant for its promise to take its requirements as to gasoline, oil and grease from the plaintiff, it is not obliged to follow such promise with performance.
Most authorities hold that a requirement contract is not lacking in mutuality where there is a promise of one party to sell and of another to purchase all of a commodity which the latter may require in his business. The mutual promises are consideration one for the other. The authorities are to the effect that so long as there is consideration for the obligation of the defendant, it is not essential that there be mutuality of obligation between plaintiff and defendant in order to sustain a right of action in the plaintiff against the defendant for a breach of such obligation; and as will be pointed out later, there is such a situation in this case. But it is claimed that the courts of this state are committed to the proposition that to make a valid contract there must be not only mutuality as to obligation, but in order to invoke the remedy of specific performance, mutuality as to remedy as well.
Defendant bases its contention in this regard on the authority of the case of Steinau v. Gas Co., 48 Ohio St. 324, 27 N.E. 545, wherein it is held that a binding contract resulted where the gas company promised to deliver to the defendant all the gas required to illuminate his premises for a period of ten years, in consideration of a promise on the part of the defendant to receive and pay for such gas for such period of time at a specified rate named in the contract. On the other hand, the defendant having refused, after a period of time, to accept the gas as provided in the contract, this court held that the gas company was not entitled to prosecute a suit to enjoin the defendant from using electric light or any material other than gas supplied by the plaintiff for illuminating purposes on the premises of the defendant, for the reason, among others, that the contract did not afford mutuality of remedy. The court said "that a court of equity will not grant an injunction to restrain a breach of negative covenants where the result will be to effect specific performance of affirmative covenants, unless the affirmative stipulations of the complaining party can be specifically enforced against him," and that since it was beyond the power of the court to compel the gas company to manufacture and supply gas to the defendant for a period of ten years, it could not enforce the covenants of the contract against the defendant by injunction. The court further observed that while there are cases to the effect "that 'where there is a clear and continuing breach of a negative covenant in a contract, and where an injunction against the breach of it will do substantial justice between the parties by obliging the defendant to carry out his contract or lose the benefit of a breach of it, and the remedy at law is not adequate, or the damages for such a breach are not susceptible of proper assessment by a jury, a court of equity may properly restrain the defendant from such a breach, though the court might not be able to enforce a complete specific performance of the contract against the other party,' " yet the weight of authority is as stated by Pomeroy on Contracts (2 Ed.), 229 and 232, Sections 163 and 165, as follows:
"The remedial right to a specific performance must be mutual. If, therefore, from the nature or form of the contract itself, from the relations of the parties, from the personal incapacity of one of them, or from any other cause, the agreement devolves no obligation at all upon one of the parties, or if it cannot be specifically enforced against him; then and for that reason he is not, in general, entitled to remedy of a specific performance against his adversary party * * *. It is a familiar doctrine that if the right to the specific performance of a contract exists at all, it must be mutual; the remedy must be alike attainable by both parties to the agreement."
The Steinau case above referred to was decided almost fifty years ago. In the light of modern judicial authority it is doubtful whether the court can now go so far in the statement of the rule. Certainly the weight of authority at the present time is to the effect that it is not necessary, under all contractual situations, that there be mutuality of remedy as well as mutuality of obligation in order to invoke the remedy of specific performance.
Space will not permit quotation from important modern legal authorities on this point. Sufficient at this time is the clear statement of the rule, the epitome of an exhaustive survey of the present-day case law, as it appears in 2 Restatement of Contracts, 677, Section 372, as follows: "The fact that the remedy of specific enforcement is not available to one party is not a sufficient reason for refusing it to the other party."
The comment on this section says:
"The law does not provide or require that the two parties to a contract shall have identical remedies in case of breach. A plaintiff will not be refused specific performance merely because the contract is such that the defendant could not have obtained such a decree, had the plaintiff refused to perform prior to the present suit. It is enough that he has not refused and that the court is satisfied that the defendant is not going to be wrongfully denied the agreed exchange for his performance. The substantial purpose of all attempted rules requiring mutuality of remedy is to make sure that the defendant will not be compelled to perform specifically without good security that he will receive specifically the agreed equivalent in exchange. * * * The plaintiff may already have fully performed, in which case the defendant needs no remedy. If the plaintiff's return performance is already due or will become due in specified portions as the defendant proceeds with his performance, the decree in the plaintiff's favor will be made conditional on his rendering the return performance. * * * Such a decree sufficiently protects the defendant against having to give something for nothing; and it is not essential that the plaintiff's return performance should be one that will be specifically compelled." See also 12 American Jurisprudence, 509 and 513, Sections 13 and 15.
Whatever may be the rule under other circumstances, this court concludes that the contract involved in the case at bar may be specifically enforced against the defendant so far as mutuality is concerned. As above noted, it does not appear from the record in this case that there was any promise or obligation on the part of the plaintiff to furnish the requirements of the defendant for any definite period of time. The plaintiff therefore had the right to terminate the contract at any time. Ordinarily such a contract would not be enforceable against the defendant for lack of mutuality. For instance a promise to buy all the coal mined from a certain mine is not binding because of want of consideration where the owner of the mine does not in turn promise to sell. A promise to accept a lesser sum than is due upon an obligation if paid within a certain time is not binding for want of mutuality unless before such offer is withdrawn it has been accepted and performed by the party to whom the offer was made. In other words, an offer, unsupported by a consideration, may be revoked before acceptance even though an express period of time is given in which to accept. Only performance in such case will amount to acceptance and until there is performance the right to revoke remains unimpaired. Bretz v. Union Central Life Ins. Co., 134 Ohio St. 171, 16 N.E.2d 272.
But in the case at bar there is an independent or collateral consideration, fully executed, which requires performance on the part of the defendant so long as the plaintiff fulfills the conditions which are necessary to keep the contract in force. The purchase of the stock by the plaintiff from the defendant and his payment of $7,500 in cash therefor furnishes a complete and adequate consideration for the obligation upon the part of the defendant to carry out the terms of this contract. The contract is similar to an option contract for the purchase of property where a consideration has been paid for the option. In such case the optionee may enforce the contract and compel the optioner to sell at any time within the option period while he, as optionee, is not obliged to buy. Under such contracts, consideration is essential, but mutuality of obligation is not. Where there is an independent consideration for the contract so that one promise does not depend upon another for consideration, mutuality of obligation is not essential. Stenegaard v. Smith, 43 Minn. 11, 44 N.W. 669; Luikart, Recr., v. Massachusetts Bonding Ins. Co., 129 Neb. 771, 263 N.W. 124; Turner v. Hall, 128 Va. 247, 104 S.E. 861.
This doctrine is well illustrated in the case of Himrod Furnace Co. v. Cleveland Mahoning Rd. Co., 22 Ohio St. 451, 459, where the railroad company agreed with certain parties in consideration that they would build an iron furnace on the line of its road, to transport ore and metal to and from the furnace at a specified rate for the term of ten years when the parties required it so to do. These parties, on the strength of this promise, erected the furnace according to stipulations of the agreement, but after a time the railroad company refused to continue performance. The court held that the promise of the company to carry freight at the rates agreed upon was not void for want of consideration, or for want of mutuality of obligation between the parties; that while there was no promise upon the part of these parties to build the furnace in the first instance, having done so before the offer was withdrawn by the railroad company, there was consideration which entitled them to enforce the obligation.
Since the plaintiff has given full and adequate consideration to the defendant in the purchase of the stock in the defendant company, there is a binding obligation upon the part of the defendant to carry out its covenant in the contract to purchase its requirements from the plaintiff so long as the plaintiff retains the stock and furnishes the merchandise requirements to the defendant as stipulated in the contract. While there is no mutuality of obligation, there is sufficient consideration to require performance upon the part of the defendant so long as the plaintiff demands it within the term of the contract and so long as he himself complies with the conditions which keep the contract in force. See annotations 14 A. L. R., 1300; 24 A.L.R., 1352, and 74 A. L. R., 476.
Finally the defendant claims that the plaintiff may not maintain his equitable remedy here sought, because he has an adequate remedy at law. Again, the defendant claims its position is supported by the case of Steinau v. Gas Co., supra. In that case the contract under consideration called for a supply of gas which might be required to properly illuminate plaintiff's premises, but not less in amount than three-fourths of the present average consumption of gas on such premises, for a definite fixed term and at a definite fixed rate to continue throughout the term.
The court, in denying equitable relief in that case, was doubtless influenced by the definite terms of the contract by which damages might be reasonably estimated. Furthermore, the court, in its opinion, recognized the propriety of the equitable remedy of injunction where there is a continuing breach of an implied negative covenant and an injunction against the breach of it will do substantial justice between the parties; or where the damages for such a breach are not susceptible of proper estimation by a jury. The term adequate remedy at law, as applied to a breach of contract, means that the legal remedy must be as efficient as the indicated equitable relief would be; that it must be presently available in a single action; and that it must be certain and complete, taking into consideration the specific advantages to which the plaintiff is entitled by the terms of his contract.
The contract involved in the case at bar possesses contingencies as to time, quantity, and price, which experience gained from operation under the contract alone will make certain, and under these circumstances it seems to the court that the plaintiff does not have a complete and adequate remedy at law. There are cases where a party may be permitted to breach and abandon his contract and pay for his breach in damages, but he should have this privilege only when the other party will not suffer thereby. Ordinarily the stability of the business world is best conserved by requiring contracting parties to perform their specific obligations rather than to compensate for a breach of them; and equity still operates to preserve such stability in proper cases. This view is well stated in 14 Ruling Case Law, 381, Section 82, as follows:
"A court of equity will endeavor, to the extent of its powers, to bind men's consciences so far as they can be bound to a true and literal performance of their agreements, and will not suffer them to depart from their contracts at pleasure, leaving the party with whom they have contracted to the more chance of any damages which a jury may give. It will, therefore, in a proper case, enjoin the breach of a contract, notwithstanding the fact that the nature of the contract may be such that specific performance could not be enforced. Accordingly, the breach of a negative covenant in a contract may be enjoined."
As illustrating the propriety of the equitable remedy of injunction under circumstances such as exist in the case at bar, it has been held that where the plaintiff, engaged in the distribution of motor vehicle supplies, leases to defendant a gasoline filling station with an express covenant that he will sell and the lessee will purchase from the plaintiff lessor throughout the term of the lease, at prices conformable to the established market for lessor's products sold to other filling stations, all the motor vehicle supplies required by the business of the defendant as distributor of same to the exclusion of similar merchandise marketed by other persons, an injunction will issue to enjoin the lessee from violating the lease by selling gasoline purchased from a competitor of the lessor. See Stines v. Dorman, 25 Ohio St. 580; Konst v. Christ Diehl Brewing Co., 79 Ohio St. 469, 87 N.E. 1137, affirming Chris. Diehl Brewing Co. v. Konst, 12 C. C. (N.S.), 577, 20 C. D., 782.
In the case of Hendler Creamery Co. v. Lillich, 152 Md. 190, 136 A. 631, the plaintiff was a corporation engaged in the manufacture and distribution of ice cream and other commodities, while the defendant owned and conducted a drug store. Plaintiff and defendant entered into a three-year contract by which, in consideration that plaintiff install a refrigerator service in defendant's drug store, the latter agreed to buy and use exclusively, and to the extent of his requirements during the period, the ice cream, sherbets and other frozen commodities made by the plaintiff at the wholesale price as adopted by the plaintiff from time to time. After a period of one year the defendant undertook to handle ice cream and other products of another dealer, whereupon the plaintiff sought an injunction against the defendant from selling similar goods purchased from persons other than the plaintiff while the contract was in force. The court, in sustaining the injunction, says:
"The only remaining question is whether the contract, being valid, is enforceable in a court of equity. Of this we have no doubt. The damages which might be sought to be recovered in a court of law would be practically impossible of ascertainment because of the difficulty of determining in advance the quantity of the commodities which will be used, and, further, the impossibility of determining in sums of money the damage which would result to the appellant by losing the advertisement of its own goods and having that of a competitor's substituted at the appellee's place of business." See also to the same effect, Dairy Cooperative Assn. v. Brandes Creamery, 147 Ore., 488, 30 P.2d 338; Renner Brewing Co. v. Rolland, 96 Ohio St. 432, 118 N.E. 118; K-W Ignition Co. v. Unit Coil Co., 93 Ohio St. 128, 112 N.E. 199.
We think the case at bar is similar to those above reviewed, and that plaintiff's amended petition states a cause of action for equitable relief.
The judgment of the Court of Appeals is therefore affirmed and this cause is remanded to the Common Pleas Court for further proceedings according to law.
Judgment affirmed and cause remanded.
WEYGANDT, C.J., DAY, ZIMMERMAN, WILLIAMS, MYERS and MATTHIAS, JJ., concur.