Linder v Mid-Continent Petroleum Corp.

Linder v Mid-Continent Petroleum Corp.
252 S.W.2d 631 (1952)

George Rose Smith, Justice.

This is an action by Mid-Continent Petroleum Corporation to recover possession of a filling station owned by Cora Lee Lindner and leased by her to Mid-Continent.  The theory of the complaint is that Mrs. Lindner wrongfully attempted to cancel the lease and thereafter unjustifiably withheld possession from the plaintiff. There was also involved certain equipment appurtenant to the filling station, but the arguments advanced on appeal present no issue with respect to this equipment. The defenses below were that Mrs. Lindner’s lease to Mid-Continent was void for lack of mutuality and that the lessee was in default in the payment of rent. Trial before a jury resulted in a verdict awarding possession to the plaintiff.

The jury may have concluded from the proof that on March 19, 1949, Mid-Continent wished to rent the station as an outlet for the sale of its petroleum products, Mrs. Lindner desired to lease the property to Mid-Continent, and Mrs. Lindner’s husband, the other appellant, wanted to undertake the operation of the station. In furtherance of these ends the parties executed four instruments on the date mentioned. First, Mrs. Lindner, for a rental of one cent for each gallon of motor fuel sold on the premises, leased the filling station to Mid-Continent for a term of three years with an option by which the lessee might extend the lease for two more years. In this lease the lessee reserved the privilege of termination at any time upon ten days’ notice to the lessor. Second, Mid-Continent in turn rented the property to Paul Lindner upon a month-to-month basis at the same rental, both parties retaining the privilege of termination upon ten days’ notice. Third, the Lindners authorized Mid-Continent to offset the rents against each other, so that Mid-Continent would not be required to collect the rent monthly from Lindner and pay over an identical amount to Mrs. Lindner. Fourth Mid-Continent and Lindner agreed upon the price schedule at which the company would sell petroleum products to Lindner, this Contract also being cancelable upon ten days’ notice by either party.

These arrangements appear to have been satisfactory until the year 1951, when Lindner removed Mid-Continent’s advertising from the service station and began buying gas and oil from a competing company. On July 23, 1951, Mid-Continent gave notice that it elected to terminate its lease to Paul Lindner and its agreement to sell petroleum products to him. Three days later the Lindners retaliated by attempting to cancel Mrs. Lindner’s lease to Mid-Continent. When the latter demanded possession at the expiration of the ten-day notice by which its sublease to Paul Lindner had been canceled the defendants refused to give up the property. This suit was then filed.

It is argued by the appellants that the lease from Mrs. Lindner to Mid-Continent is lacking in mutuality in that the lessee can terminate the contract upon ten days’ notice, while no similar privilege is granted to the lessor.


Mutuality is the doctrine that a promise by one party is consideration for a promise by the other party only if the latter’s promise is consideration for the former’s promise. 


This contention is without merit. Williston has pointed out that the use of the term ‘mutuality’ in this connection ‘is likely to cause confusion and however limited is at best an unnecessary way of stating that there must be a valid consideration.’  Williston on Contracts, § 141. As we held in Johnson v. Johnson, 188 Ark. 992, 68 S.W.2d 465, the requirement of mutuality does not mean that the promisor’s obligation must be exactly coextensive with that of the promisee.  It is enough that the duty unconditionally undertaken by each party be regarded by the law as a sufficient consideration for the other’s promise.  Of course a promise which is merely illusory, such as an agreement to buy only what the promisor may choose to buy, falls short of being a consideration for the promisee’s undertaking, and neither is bound.  El Dorado Ice & Planing Mill Co. v. Kinard, 96 Ark. 184, 131 S.W. 460; Williston, § 104. If, however, each party’s binding duty of performance amounts to a valuable consideration, the courts do no insist that the bargain be precisely as favorable to one side as to the other.

In this view it will be seen that Mid-Continent’s option to cancel the lease upon ten days’ notice to Mrs. Lindner is not fatal to the validity of the contract. This is not an option by which the lessee may terminate the lease at pleasure and without notice; at the very least the lessee bound itself to pay rent for ten days. Even lesser duties than this are held to be a sufficient consideration to support a contract. Williston, §§ 103F and 105. . . .

Affirmed.

Question

Under the bargain theory of consideration, a promise by Mid-Continent to pay rent for ten days is consideration for Linder’s promise to allow Mid-Continent to use the station only if Linder gave that promise in order to get Mid-Continent’s promise in exchange.

(a) True

Correct. But it is extremely implausible to think that Linder gave her promise to get only a promise from Mid-Continent to pay ten days rent. Just imagine that, in the negotiations prior to the signing of the lease, Mid-Continent had said, “We can only make a commitment for ten days.” Surely, Linder would not have responded, “Oh, that is fine; we can go ahead with the lease.” So how is Linder consistent with the bargain theory.

(b) False

Incorrect. But it is extremely implausible to think that Linder gave her promise to get only a promise from Mid-Continent to pay ten days rent. Just imagine that, in the negotiations prior to the signing of the lease, Mid-Continent had said, “We can only make a commitment for ten days.” Surely, Linder would not have responded, “Oh, that is fine; we can go ahead with the lease.” So how is Linder consistent with the bargain theory.