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McMichael v. Price

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McMichael v. Price
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMay 5, 1936 (1936-05-05)
Docket nos.23797
DefendantW. M. McMichael
PlaintiffsHarley T. Price, doing business as Sooner Sand Company
Case history
Prior actionsAppeal from District Court, Tulsa County
Court membership
Judges sittingOsborne, Michael E. Riley, David Roger Corn, Thomas L. Gibson
Case opinions
Decision byOsborne

McMichael v. Price, 58 P.2d 549 (OK 1936), was a case decided by the Supreme Court of Oklahoma that held that a constraint on discretion was enough to ensure mutuality of obligation in a requirements contract.

Factual background

The plaintiff Harley T. Price formed a contract with defendant W.M. McMichael to enter the sand business, Sooner Sand Company on February 25, 1929. Specifically, part of the contract read that:

agrees to purchase and accept from all of the sand ... which can sell ..."

When McMichael refused to sell the sand, Price sued for breach of contract in Tulsa county. The trial jury found for plaintiff Price, and McMichael appealed.

Decision

The Supreme Court of Oklahoma affirmed the verdict for the plaintiff. McMichael argued that this was an illusory promise because it lacked mutuality of obligation - he contended that the plaintiff could escape all contract liability for simply refusing to sell sand. The court held that the contract did have mutuality of obligation because the contract constrained Price's discretion. Price was required to buy all the sand that he would sell from McMichael, so if he wanted to be in the sand business he was bound to buy from McMichael. The court noted that Price was an experienced sand salesmen, and that while the parties were in business Price was making a profit.

References

  1. Ayres, I. & Speidel, R.E. Studies in Contract Law, Seventh Edition. Foundation Press, New York, NY: 2008, p. 97
  2. McMichael v. Price, 58 P.2d 549 (OK 1936)
  3. Ayres, p. 96
  4. Ayres, p. 97
United States contract law
Contract formation
Offer and acceptance
Implied-in-fact contract
Mailbox rule
Shrinkwrap, Clickwrap, Browsewrap agreements
Consideration
Substantial performance
Privity & 3rd parties
Implied warranty, caveat emptor
Defense against formation
Illusory promise
Statute of frauds (written) & Parol evidence (unwritten & informal)
Unconscionable
Cancelling Contract
Mistake
Illegality
Misrepresentation
Quasi-contract obligation
Promissory estoppel
Unjust enrichment
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