By the contract between the parties, Child agreed to saw ninety thousand feet of lumber for Bassett, for five hundred dollars ; one half to be paid when one half of the lumber was sawed, and the other half after the whole should be completed; and it was further agreed, that in case Bassett should neglect to furnish logs to keep the mill running, that Child should be allowed at the rate of fifteen hundred feet per day, for the time which he should thus be compelled to remain idle.
At the instance of the plaintiff below, the Court instructed the jury, “ that if the defendant ceased to haul the logs to the plaintiff’s mill, it excuses the performance by the plaintiff of his whole contract, and he is entitled to recover for what he has sawed for the defendant, at the contract price.” This was clearly .a misconstruction of the contract, and should not have been given. The parties had expressly provided that the contingency contemplated by the instruction should not authorize Child- to abandon the work, by allowing him for the sawing of fifteen'-hundred feet for every day he should be without logs. Under this contract he had no right to complain if no more logs were furnished him; but he was bound to remain until, by the allowance of fifteen hundred feet per day, his contract for the ninety thousand feet should be completed ; when he would have been entitled to the full compensation stipulated. The first and third instructions asked for by the counsel for the defendant below, ought to have been given. The first was, “that under the contracts given in evidence in this suit, the plaintiff is not entitled to recover pay for sawing of more than forty-five thousand feet of lumber, unless he has sawed the whole amount of ninety thousand feet, or has shown that he has been released from his contract by defendant, or, some other legal excuse for not having fulfilled the contract on his part.55 And the third wa,s, u that this contract was an entire contract, and the plaintiff cannot recover unless he has performed the contract on his part, or some legal excuse for not sawing.55 These two instructions involve substantially the same proposition, and should have been given. That this was an entire and dependent contract, compelling Child to fully perform on his part, before he was entitled to any portion of the last half of the compensation, is a proposition sedear, in our opinion, that it hardly admits of argument. The action was brought upon the special agreement, which makes Child’s right to claim the last half of the compensation to depend, upon his sawing the full ninety thousand feet, as explicitly as language can express it. The instructions did not ask that the plaintiff should show that he had sawed the lumber in the manner required by the contract, hut only that he should show’ that he had sawed the stipulated quantity. IF he had sawed the inquired quantity, and this had been received by the defendant, although it had been imperfectly done, it may he that he might have recovered, making a reasonable deduction for the i-nperfeci; manner in which the work was executed. But here a total failure to complete the contract is supposed, and without any legal excuse. It was objected to the instructions, that it loft it to the jury to judge as to what would or would not constitute a reasonable or legal excuse for non-performance. But the instructions were not obnoxious to any objection on that account. For the defendant to have specified every thing which would or would not have furnished a good excuse for non-performance, he must have written a book for an instruction, which would have been equivalent to denying him the right of instruction altogether; and he certainly had a right to have that legal proposition go to the jury. Had the plaintiff supposed that he liad shown a legal excuse, he could have framed an instruc— tion based upon such supposed state of facts, and thus have put' the jury in possession of all the law as applicable to the particular case. Indeed, this was done; and upon such instruction for the plaintiff, he obtained a verdict. That instruction, however, as we have seen, was erroneous. Upon the principle involved in these two last instructions, we adhere to the rule laid down in the case of Eldridge vs. Rowe, 2 Gilm., 91.
The judgment is reversed, with costs, and the cause remanded.
Judgment reversed.