*560The opinion of the court was delivered by
Bennett, J.The plaintiff, in this case, having been prevented from fulfilling his contract with the defendant, by reason of sickness, the important question presented for our decision is, can he recover for the labor performed, as upon a quantum meruit, so much as it was reasonably worth to the defendant ?
The position, that if A. contracts with B. to labor for him for a given time, and for a stated consideration, and A. voluntarily leaves the service of B., before the expiration of the time, there can be no recovery, is sustained by numerous adjudged cases. There can be no recovery in such case, even upon a quantum meruit, it is said, because the contract is entire, and its performance a condition precedent. ^Though it is difficult for me to see any very sound ground of distinction between such a case and one, for instance, where one person contracted with another to build a house, according to a given plan, and for a given sum, and failed.to perform the contract according to its terms; yet a different course of decisions have obtained in the two cases. The contract is entire, and its performance, it would seem, as much a condition precedént in the one case as in the other. In both the defendant'has had some benefit from the plaintiff's labor, and in neither can the parties be placed in statu quo by rescinding the contract. The same technical difficulty exists to a recovery in the one case as in the other, and were the question new, it might well be inquired, whether a different rule should be applied to the two cases. In the case of Britton v. Turner, 6 N. H. R. 493, it is said by Parker, J. that the technical reasoning that the performance is a condition precedent, and that there can be no apportionment, does not apply to the case of laborers, and that where beneficial service has been performed, under contracts of this description, the mutual agreements cannot be considered as going to the whole of the consideration, so as to make them mutual conditions, the one precedent to the other, without a specific proviso to that effect. In Boon v. Eyre, 1 H. Bl. R. 273, n. Lord Mansfield says, “ the distinction is very clear, where mutual covenants go to the whole of the consideration on both sides, they are mutual conditions, the one precedent to the other ; but where they go only to a part, where a breach *561may be paid for in damages, there the defendant has a remedy on his covenant, and shall not plead it as a condition precedent.” In Ritchie v. Atkinson, 10 East’s R. 295, the contract was for the delivery of a complete cargo of hemp and iron at a given price for each per ton, and it was held the party might recover for so much as he had delivered, though less than a full cargo, and the defendant have his damages for such short delivery. So in the case of Kimpton v. Casson, 5 B. & C. Rep. 378, where a given quantity of bark was sold at a given price per ton, and but a part of it delivered, it was held, the defendant having kept the part delivered without an offer to return it, an action lay for it.
Whenever a benefit has been conferred on the defendant by a part performance of a contract, and the party cannot be restored to the benefit of his own labor, to hold that there can be no recovery on a quantum meruit, operates as a forfeiture and in the nature of a penalty ; and the principle should not, as I think, be extended beyond what the authorities require. It has, indeed, already been extended by some courts to great lengths. In Lantry v. Parks, 8 Cowen’s R. 63, the contract was for the hiring for a year, at a given price per month. The plaintiff, after working ten and.a-half months, on a Saturday left the defendants service without any good cause, but on the Monday following returned, and offered to go to work again, when the defendant refused to employ him, and yet it was held there could be no recovery for the ten and a-half months labour, upon the technical ground that the contract was entire, and the performance of it a condition precedent.
That case furnishes a practical illustration of the manifest injustice which may be done, under the rule that there can be no apportionment in the case of hired laborers for a given .period. It is not the object of the law to punish the party for a violation of his contract, but to make the other party good for all damages he may sustain by such violation. Common justice required that the plaintiff should have been permitted to recoi%- so much as the defendant had been bejiefitted by the labor, after deducting any damages he might have sustained by reason of the violation of the contract. There is less practical difficulty in making an apportionment *562in the case of laborers, than in many others, where it is done. Under the doctrine that the contract is entire, and its performance a condition precedent, the result is, that if the laborer fails to fulfil his contract, but for a single day, he forfeits all that he lias done, and in case of what he esteems maltreatment, he must submit to it, or leave his employer, not only subject to answer for such damages as may be sustained, but even at the peril of forfeiting all former earnings, in case it should be found by a jury of his country, that he had left the service without sufficient cause. This forfeiture may be ten, or even an hundred fold, more than sufficient to compensate for all damages arising from a violation of the contract. If, in such case, there can be no recovery for the labor performed, upon a quantum meruit, on the ground that the contract is entire, does it not follow, that the laborer, when sued for a breach of his contract, could not interpose any part performance of it, as a partial or total defence of the action ? If he had received part payment, could he not be called upon to refund such payment, without regard to any benefit which he might have, conferred upon the other party, by any partial performance of the contract on his part ? But we are not called upon to apply the principle to an ordinary case, but to one where the party was prevented from performing the contract, on his part, by reason of sickness, and it is contended by the defendant’s counsel, that this should not alter the rule. It is undoubtedly settled law, that where a party, by his own contract, creates a duty or charge upon himself, he is bound to make it good, if he may, notwithstanding any accident by inevitable necessity, because, it is said, he might have provided against it by his contract. Upon this principle, where the party covenants to repair, and leave the houses and buildings in as good plight as he found them, he will be answerable for all damage, even if committed by the public enemy, or occasioned by storms, flood, fire, or lightning. It is to be remembered, that in such cases, there is nothing in the nature of things that renders it impossible for the party to perform the obligations whicl^he has assumed by his own contract. In cases where the act of God renders the performance absolutely impossible, the contract is' discharged, according to the maxim “ impalentia excusatt *563legem ” This position is sustained by many adjudged cases. In 1 Coke’s R. 98, is cited a case as having been decide^' as early as Edward III, in which it was held, if a lessee covenants to leave a wood in as good plight as it was in at the time of the lease, and afterwards the trees are blown down by a tempest, he is discharged of his covenant. In Williams v. Hyde, Palm. R. 548, the defendant had covenanted to deliver to the plaintiff a certain horse on request. The horse having died, by reason of sickness, without the fault of the party, before request was made, it was held that the death of the horse, being the act of God, relieved the defendant from his contract. In 1 Shep. Touch. 180, it is laid down, if a person covenant to serve another seven years, and he die before the expiration of the seven years, by this the covenant is discharged. See also Gilb. on Covenants, 472. So in the case of Nash v. Ashton, Skin. R. 42, where two husbands seized of lands in the right of their wives, as coparceners, made a feoffment, and covenanted among other things, to make further assurance, if requested, within seven years. The defendant’s wife was within age at the feoffment, and died within the seven years, leaving issue a son. And it was contended that the wife dying and leaving a son, an infant, there was an impossibility of a further assurance within the seven years, and so a breach of the covenant; — but it was not so held. In the case before the court, the plaintiff contracted with the defendant, to labor personally for him four months, at ten dollars per month, and, by the terms of the contract, was to receive no pay till he had worked the four months. These services being of a personal character, the contract could not be performed by another, and as the plaintiff was disabled to perform it himself, by reason of sickness, which was the act of God, upon the authority of the forgoing cases, the contract was discharged. The inquiry then arises, what is the result. It appears to me apparent, that the plaintiff must, at least after the expiration of the four months, be permitted to recover, as upon.a quantum meruit, pro rata, for the services rendered. Common justice requires this, and I should be sorry to find that it was not tolerated by the principles of the common law. To hold, in a case like this, where the plaintiff has been discharged of his contract *564by the act of God, that there can be no apportionment, upon the technical ground that the contract is entire, and its performan ce a condition precedent, is, to my mind, leaving the substance and adhering to the shadow. If the plaintiff is re]¡eVed from the contract, how can the defendant interpose it, as a reason why the plaintiff should not recover for the labor actually performed, though performed under the contract, and while it was in force. Suppose a minor was to contract to labor for another for a given time, and for a given, sum, could he not, at any time, repudiate the contract, and recover for such services as he might have rendered ?
In the case of Cutter v. Powell, 6 Term R. 320, it. is indeed held, that if a sailor, hired for a particular voyage, take a promissory note from his employer, for a certain sum, provided he proceed, continue, and do his duty on board for the whole voyage, and before it is completed he dies, no wages can be claimed, either on the contract or on a quantum meruit. This case seemed to rest on peculiar grounds. The defendant had contracted to pay thirty guineas, provided the intestate performed the voyage from Jamaica to Liverpool, and the accompanying circumstances disclosed in the case were, that the common rate of wages was four pounds per month, where the party is paid in proportion to the time he serves, and that the voyage, in that case, was usually performed in two months, and therefore, if the whole voyage had been performed, the plaintiff, by the contract, would have been entitled to recover four times the amount he could have recovered, on a quantum meruit, for the same services, Lord Kenyon says this contract was a kind of insurance, that the intestate would perform the whole voyage or receive no compensation, and that his opinion was founded on that particular contract. It was admitted by Wood, who argued in that case for the defendant, that in the common case of service, if a servant, who is paid for a year, die in the middle of it, his executor may recover part of his wages in proportion to the time of service. Lawrence, J. in giving his opinion, says, in regard to the common case of a hired servant, with which that had been compared, “ such a servant, though hired in a general way, is considered to. be hired with reference to the general understanding upon the subject, that the *565servant shall be entitled to his wages for the time he serves, though he do not continue in the service during the whole year.” Chancellor Kent, in a note to the last edition to his commentaries, 3 Vol. p. 470, says, annuities and servants’ wages, like rents, were not in general apportionable at common law. “ If,” says he, “ a servant was hired for a month or a year, and the service ceased within the time, there was no apportionment of wages, for the actual time of service, though the rule operated in some cases most unjustly.” But he proceeds to say, “ the old rule is now held to be relaxed, and wages, it is understood, may be apportioned, upon the principle that such is the reasonable contract of hiring. This is the doctrine of the South Carolina courts. See McClure v. Pyatt, 4 McCord’s R. 26. Bacot v. Parnell, 2 Bailey, S. C. R. 424. It is a doctrine that does substantial justice between the parties, and, as applied to a case like the one under consideration, commends itself to our approbation. In regard to the casé in 1 Salk. R. 65, which has been pressed upon the court by the defendant as decisive of this case, it may be remarked, that that was not the common case of a hired servant, and that the decision itself was grounded upon the old rule of the common law, when it was held that wages were not apportionable, the case itself having been decided as early as 1688.
It is argued by the defendant, that in this case it was the duty of the plaintiff, after he had recovered from his sickness, to return to the defendant, and complete his four months’ labor, and that, as he did not do it, he is for this cause prevented from a recovery. It is undoubtedly true, that whenever any special matter does not operate to an-1 nul the contract, but only as a temporary suspension of it, l as in the case in the 7 Mass. R. to which we have been re-/ ferred, it is the duty of the party to perform the contract' within a reasonable time after the cause of its suspension shall have ceased to operate. But, in the present case, th.e audit- or finds that the plaintiff was not restored to health until after the expiration of the four months. His services were of a personal character, and the time of performance material to the rights of the parties. The defendant could not be required to accept of the services, at another time, and the *566plaintifi was as much excused from their performance by reason of his sickness, as he would have been in case of death, and the contract being annulled, by this act of God, and not simply suspended for a time, there is no reason why the plaintiff should have proffered to work for the defendant, after being restored to health. Such proffer the defendant might have rejected, and it could have had no possible effect upon the rights of the parties upon what was already past.
On the whole, then, we think there is error in the judgment of the county court. Therefore, that judgment is reversed, and judgment must be entered upon the report of the auditor, for the plaintiff.