Supreme Court of Canada
Canada
Egg Products Ltd. v. Canadian Doughnut Co. Ltd., [1955] S.C.R. 398
Date: 1955-04-26
Canada Egg Products, Limited) (Defendant)
Appellant;
and
Canadian Doughnut Company Limited (Plaintiff)
Respondent.
1955: January 14, 15; 1955: April 26.
Present: Kerwin C.J. and Estey, Locke, Fauteux and Abbott JJ.
ON APPEAL FROM THE COURT OF APPEAL FOR SASKATCHEWAN
Contract—Breach by repudiation—Whether
continuing—Whether issue of writ sufficient notice of acceptance of
repudiation, and made within a reasonable time.
By a contract in writing entered into in Feb. 1951, the
appellant agreed to sell and the respondent to buy a quantity of powdered egg
yolk and egg albumen. It was provided that initial deliveries were to begin
July 15 following, and that if the powder was not satisfactory, or not in
accord with the specifications, it was to be returnable within 14 days of
delivery. On May 7 the appellant notified the respondent that the contract was
not valid and that it would not make delivery. Despite the notice, the
respondent continued negotiating for delivery until June 1, when because of the
appellant's continued refusal to deliver the order, other than a small quantity
of albumen, the respondent without notifying the appellant made the purchases
elsewhere. On June 25 it brought action for a declaration that a valid contract
had been entered into and claimed damages for an anticipatory repudiation
thereof.
Held: That the refusal by the appellant on May 7 to
perform the contract, which it never retracted, constituted in the
circumstances, a continuing refusal. Ripley v. McClure 4 Ex. R. 344; Hochster v. De la Tour 2
E. & B. 678, 22 L.J. (Q.B.) 455. The issue of the writ by the
respondent was sufficient notice of its acceptance of the appellant's
[Page 399]
continuing repudiation, and even if there was on June 1
another and independent act of repudiation, the acceptance thereof was made
within a reasonable time. Roper v. Johnstone L.R. C.P. 167; Ripley
v. McClure, supra.
Decision of the Court of Appeal for Saskatchewan (1954) 11
W.W.R. (N.S.) 193, affirmed.
APPEAL from a judgment of the Court of Appeal for
Saskatchewan dismissing
an appeal, from the judgment of Doiron J. who awarded the respondent damages in
the sum of $54,843 because of the appellant's repudiation of a contract to
deliver certain quantities of powder egg yolk and powdered egg albumen to the
respondent.
G. H. Yule, Q.C. and I. Nitikman, Q.C.
for the appellant.
E. M. Hall, Q.C. and R. F. Reid for the
respondent.
The Chief Justice:—This
is an action brought by the respondent against the appellant for a declaration
that a valid contract had been entered into between the parties and for damages
for an anticipatory repudiation thereof. In its statement of defence, at the
trial and before the Court of Appeal, the appellant set up a number of
defences, one of which was that no contract had been entered into between the
parties. That defence was abandoned in this Court and, therefore, the record
contains much that is now not material.
In February, 1951, the appellant agreed to sell and the
respondent agreed to purchase 100,000 pounds of Grade A Spray Powdered Egg Yolk
and 10,000 pounds of Powdered Egg Albumen. The transaction took the form of an
order on the respondent's standard form, which the appellant accepted. On the
face of the form appears the specifications, followed by this clause printed in
red ink:—"This order subject to conditions printed on reverse side",
and this typed clause:—"It is understood that if the powder is not
satisfactory and within the above specifications upon arrival at Trenton, it
can be returned to the seller within 14 days for full credit, plus transportation
and charges." On the reverse side are the printed conditions, number 6 of
which reads as follows:—
All goods furnished will be received subject to inspection,
and if found defective, or not in accordance with the specifications, will be
returned to the seller at the latter's risk and expense.
[Page 400]
One argument on behalf of the appellant which may be
immediately disposed of is that the typewritten clause on the face of the order
renders the contract too vague to be enforced, or, alternatively, that it
renders the contract unenforceable for want of mutuality. There is no substance
to the last branch of this submission because, the parties having entered into
the contract, they are bound by its proper construction. As to the first
branch, emphasis is placed upon the word "satisfactory" and it is
said that, even if goods supplied under the contract would have complied with
all the specifications and would have been free from defect, the respondent
could still have rejected them on the ground that they were unsatisfactory. As
against this there is much to be said for the view of Chief Justice Martin that
the goods could not be returned by the respondent unless found defective, or
unless found to be not in accordance with the specifications. It appears
difficult to hold that the typed clause is mere surplusage, as the trial Judge
considered, since it may well be that the real reason for inserting it, as
indeed he indicated, was that the respondent desired fourteen days to ascertain
if the goods were defective or were not in accordance with the specifications.
However, whatever its proper construction may be and even if it were to be left
to the respondent to decide if goods furnished by the appellant were
satisfactory, the parties agreed to the terms and the mere fact that disputes
might arise as to their meaning is of no consequence.
The appellant's main submission was that there had been no
repudiation of the contract. Even if it be not admitted that both Courts have
found against the appellant, there appears to be no doubt that it unequivocally
repudiated the contract on May 7, 1951. It is true that at that time the
appellant did not treat the repudiation "as a wrongful putting an end to
the contract", to quote the words of Chief Justice Cockburn in Frost v.
Knight .
Adapting the language used earlier by the Chief Justice, the respondent might
have treated the repudiation as inoperative and awaited the time when the
contract was to be executed and then hold the appellant responsible for the
consequence of non-performance; in which case it would have kept the
[Page 401]
contract alive for the
benefit of both ; it would remain subject to all its own obligations and
liabilities under the contract and would have enabled the appellant not only to
complete the contract, if so advised, notwithstanding its previous repudiation
of it, but also to take advantage of any supervening circumstance which would
justify it in declining to complete it.
However, the matter does
not rest here. In a conversation between the representatives of the parties on
May 30, 1951, the appellant insisted that there was no contract. Objection was
taken by the appellant to any evidence of a further discussion on June 1st on
the ground that it was without prejudice. Although I understood Mr. Yule to
admit that he had waived that objection by his introduction of evidence, I do
not proceed upon any such admission. The important fact is that after June 1st
the appellant continued to put forward its claim that there was no contract and
that it was not bound to deliver the goods to the respondent, and the result is
that the respondent was entitled to treat that continuing repudiation as a
breach of the contract. In fact that claim was advanced at the trial and before
the Court of Appeal. Shortly after June 1st the respondent's purchasing agent
was instructed to buy egg yolk wherever possible. Once it is found that the
repudiation was still alive, the respondent was not obliged to say in so many
words, orally or in writing, that it treated the repudiation as putting an end
to the contract, but it was sufficient to bring this action while the matter
remained in that position. L. Roth & Co. (Ltd.) v. Taysen,
Townsend, & Co. and Grant and Grahame . In Heyman v. Darwins, Ltd. , Viscount Simon states that the issue of a writ
claiming a declaration that an agreement had been terminated by the wrongful
repudiation by the defendants which had been accepted by the plaintiffs may
sometimes be regarded as amounting to the exercise of the plaintiffs' claim to
rescind. In American National Red Cross v. Geddes Brothers , Geddes Brothers had agreed to sell and the Red
Cross to purchase a quantity of yarn. The single question for determination was
whether an unequivocal and
[Page 402]
absolute written
renunciation by the former of the contract had been adopted by the Red Cross.
At p. 145 Chief Justice Davies says:—
The question then, it
seems to me, in every such case must be whether under the proved facts adoption
of one party to a contract of its repudiation by the other party may be
inferred from the proved facts, or whether an actual notice of acceptance or
adoption must be given by the party receiving notice of the repudiation to the
party repudiating.
It seems to me from
reading the authorities that such an actual notice of acceptance or adoption is
not necessary but that adoption may be reasonably inferred from all the
circumstances as proved.
The facts in that case
lead the Court to the conclusion that the Red Cross had adopted Geddes
Brothers' renunciation; the evidence in the present case requires the same
result. Other cases were cited, but an examination of them shows that the
judgments depend upon their particular facts.
At one stage of the
proceedings it was contended that paragraph 8 of the statement of claim
indicated that the respondent was relying only upon the repudiation of May 7.
That paragraph reads as follows:—
8. On or about the 7th
day of May 1951, the said A. E. Leary in his capacity of Manager at Toronto
aforesaid of the defendant and on behalf of the defendant, notified the
plaintiff that the defendant did not intend to carry out its contract to
deliver to the plaintiff the products described in paragraph 3 hereof as
agreed.
Paragraph 3 of the
defence reads:—
3. As to Paragraph 8,
the defendant repeats its denial that Leary was Manager for the defendant at
Toronto but says that on or about the 7th of May, 1951, and on divers occasions
prior thereto the said Leary did notify the plaintiff that the defendant took
the position that it had not entered into a contract with the plaintiff for
delivery of the products referred to in Paragraph 3 of the statement of claim.
Before the trial the
appellant had sought, but was refused, leave to amend this paragraph. In view
of the course of the trial, Mr. Yule quite frankly admitted that he could not
ask the Court to restrict paragraph 8 to an averment that the repudiation of
the appellant ceased on May 7th, but that it should be taken as alleging a
continuing repudiation. It was not necessary that the appellant should have
pleaded that it had treated that continuing repudiation as a wrongful putting
an end to the contract, since it was made quite clear that that was the
position it had adopted.
[Page 403]
Because of what occurred
with reference to the albumen, it is argued that it was impossible for the
respondent to contend that it had "accepted" the repudiation. In my
opinion, no difficulty arises. The agreement was for 10,000 pounds of albumen
"as required to March 31, 1952". While declining to deliver any yolk
the appellant, when pressed by the respondent to carry out its contract, agreed
to send what albumen it had on hand. Some of this was in the form of crystals
which had to be pulverized, and the respondent agreed to pay and did pay an
independent company's charge of three cents per pound for this process, in
addition to the contract price. The appellant continuing to refuse to carry out
any other part of the bargain, the respondent had the right, notwithstanding
the arrangement with reference to the albumen, to treat the appellant's
repudiation as a breach of all else and bring its action,—which it did, after
the delivery of the last of the albumen which the appellant had on hand.
A question was raised as
to the amount of damages awarded in connection with the albumen purchased
elsewhere by the respondent after March 31, 1952, in order to complete the
total of 10,000 pounds. The action was tried in March, 1953, and no point
appears to have been made there that there was any substantial difference
between the prices of the albumen before and after March 31, 1952, and, in the
absence of any relevant material to which our attention was drawn, the $881.61
allowed by the trial Judge under this heading and approved by the Court of
Appeal should not be interfered with by this Court.
The appeal should be
dismissed with costs.
The judgment of Estey,
Fauteux and Abbott JJ. was delivered by:—
Estey
J.:—The appellant in this Court
conceded (except as to a submission of ambiguity to be hereinafter discussed)
the contract and there are concurrent findings of fact, fully supported by the
evidence, that it denied the validity of the contract and refused performance
of its obligations thereunder on May 7, 1951. The essential issues in this
appeal are, therefore, (a) on June 25, 1951, was it open to the
respondent to adopt the appellant's repudiation; and (b) if so, did the
issue of the writ on that date constitute an adoption.
[Page 404]
The parties hereto, on
February 9, 1951, entered into a contract under which the appellant agreed to
sell and the respondent to purchase 100,000 pounds of Grade A spray powdered
egg yolk (hereinafter referred to as egg yolk) to be delivered on July 15,
1951, and July 31, 1951, and 10,000 pounds of powdered egg albumen (hereinafter
referred to as egg albumen), delivery to be made as required to March 31, 1952.
About the middle of
April the appellant, either because of its inability to purchase sufficient
eggs or because it could not purchase eggs at a price that would enable it to
make deliveries under the contract, decided it would not carry out its
obligations thereunder. This the appellant's representatives in Toronto
intimated to those of respondent at some preliminary discussions and finally,
on May 7, definitely stated to respondent that a valid contract had not been
concluded on February 9, 1951, and, in any event, the appellant would not make
the deliveries thereunder as required.
The appellant, prior to
the issue of the writ, in its pleadings and both at trial and in the Court of
Appeal consistently adhered to its position of May 7. Only in this Court has it
admitted the validity of the contract and, in the main, rested its case upon
the fact that respondent had not adopted its repudiation.
Appellant's repudiation
prior to the time fixed for performance gave respondent the opportunity to
adopt that repudiation and thereby rescind the contract, reserving a claim for
damages, or to ignore the repudiation, in which event the contract remained in
force. Hochster v. De la Tour ; Johnstone v. Milling ; Dalrymple v. Scott ; Principles of Rescission of Contracts, Morison,
c. 4.
It is, therefore, necessary to determine whether the
respondent has adopted appellant's repudiation. After the interview on May 7,
appellant's representatives reported that respondent "would like to get
together" with the officers of the appellant "and see what kind of a
compromise can be worked out." The interview of May 30 was apparently as a
consequence of this attitude on the part of the respondent, but at its
conclusion the parties continued
[Page 405]
to maintain the positions as of May 7. In fact, the
appellant's representative left that interview on the understanding that he
would return, as he did, on June 1.
On June 1 the interview in the morning was without prejudice
and no evidence was given with regard to what was then said. In the afternoon
the interview was continued, but 'nothing was said as to whether it was then
without prejudice. As it was admittedly an adjourned meeting relative to the
same matter, it might well be regarded as being without prejudice. However,
both parties adduced evidence as to the result of the afternoon conversation
and at least to that extent the protection provided by its being without
prejudice would be waived. Georgia Construction Co. v. Pacific Great
Eastern Ry. Co. .
This evidence makes it clear that at the conclusion of the interview of June 1
the parties were still persisting in the positions they had taken on May 7.
While at all times throughout these interviews the respondent consistently took
the position that it desired the contract carried out, I do not think, in the
circumstances, it can be said that this was done other than as part of the
negotiations out of which it was hoped that the appellant might be induced to
withdraw its repudiation and deliver the egg yolk and. albumen. It ought not to
be said that respondent, by so urging a withdrawal, intended to accept or
refuse appellant's repudiation.
After the interview of June 1 respondent, at a conference of
its officers, concluded that further negotiations with the appellant would be
futile and that it would, as in fact it did, go into the market and buy egg
yolk and albumen. However, the respondent did not make known to the appellant,
expressly or by appropriate conduct, that it did not intend to negotiate
further or to go into the market.
The appellant had on hand about 4,000 pounds of egg albumen
which, as requested, it delivered to the respondent. These deliveries, apart
from that of May 16, were made as a result of the conversation on May 30, upon
which occasion the parties, as to the egg yolk and the balance of egg albumen,
continued their respective positions as of May 7. In these circumstances such
deliveries do not affect the issues involved in this action.
[Page 406]
No further correspondence or interviews followed after June
1, except such as related to the delivery of the 4,000 pounds of egg albumen,
until June 25, when the respondent issued the writ.
The appellant, at all times material hereto, has maintained
that there was no binding contract between the parties and, even if there were,
it would not perform its obligations thereunder. It has adhered to that
position in its pleadings and submissions both at trial and in the Court of
Appeal. Apart from its conceding the validity of the contract in this Court, it
has not in any way withdrawn from the position it took on May 7. In my view its
refusal has continued and is properly described in the language of Baron Parke
as "a continuing refusal." In Ripley v. McClure , on March 16, 1847, the
plaintiff agreed to sell and the defendant to purchase one-third of a cargo of
tea upon its arrival at Belfast. The defendant repudiated its obligations and
when it persisted in that attitude throughout "a long correspondence"
it was held to constitute "a continuing refusal." The cargo did not
arrive at Belfast until September 21 of the same year and action was brought
after that date. Baron Parke, referring to the judge's charge to the jury,
stated at p. 358:
He left the questions in
writing, whether there was a refusal at any time, and whether that refusal had
been subsequently retracted; and the jury having found, as we think they were
warranted by the evidence to do, that it had not, there was certainly evidence
of a continual refusal down to and inclusive of the time when the defendant was
bound to receive, …
In Hochster v. De
la Tour, supra, Lord Chief Justice Campbell, in referring to Ripley v.
McClure at p. 693, stated:
And they held that a refusal by one party before the day
when the act is to be done, if unretracted, would be evidence of a continual
refusal down to, and inclusive of, the time when the act was to be done.
In Roper v. Johnson
, in April, 1872, the plaintiff agreed to
purchase and the defendant to sell 3,000 tons of coal in May, June, July and
August. Keating J. stated at p. 175:
There was some controversy as to the facts; but there can be
no doubt that the defendant, soon after the contract was entered into,
intimated his determination not to perform it; and it seems to be agreed
[Page 407]
that, at all events, that repudiation of the contract was
accepted by the plaintiffs on the 3rd of July, when they brought this action
for the nonperformance of it.
Even if, as it was contended, there was on June 1 another
and independent act of repudiation on the part of the appellant, it would
appear that the respondent would, having regard to all the circumstances, have
until at least June 25 to make its election whether to adopt appellant's
repudiation or not. It is stated the adoption must be made known "with
every reasonable dispatch" (Halsbury's Laws of England, 2nd Ed.,
Vol. 7, p. 229) and "with all reasonable dispatch" (Leake on
Contracts, 8th Ed., p. 675 and Pollock on Contracts, 13th Ed., p.
219). These phrases are not equivalent to immediately, or forthwith, but rather
would appear to mean what is reasonably required or dictated by the
circumstances. The authorities cited by the learned authors would appear to
support this construction. When regard is had to the preliminary discussions
prior to May 7, the negotiations thereafter and the nature and character of the
egg market, the period of twenty-four days, apart from evidence to the contrary,
would not be in excess of what would be reasonable in the circumstances. The
foregoing authorities, and particularly Ripley v. McClure and Roper
v. Johnson, would appear to support this view.
Therefore, when the writ in this litigation was issued the
appellant's refusal continued and respondent had not adopted appellant's
repudiation.
Whether or not the issue of the writ will constitute an
adoption must depend upon the circumstances of the particular case. Where the
repudiation arises out of a disagreement as to the construction of a contract
the issue of a writ to determine the meaning thereof would not constitute an
adoption of the act of repudiation. There is no such suggestion in the case at
bar. The respondent here asks a declaration that the contract was duly
executed, that there was a wrongful repudiation thereof by the appellant, and
damages. Upon the authorities it would appear that the issue of such a writ did
constitute an acceptance of the appellant's repudiation. In Hochster v. De
la Tour, supra, and Frost v. Knight , there does not appear to have
been any adoption apart from the issue of the writ. In Roper v.
[Page 408]
Johnson, supra, the contract was made in April and
shortly thereafter the defendant intimated that he would not perform it. It was
held that this repudiation was adopted by the issue of the writ on July 3. In
1925 Lord Atkinson, speaking for the Privy Council, stated:
On the other hand, in no way could this repudiation by Mr. Martin
be more unequivocably accepted by Mr. Stout, and by him acted upon, than by
instituting within forty-eight hours of the telegram reaching him an action
claiming to recover damages for breaches of those very contracts so repudiated.
Martin v. Stout .
See also Heyman v. Darwins, Ltd. .
It would, therefore, appear that respondent's action is not
premature.
The appellant submitted that the contract is too vague to be
enforceable. This submission is based upon a typewritten clause in the purchase
order and accepted as a term of the contract. It reads:
It is understood that if the powder is not satisfactory and
within the above specifications upon arrival at Trenton, it can be returned to
the seller within 14 days for full credit, plus transportation charges.
This provision, it is suggested, gives to the respondent a
right which it is free to exercise in a manner arbitrary or otherwise and,
therefore, in reality, there is no agreement or, as counsel for respondent
expressed it, the contract is unenforceable "for want of mutuality."
In support of this submission counsel quoted a statement from Williston on
Contracts, 1936, Vol. 1, s, 43, p. 124, and Leake on Contracts, 7th
Ed., p. 3. The latter reads:
Promissory expressions reserving to the promiser an option
as to the performance do not create a contract: as in cases of employment upon
the terms of such remuneration as the employer thinks right to give; . . .
In the cases there cited no binding obligation was
concluded. The case of Roberts v. Smith , illustrates the type of case
the learned author had in mind. There the plaintiff claimed remuneration for
work done. In dismissing the action Baron Martin stated at p. 320:
… the plaintiff put himself in this condition—"I will
work for you, and I leave the remuneration in your hands." In reason and
common sense that is a liability in honour, and not a liability by contract.
[Page 409]
The statement quoted from Williston is followed by a
sentence:
Thus an agreement to pay such wages as the employer wishes
is invalid, though an agreement to pay such wages as the employer considers
"right and proper" is not too uncertain, since performance of such a
promise does hot leave the promisor free to do as he may choose.
These authorities emphasize that where performance by one of
the parties is entirely a matter for his own decision there is no enforceable
contract. In the case at bar there is a contract under which the appellant
undertook to deliver egg powder which, if not satisfactory to the respondent,
as purchaser, might be returned. The meaning of the clause is neither
indefinite nor vague, nor is the language thereof different in effect from that
which has been recognized and enforced by the courts over a long period of
time. In Truman v. Ford Motor Co. of Canada Ltd. , the plaintiff undertook to
supply sods and place them in a manner satisfactory to the defendant. When the
latter became dissatisfied with the sods it cancelled the contract and the
plaintiff brought an action for breach thereof. The jury found that the
defendant, in rejecting the sods, had: acted honestly but not reasonably. Upon
these findings the learned trial judge directed judgment for the plaintiff and
this was reversed in the Court of Appeal on the basis that the defendant,
having acted honestly, was acting within his contractual rights.
It would appear, under a
contract providing for the delivery of powdered egg, which, if not
satisfactory, might be returned, the purchaser is within his contractual rights
if he honestly rejects the powder. The fact that others might have been
satisfied or that he has acted unreasonably is not material. Stadhard v.
Lee ; Grafton and Others v. The Eastern
Counties Ry. Co. ; Diggle v. Ogston Motor Co. ; Benjamin on Sale, 8th Ed., p. 582.
Scammell v. Ouston, cited by appellant, is an
example of a case where the language used is so indefinite, and in relation to
which the parties had not adopted a meaning, that it cannot be said the parties
had agreed upon the essential terms and, therefore, no consensus ad idem and
[Page 410]
consequently no contract. See also Lethbridge Brewing &
Malting Co. Ltd. v. Webster ; Coldwell & Jennings Ltd.
v. J. W. Creaghan Co..
Parties may, subject to exceptions not material hereto,
embody in a contract such terms as they may agree upon. In the case at bar,
under the terms agreed upon, the parties assumed obligations that were clearly
expressed and with respect to which no misunderstanding is suggested. In such a
case, as stated by Cockburn C.J.:
… to ascertain and give effect to the intention of the
parties as evidenced by the agreement; and though, where the language of the
contract will admit of it, it should be presumed that the parties meant only
what was reasonable, yet, if the terms are clear and unambiguous, the Court is
bound to give effect to them without stopping to consider how far they may be
reasonable or not. Stadhard v. Lee, supra, at p. 372.
The appellant objects to an item of $881.61, being damages
allowed by the learned trial judge in respect to two shipments of egg albumen
dated respectively October 28 and November 4, 1952. These purchases were, upon
the evidence, made as a result of the appellant's failure to deliver egg
albumen and there is no evidence to the contrary. The mere fact that it was
purchased after the date when the respondent might have required deliveries
under a contract is not necessarily inconsistent therewith. It would,
therefore, appear that the judgment of the learned trial judge and the Court of
Appeal allowing this item should be affirmed.
The appeal should be dismissed with costs.
Locke J.:—That
there was a binding contract made between the parties by the acceptance of the
respondent's written order of February 9, 1951, subject to the variation asked
for in the telegram from the appellant of February 13 which the respondent
agreed to in the answering telegram of February 14, 1951, is conceded on behalf
of the appellant.
It was contended before us that, by reason of the fact that
as it was a term of the agreement that if the egg powder was not satisfactory
and did not comply with the specifications it might be returned by the seller
within 14 days, it was too vague to be enforceable. Whatever be the proper
interpretation of the word "satisfactory" in the context, a matter
which the Court would have been required
[Page 411]
to determine had the need arisen, the acceptance of the
respondent's offer obligated the appellant to deliver the material at the price
and at the times specified. There is neither vagueness nor uncertainty in the
terms in which that obligation was expressed. The decision of the House of
Lords in Scammell v. Ouston ,
relied upon by the appellant, turned upon the fact that, in the opinion of the
House, there was no completed contract. Here it is conceded that there was.
The objection that the action was premature raises a
question of more difficulty. It is clear from the evidence of the witness
Livingston that on May 2, 1951, Leary, the appellant's salesman who had
negotiated the sale, informed the respondent that the appellant was not going
to deliver the goods sold, saying that it contended that there was no
enforcible contract and that this statement was repeated at a meeting between
the representatives of the parties in Toronto on May 7. The respondent did not
then elect to rescind the contract or, as it might be more accurately
expressed, elect to treat this as a repudiation of the contract and treat it as
at an end but, maintaining its stand that there was an enforcible contract,
endeavoured to induce the appellant to carry out its obligations.
On May 7, and again on May 23, 1951, the solicitors for the
respondent wrote to the appellant at Saskatoon asking if they intended to carry
out the contract, but these communications were not answered. On a date which
appears to have been May 30, Bernard Halstead, then the sales manager of the
appellant, met the representatives of the respondent in Toronto, at which time
it was arranged that the appellant would deliver some 4,000 pounds of albumen
which it then had in Eastern Canada on account of its obligations under the
contract, to be paid for at the agreed price. As to the balance of the material
to be delivered, however, Halstead said that they had no egg yolk available and
that the plant was not in operation. The parties met again on the morning of
June 1st but the discussions that morning were without prejudice. Later that
day, however, Halstead had a further discussion with D. H. Beskind and
[Page 412]
one Goldhill, an American lawyer representing the
respondent, at which time Halstead informed them that the appellant could not
and would not make delivery of the goods.
While the discussion during the morning had been expressly
stipulated to be without prejudice, nothing apparently was said as to this
regarding the meeting in the afternoon and the evidence of Beskind as to
Halstead's final refusal was given without objection. Halstead also was called
as a witness for the appellant and gave evidence as to the afternoon meeting.
It is thus clear that neither party regarded the discussion during the
afternoon as being privileged from disclosure. If it were to be regarded as
merely a continuation of the meeting in the morning and thus protected by the
stipulation then made, it is clear that both parties waived the privilege. It
was shown by the evidence of the witness Livingston that Halstead's statement
then made, that the appellant refused to complete, was accepted as final by the
respondent. Following the meeting, a conference was held by Beskind with
Goldhill and the Toronto solicitor for the company, following which Beskind
instructed Livingston to go into the market and buy egg powder for the
company's requirements.
There is no evidence to suggest that the election of the
respondent to treat the contract as at an end was communicated to the appellant
otherwise than by the delivery of the Statement of Claim in the action. In that
pleading the respondent alleged that the appellant had on May 7, 1951, declared
its intention not to carry out the contract, and the prayer for relief which
claimed, inter alia, a declaration that there was a valid contract asked
a further declaration that the appellant had wrongfully repudiated and
wrongfully refused to carry it out.
It is, of course, true that no legal consequences result
from a simple declaration by a party to a contract that it does not intend to
carry out his part of it. When, however, such a declaration is made, the other
contracting party may either insist on holding his co-contractor to the bargain
or elect to treat the contract as at an end and claim damages for its breach,
even though the time for performance has not arrived.
[Page 413]
Where the promisee elects to treat the contract as at an end
or, as it is sometimes described, to rescind the contract, his election is not
complete until it is communicated to the other party, and this must be done
within a reasonable time. In the present matter, as shown by the evidence to
which I have referred, it was on or shortly after June 1, 1951, that the
respondent, acting apparently on legal advice, elected to treat the contract as
at an end and went in the market to obtain the goods which the appellant had
contracted to deliver. It was on June 25, 1951, that the action was commenced.
Where one party to a contract declares his intention to
repudiate his obligations under it, the other party, if he insists upon
performance, cannot until after the time fixed for performance bring an action
to recover damages for its breach. The contract is then kept alive for the
benefit of both parties. Thus, the respondent in the present matter cannot
rely, in my opinion, upon what occurred on May 7, 1951, to support an action
brought before the time fixed for performance. Where, however, as in the
present case, the respondent after the refusal of May 7 continued its efforts
to induce the appellant to alter its position and discharge its obligations, it
is entitled, in my opinion, to rely upon the final refusal of June 1st and its
own election to then treat the contract as at an end to support the action
brought before the time fixed for performance.
While an election to treat a contract as at an end is not
complete until notice of such election is given to the other party and until
such notification the latter is entitled to treat the contract as subsisting
and insist upon carrying out its terms, no particular manner of communicating
such election is required. In Syers v. Syers , the notice required to
terminate a partnership at will was held sufficiently given by the answer filed
in the action. In Roper v. Johnson , the election of the plaintiff
to accept the repudiation of the obligations under a contract made on June 11
was, in the language of Keating J. (p. 175), "accepted" by the
plaintiffs on July 3, when they brought the action for the nonperformance of
it. There was, apparently, no other notice of the plaintiffs' election to treat
the contract as at an end.
[Page 414]
In the present matter I consider that the service of the
Statement of Claim was a sufficient notice of the election of the respondent to
treat the contract as at an end and that it was given within a reasonable time,
in the circumstances. In my opinion, the action was not prematurely brought.
I would dismiss this appeal with costs.
Appeal dismissed with costs.
Solicitor for the appellant: G. H. Yule.
Solicitors for the respondent: Hall, Maguire &
Wedge.