Mississippi Valley Utilities Corporation v. Williams

Decision Date24 October 1932
Docket Number30164
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
PartiesMISSISSIPPI VALLEY UTILITIES CORPORATION v. WILLIAMS

(Division B.)

SALES.

Buyer paying more than contract price for ice, without consideration, during certain period could not recover additional price paid; it being executed gift.

Division B

APPEAL from chancery court of Sharkey county.

HON. J L. WILLIAMS, Chancellor.

Suit by J. C. Williams against the Mississippi Valley Utilities Corporation. From a decree for complainant, defendant appeals. Affirmed in part, and reversed in part.

Reversed in part, and affirmed in part.

Jas Stone & Sons, of Charleston, and Judge Julian C. Wilson, of Memphis, Tennessee, for appellant.

The undisputed proof shows that appellee entered into the contract of April 3, 1931, with full knowledge of his legal rights and for the purpose of avoiding a lawsuit and this was sufficient consideration for the contract of April 3, 1931, and all prior contract or contracts were thereby rescinded.

6 R. C. L. 919, section 302; 11 L.R.A. (N.S.) 789; 28 L.R.A. (N.S.) 450; D. L. Fair Tie Company v. Warrell 147 Miss. 412, 112 So. 24.

It is a rule established by many well-considered cases that parties to a lease cannot escape from the secondary modifying agreement on the ground of want of consideration, where it has been fully executed, nor if partially executed on both sides, can they repudiate that part of it which has been executed, though the unexecuted part may be repudiated unless grounds of equitable estoppel exist.

42 A.L.R. 1451, note, 1458; Spicer v. Earl, 41 Mich. 191, 32 Am. Rep. 152; Ten Eyck v. Sleeper, 65 Minn. 413, 67 N.W. 1026; McKenzie v. Harrison, 120 N.Y. 260, 24 N.E. 458, 17 Am. St. Rep. 638, 8 L.R.A. 257.

There is no objection to an agreement on the one side to pay, and on the other side to accept, a sum of money less than that claimed by a creditor in satisfying a disputed balance, and when the debtor pays the original debt is discharged.

McCall v. Nave, 52 Miss. 494.

The acceptance from the maker by the payee of a note of a sum less than the amount due, with an agreement that it is received as full satisfaction, accompanied by the surrender of the note, extinguishes the entire debt.

Clayton v. Clark, 74 Miss. 499, 21 So. 565.

Although an unexecuted contract between debtor and creditor by which the latter agreed to take a less amount than owing on a past due indebtedness was void and unenforceable because there was no new consideration, nevertheless where such a contract had been executed it is binding, and the creditor cannot sue for the balance, although there was no consideration for the new contract.

Greener & Sons v. Cain & Sons, 137 Miss. 33, 101 So. 859.

Irrespective of whether there was sufficient consideration to support the new agreement if the parties therein agreed and it was fully executed there can be no recovery.

Mackie & Company v. Dale & Sons, 122 Miss. 430, 84 So. 453; Cragin v. Eaton, 133 Miss. 151, 97 So. 532, 34 A.L.R. 508.

W. H. Clements, of Rolling Fork, for appellee.

The chancellor has settled the facts of this case against appellant.

A subordinate and separable part of the contract may be waived or modified by the parties without cancellation or an avoidance of the whole contract.

6 R. C. L., p. 914; Leggett v. Vinson, 155, Miss. 422; Mackie & Co. v. Dale & Co., 122 Miss. 446; Sauce Co. v. Bolling, 95 Miss. 752; L.R.A. 1915B, 28, 42 A.L.R. notes, 1012.

Where the refusal to perform and the promise to pay extra compensation for performance of the contract are one transaction, and there are no exceptional circumstances making it equitable that an increased compensation should be demanded and paid, no amount of astute reasoning can change the plain fact that the party who refuses to perform, and thereby coerces a promise from the other party to the contract to pay him an increased compensation for doing that which he is legally bound to do, takes an unjustifiable advantage of the necessities of the other party. Where the promise to the one is simply a repetition of a subsisting legal promise there can be no consideration for the promise of the other party, and there is no warrant for inferring that the parties have voluntarily rescinded or modified their contract. And the promise cannot be legally enforced although the other party has completed his contract in reliance upon it.

Leggett v. Vinson, 155 Miss. 422; Bell v. Oates, 97 Miss. 790.

The mere agreement to perform, or the actual performance of, an existing contract obligation, affords no consideration for a new promise on the part of the party to whom the existing obligation is due, and, specifically, that a promise of additional consideration for completing an existing executory contract in accordance with its terms is without consideration and invalid.

11 L.R.A. (N.S.) 789.

The general principle is that the performance of an existing obligation is not a consideration for a new promise.

Linz v. Schuck, 11 L.R.A. (N.S.) 789; Leggett v. Vinson, 155 Miss. 422.

A promise by one party to the other party to a subsisting contract, made to prevent a breach of such contract by the promisee, is without consideration.

King v. Duluth, M & N. R. Co., 61. Minn. 482; Lingenfelder v. Wainwright Brewing Co., 103 Mo. 578; Burkham v. Mastin, 54 Ala. 122; Organ v. Stewart, 60 N.Y. 413; Ayres v. Chicago, R. I. Co., 52 Iowa 478; Rooney v. Thomson, 84 N.Y.S. 263; United Merchants Press v. Corn Producers Ref. Co., 76 Misc. 232 N.Y.S. 578; Feldman v. Fox, 164 S.W. 766; Leonard v. Hallett, 141 P. 481; Red Cypress Lumber Co. v. Beall, 5 Ga.App. 202; Coe v. Hobby, 72 N.Y. 141, 28 Am. Rep. 120.

The mere acceptance by the landlord of a reduced amount of rent, with an expression of his satisfaction of the payment in full, does not establish an oral agreement reducing the rent reserved in a written lease.

Wheeler v. Baker, 59 Iowa 86.

Argued orally by Phil Stone and Julian C. Wilson, for appellant, and by W. H. Clements, for appellee.

OPINION

Anderson, J.

Appellee filed his bill against appellant in the chancery court of Sharkey county seeking the specific performance of a contract, by the terms of which appellant agreed to sell to appellee for a five-year period beginning the 23rd of May, 1929, the output of its ice plants at Rolling Fork and Anguilla at five dollars per ton, and to recover damages for a breach of the contract; and an accounting in order to ascertain the amount of the damage, and to restrain appellant from selling the output of its said plants to anyone else during the life of the contract. A temporary injunction was issued in accordance with the prayer of the bill, and on final hearing on bill, answer, amended answer, and proofs a final decree was rendered perpetuating the injunction and awarding appellee damages for the breach of the contract in the sum of one thousand three hundred sixty-five dollars and forty-one cents. From that decree appellant prosecutes this appeal.

On the 23rd day of May, 1929, appellant and appellee entered into a written contract to become effective the 31st day of May, 1929, and to terminate five years thereafter, the pertinent parts of which are substantially as follows: Appellant owned an ice plant at Rolling Fork and one at Anguilla and agreed to sell to appellee, and the latter agreed to buy, his entire requirements of ice for his ice business in that territory (appellee being engaged in the retail sale of ice) from the Rolling Fork and Anguilla plants at and for five dollars per ton. The contract provided further that appellant should sell its ice during the life of the contract exclusively to appellee and the latter agreed to take his full requirements from appellant. It was further stipulated that appellee's services should be rendered in a satisfactory manner to appellant and the customers of the ice plants. The parties functioned under this contract until the latter part of May, 1930, when appellee resigned as manager of the two plants by agreement between the parties. Thereafter they continued to operate under the contract as so modified, appellee paying appellant five dollars a ton for his ice requirements until the 3rd day of April, 1931, at which time they agreed on the price of six dollars per ton.

Appellant's contention is that this change in the contract was to continue only during the balance of the ice season of that year, and thereafter for the balance of its term the contract was canceled; while appellee's contention is that there was no agreement to cancel the contract at the end of the ice season of that year, and that he agreed to pay six dollars per ton, instead of five dollars per ton as provided by the contract, in order to avoid a lawsuit.

At the end of the ice season of 1931, some time in October, appellant notified appellee that the contract was canceled and at an end. From the 3rd day of April up to that time appellee had paid appellant six dollars a ton for his ice requirements, the difference between five dollars a ton and six dollars a ton amounting to one thousand three hundred sixty-five dollars and forty-one cents, which amount the final decree awarded appellee as damages for the breach of the contract by appellant.

Appellant contends that appellee breached the contract, in that his services were not satisfactory to appellant or to the customers of the ice plants and that such dissatisfaction was caused by appellee's drunkenness, and...

To continue reading

Request your trial

VLEX uses login cookies to provide you with a better browsing experience. If you click on 'Accept' or continue browsing this site we consider that you accept our cookie policy. ACCEPT