Manning Manufacturing Co. v. Miller Bros.

Powers, J.

By a 'written contract the defendants bought of the plaintiff certain milking machines and equipment to be installed by the latter on the farm of the former at West New-bury, for the sum of $320. The goods were shipped to the defendants at their railroad station, and arrived ' there in due course. Promptly thereafter the plaintiff’s' agent came, and offered to install the apparatus on the farm, as required by the contract.. This the "defendants refused to allow him to do. It did not appear that the outfit was ever removed from the station, and what became of it is not-shown.

The declaration contains the common counts in assumpsit, only; and'the court below ruled that the plaintiff could not recover thereunder, and rendered judgment for the defendants. The plaintiff excepted.

The general rule is that in the case of a special contract, not under seal, which has been fully performed by the plaintiff,- and nothing remains but the payment of the money by the defendant, liability may be enforced under the common counts or by a special count on the contract, at the option of the pleader. Mattocks v. Lyman, 16 Vt. 113; Bradley v. Phillips, 52 Vt. 517. Cases arise wherein there has been a partial delivery, accepted service, benefit conferred or perhaps some other special circumstance which makes the rule inapplicable. But nothing of the kind exists 'here. The defendants’ wrongful refusal to allow the outfit to be installed intervened before any of these conditions resulted. There was no delivery of the goods. They had not arrived at the place of delivery; nor had they been put into condition for delivery. All this remained to be done by the plaintiff at the defendants’ farm. So the count for goods sold and delivered would not do. The work done on the apparatus was bestowed upon the plaintiff’s own materials, and went to the plaintiff’s and not the defendants’ use. Nor was the plain*457tiff, in a legal sense, employed by the defendants. So the count for work and labor was inapplicable. The materials which went into the outfit were not furnished to the defendants, for they never came to their use. So the count for materials furnished would not apply.

All this is sufficiently shown by Allen v. Thrall, 36 Vt. 711, Curtis v. Smith, 48 Vt. 116, and Derosia v. Ferland, 83 Vt. 372, 76 Atl. 153, 28 L. R. A. (N. S.) 577, 138 Am. St. Rep. 1092, Ann. Cas. 1912 N. 295.

To hold that the plaintiff cannot recover under the common counts is not to deny it-full redress for the defendants’ breach of contract; it is simply to require it to seek its damages in an appropriate form of action.

Affirmed.