The plaintiffs were bound to haul for the defendants all the pulp wood that should be cut upon a designated tract, and were to be paid therefor eighty-five cents per cord, of which twenty-five cents per cord was to be kept back until the completion of the contract. The whole number of cords cut was 8,345. By the first of April, at the end of the sledding season, the plaintiffs considered their contract substantially completed, and it was literally completed except for scattering blocks that had been covered by the snow or had been otherwise overlooked. On the second of June they brought this action for the balance due under the contract, and within a few days thereafter went over the whole territory and gathered up the overlooked pieces, finding in all seven cords and a half, and delivered these also. They did it because they thought the contract required it and thought it wise to1 make a *439literal completion. To do it cost tjiem thirty-six dollars, or nearly five times the contract price. The quantity thus gleaned was less than one eleven-hundredth of the entire amount. The defendant would defeat the action on the ground that it was premature, urging that although the gleanings were meagre they cannot be called immaterial or unessential, and that the plaintiffs themselves construed the contract as requiring this raking after, and are bound by that construction.
But we are not inclined to give quite so much force to the action of the plaintiffs, taken perhaps in excess of caution, but rather to treat the question as it would have deserved to be treated if this after-gathering had not occurred. And if it had not occurred could the plaintiffs have been defeated of their recovery by showing that upon this whole territory one stick in eleven hundred had been lost or left behind ?
It must be observed that the plaintiffs could not recover as upon a quantum meruit; for if we should hold that what they did after bringing the action was an indispensable part of the performance, then, as there had been no abandonment, we could only say that the action was brought too' soon.
In New York, and perhaps in many of the states, one who has in good faith performed his contract substantially, although he has not done all he should have done within its fair intent and meaning, may recover, not upon a quantum meruit, as it is said, but upon the contract itself, the contract price, suffering a deduction of such damages as his failure has occasioned. Woodward v. Fuller, 80 N. Y. 312. To be a substantial performance under those cases, it is only necessary that the defects should not run through the whole, nor be so essential as to defeat the object of the parties, to have a specified amount of work done in a particular way. Phillip v. Gallant, 62 N. Y. 264. We do not treat the present as a case of sub*440stantial performance in this sense, merely; but hold that the contract, in .view of the subject matter to which it was to be applied, had been performed, within its fair intent and meaning, before the action was brought. The parties could not have expected nor intended that every single stick should be delivered; and we think the quantity undelivered for the reason and in the circumstances stated, was no greater than they would naturally have expected to be overlooked or dropped and left ungathered. It is much as though a farmer, who had engaged to harvest all the hay upon a large farm, should be met with the claim that he could not recover the stipulated price because by raking all the fields over again, at an enormously disproportionate expense, a few fork-fuls or even a small load might be obtained. It is not that the law does not concern itself with trifles, for in the case supposed and in the case at bar the quantity is not in itself trifling; but that the contract has been fully performed, judged by any fair and sensible construction. When the contract is to do' a large piece of work, like the one in question, in the doing of which by the common and ordinary process some residuum or fragments would naturally be neglected or overlooked, of slight consequence in themselves and for the securing of which great and disproportionate expense would be required, we think it becomes a question of fact, within reasonable legal limits, whether the contract has been performed to its fair meaning and intent, notwithstanding it has not been fulfilled to the letter.
So far as it was a question of fact, we understand and treat the report as finding that this contract had been performed in the sense we have indicated, and we discover no legal obstacle to the finding.
The judgment below was erroneous, however, to a slight extent, in that it included, probably by oversight, pay for haul*441ing the seven and a half cords; and the amount should be reduced by $6.37.
The defendant also insists that he was entitled to notice that the contract was completed. The rule is that “when a party stipulates to do a certain thing in a certain specific event, which maj' become known to him or with which he can make himself acquainted, he is not entitled to notice unless he stipulates for it; but when it is to do a thing in an event which lies within the peculiar knowledge of the other party, then notice ought to be given him.” Lord Abinger’s rule, adopted in Lamphere v. Cowen, 42 Vt. 175. See also, Hill v. Hovey, 26 Vt. 109. Here the defendant was engaged in lumbering operations close by the tract in question and appears to have had about the same means of knowledge that the plaintiffs had.
He urges, however, that he did stipulate'for notice; and points to the finding that in the fall before, when his agent and the plaintiffs were examining the tract and estimating the progress of the work, it had been arranged between them that when the plaintiffs considered their work done they should notify the agent, and that then they should go over the land together to see if the contract had been fulfilled. But the referee also finds that this arrangement had no effect upon the written contract between the parties, and that their respective rights and obligations when the suit was brought were such only as are deducible from the writing; by which we understand him to mean that the arrangement was not intended by the parties to work any change in their contract; and support for the finding is to be found in the fact that, although the parties afterwards drew up a supplemental contract, this arrangement was not included therein.
Judgment reversed, cmd judgment for the plaintiffs to recover $2410.73 with interest from June 2, 1900 and their costs.