Tipton v. . Feitner

It is not universally true that a party to a contract who has himself failed to perform some of its provisions is thereby precluded from recovering damages for a breach committed by the other party. The question in such cases is, whether the stipulation which the plaintiff has failed to observe was a condition precedent to the performance by the defendant; and whether it is of that character or not depends upon the general scope and intention of the agreement, to be gathered from its several provisions. If the parties have in terms stipulated that the defendant's performance shall be dependent or conditional upon something to be done by the plaintiff, the case is a plain one. It is equally so where the act to be done by the plaintiff must naturally precede, in the order, of time what the defendant is called upon to do, and where the former is necessary to be done to enable the defendant to perform; and also where the defendant's performance is the payment or equivalent for something which he is to receive from the plaintiff, unless, in the latter case, it is provided that such equivalent is to be rendered in advance of what is to be received on account of it, credit being given for the latter.

In contracts for the purchase of property, real or personal, where there is no stipulation for credit or delay on either side, the delivery of the property (or its conveyance where it is of a nature to pass by grant), and the payment of the price are each conditions of the other, and neither party can sue for a breach without having offered performance on his part. Such was the nature of the contract in this case. The plaintiffs had slaughtered hogs and also live hogs to dispose of, and the defendant agreed to purchase the whole of both kinds, and to pay a certain price per pound, discriminating, however, as to price between the two species of property. There was no agreement for credit for any part of the property for any time; and in the absence of such a stipulation we must consider that it was to be paid for on delivery, and that the delivery of the property and the payment of the price were to be concurrent acts. But a question then arises, whether the contract was entire in the sense that a delivery of the whole — *Page 426 the live hogs as well as the dressed meat — was to precede the payment for the latter; and it is upon the answer to that inquiry, as I think, that this case depends. And I am of the opinion that the bargain respecting the several kinds of property, in regard to the payment for each, is to be taken distributively. The dressed hogs were to be delivered immediately, while those which were alive, and were on their way from Ohio, were to be delivered when they should arrive. It would not be unreasonable for the parties to have agreed that payment for those first delivered should be postponed until the others came to hand, so that there should be one settlement for the whole; but it would be a more probable mode of adjustment for the purchaser to agree to pay for the parcel which he was to receive at once, and for the other when he should receive it. In that way neither of the parties would be called upon to trust the other — and there being nothing in the contract which looked to credit, we cannot, I think, reasonably hold that any was contemplated. The difference in the kind of property, in the price, and in the time of delivery showed such a diversity in the two operations as to preclude any necessary or probable inference that the one first to be consummated by delivery was to be suspended, as to its liquidation, for the period, more or less uncertain, which might elapse before the other would be ready for adjustment. Upon the construction of so peculiar an agreement a precise precedent is not to be expected. But there is a modern case in the Court of King's Bench, which somewhat confirms the opinion to which I have arrived. The defendant contracted in writing, in October, 1829, to supply the plaintiff with wheat straw sufficient for his use as a stable keeper, till the 24th June, 1830, to be delivered at his stables in London, at the sum of 33s. per load, of thirty-six trusses, and to be delivered at the rate of three loads in a fortnight; and the plaintiff agreed to pay the defendant "the sum of 33s. per load for each load of straw so delivered" on his premises, from that day to the 24th June. The action was for not continuing to deliver the straw after it had been furnished under the contract for about three months; *Page 427 and the defendant's excuse was, that the plaintiff had refused to pay down for the last load. The question then was, whether the price was payable on the delivery of each load, and the court held that it was so payable. Lord TENTERDEN, Ch. J., said, he had no doubt that by the terms of this agreement the plaintiff was to pay for the loads of straw as they were delivered. If that were not so, he said, the defendant would have been liable to the inconvenience of giving credit for an indefinite length of time; and in case of non-payment, bringing an action for a very large sum of money, which did not appear to have been intended by the contract. PARKE, J., said, the defendant clearly did not contemplate giving credit. The other judges concurred. (Withers v. Reynolds, 2 Barn. Adol., 882.)

Assuming that I am right in the construction of the contract, I am of opinion that the defendant cannot refuse to pay for the dressed hogs delivered, on the ground that the plaintiff has broken his contract respecting the live ones. The only condition upon which the payment for the former depended, was their delivery. The payment might have been required to be made concurrently with the delivery; but that being waived, the plaintiff might have sued immediately afterwards, and before the time for the delivery of the other property had arrived. It is true, that before this action was commenced the plaintiff was in default for not delivering the other parcel of the property; but for that wrong the defendant had his remedy, either by separate action or by a recoupment in the plaintiff's action; and the referee has allowed him the benefit of it in the latter form. The law no doubt intends to discourage men from breaking their engagements, but this is not generally accomplished by visiting them with a penalty beyond the damages sustained by the party injured. If I am right in my construction of the agreement, there can be no pretence that the delivery of the hogs coming from Ohio was a precedent condition to the payment for the others; and if this were not so when the agreement was made, it did not become so by the facts which afterwards took place.

The defendant's counsel referred to an opinion of Judge *Page 428 SPENCER, in pronouncing the judgment of the court in Ketchum v.Evertsen (13 Johns., 359-365), in which that learned and generally discriminating judge said, that a party who had advanced money or done an act in part performance of an agreement, and then stopped short and refused to proceed to the ultimate conclusion of the agreement, the other party being willing to proceed and fulfill all his stipulations according to the contract, could never be suffered to recover for what had been thus advanced or done. This dictum, taken broadly, would always preclude a party from recovery for anything done under a contract, where he had himself violated any of its provisions but the case before the court was that of a vendee in an executory contract for the purchase of land, who had paid a part of the price, and refused, without cause, to make the final payment and receive a deed. When applied to such a case, the doctrine was perfectly correct. But it would not hold where a vendee should, by a single contract, agree to sell one piece of land for $1,000, to be conveyed and paid for in one month, and a different parcel for another sum, to be in like manner conveyed and paid for in two months, and should entitle himself to be paid for the first parcel by a strict performance, but should make default in conveying the other, and should then bring his action for the price of the first piece — though it would be embraced in the generality of the expression used by the judge.

The case of Champlin v. Rowley (13 Wend., 258); S.C. inerror (18 id., 187), is equally inapplicable. The plaintiff agreed to deliver all the hay he had at the defendant's wharf, at Rhinebeck, before the close of navigation that season, at a certain price per hundred weight, to be paid for, except a small sum paid down, when the whole quantity should be delivered; and having delivered part, sued for the price of the part so delivered; and it was held he could not recover, on the ground that the delivery of the whole quantity was a condition precedent to any further payment. Mead v. Degolyer (16 id., 632), was a case of the same kind. The plaintiff agreed to deliver a large quantity of timber, for which he was to be *Page 429 paid — except the part he received before he brought the suit — when the whole quantity should be delivered. He furnished a part, and then, without any excuse or apology whatever, stopped short, and claimed to recover for the timber actually delivered. The judgment was of course against him.

These are the most striking of the cases relied on by the defendant's counsel. There is another class arising out of contracts for services, where the party employed agreed to serve for a fixed period, or to execute a particular work, and was to be paid by the week or month, or by some rule adjusted by reference to the separate parcels of the work performed, in which it has been uniformly held — except in one case, where the default was occasioned by the death of the party employed — that the whole of the service must be performed in order to warrant a recovery for any part. (McMillan v. Vanderlip, 12 Johns., 165; Cunningham v. Morrell, 10 id., 203; Jennings v.Camp, 13 id., 94; Reab v. Moor, 19 id., 337; Lantry v. Parks, 8 Cow., 63; Monell v. Burns, 4 Denio, 121;Wolf v. Howes, 20 N.Y., 197.) These cases proceed upon the ground that the contracts were entire in the sense that full performance of the services contracted for was, by the agreement of the parties, to be made before anything became payable by the employer. On this assumption, the principle of law upon which a recovery was denied was perfectly plain. But suppose a contract for a year, the employers agreeing to pay the servant ten dollars at the end of each month; and a part performance and subsequent breach by the servant, the employer being in arrear for several full months. In such a case, I conceive that the servant should be permitted to recover for the wages earned, subject to arecoupment of the master's damages for the time covered by the breach. I am ignorant of any principle upon which it could be held that he could not recover anything. It certainly cannot be upon the ground of the non-performance of a condition precedent; for it is absurd to say, that under such a contract, serving the last month was a condition to the payment for the first. In the case of contracts for personal services, the death of the servant we have seen *Page 430 would enable his representatives to recover a pro rata compensation; but in other cases, as in agreements for the purchase of articles of property to be delivered at different times, a failure to deliver the last parcel, though it should result from an unforeseen accident, and though the part not delivered should bear a very small proportion to the value of these already delivered, would, upon the opposite doctrine, preclude a recovery for any part. If parties will be so incautious as to stipulate for a full performance of a contract of this character, as a condition to the payment of anything, the law will not relieve them; but if they take care to provide for payment upon the delivery of each article or each parcel, or, in the case of services, for periodical payments, they must be permitted to recover for the part which by the terms of the agreement has become payable, upon deducting the damages of the other party in respect to the portion unperformed. The English courts have laid down a still more liberal rule. In Oxendale v.Wetherell (9 Barn. Cress., 386), the Court of King's Bench held, that where by a contract of sale, the vender agreed to deliver two hundred and fifty bushels of wheat within a specified time, and delivered part, but not the residue, he might, after the time mentioned in the contract had expired, recover from the purchaser the value of the wheat delivered to and retained by him. That case has been disapproved of in this State, with good reason, as not consistent with the principle that a condition precedent must be substantially performed. (18 Wend., 191.) But if the agreement had not been, as it was, entire, but had contemplated a delivery by parcels, and payment for each parcel at the time of delivery, I suppose the judgment would have been concurred in everywhere.

The position, that one who has violated a contract on his own part, cannot recover for the breach of any of its stipulations by the other party, however disconnected with the one he has broken cannot be sustained. There are many cases the other way; and the rule would be one of needless severity. (Boon v. Eyre, 1 H.Black., 273, note; Campbell v. Jones, 6 Term R., 570;Carpenter v. Cresswell, 4 Bing., 409; Havelock v.Geddes, 10 *Page 431 East., 555; Davidson v. Gwynne, 12 id., 381.) The cases in our own courts, in which covenants have been adjudged to be independent, show that there may be provisions in contracts available to the party in whose favor they are made, though he is unable to aver performance of other provisions of the same contract binding on him. (Robb v. Montgomery, 20 Johns., 15; Slocum v. Despard, 8 Wend., 615; Morris v. Sliter, 1 Denio, 59.)

I am in favor of affirming the judgment appealed from.