Plumb v. Taylor

Gabnett, J.

The agreement by appellees to assign the $700,000 of stock, and that by appellant to pay therefor $42,600, were mutual and dependent, and neither party, without a tender of performance, could demand performance of the other. There is nothing in the contract to indicate that either party understood it otherwise'. The courts are disposed] to favor that construction of contracts of this description! which makes the agreements dependent, and they are so con-J sidered, unless the contrary clearly appears. Bank of Columbia v. Hagner, 1 Pet. 465.

To main1 ain an action for the recovery of the purchase price of the article agreed to be sold by a contract "of that kind, it is necessary to aver and prove performance or tender of performance by the plaintiff. Mere readiness to perforin is not sufficient to support an action on the agreement. Bishop on Contracts, See. 1433; Lester v. Jewett, 11 N. Y. 453.

Counsel for appellees do not dispute the necessity of performance or tender of performance on the part of appellees, but they strive to meet this difficulty by two distinct answers. They first set up a contract made October 17, 1878, between the Wabash Railway Company, The Decatur & State Line Railway Company, Snell, Taylor & Co., Ralph Plumb and Solon Humphreys, trustee, in which it was agreed that certain contracts (not including that sued on in this case), and the certificate for said §700,000 of stock should be placed in the hands of Humphreys, to be hold by him in trust until Plumb had, by sale of §1,080,000 bonds of the Decatur & State Line Railway Company or otherwise, paid to the trustee for Snell, Taylor & Co. the $42,600 mentioned in the contract sued on, or secured such payment to Thomas Snell, Abner Taylor and H. H. Porter for Snell, Taylor & Co., in such manner as they should, over their signature, indicate to the trustee, provided such payment be made or secured on or before May 1, 1879; that if such payment was so made or secured, said contracts to remain in full force, one copy of each to be delivered to each party executing the same, and the certificates of stock to be delivered by the trustee according to contract; but if this payment was not made or secured on or before May 1, 1879, the contracts deposited should be void, the trustee to cancel them and return to each party one of each, with his certificate of cancellation, and the certificates of stock to the order of Snell, Taylor & Co., and the trust to expire.

That contract was carried out to the extent of delivering to Humphreys the documents and certificates of stock specified, but Plumb failed to make any payment on or before May 1, 1879, and, in fact, has never paid any part of the $42,600 to Humphreys or to appellees. The certificates of stock remained in the hands of Humphreys until after May 1, 1879, but were never tendered to Plumb until this case was actually on trial, when they were produced and offered to him in open court. The appellees contend that the delivery to Humphreys was a full compliance with the contract on which this action is founded, because they thereby relinquished control of the stock, placing it in the power of Plumb to take it at any time on payment of the money, and that the “ tender ” (we surmise this to mean the placing of the certificates in Humphreys’ possession,) was kept good by bringing the certificates into court and offering them to the defendant. But appellees did not, by putting the stock in escrow, lose anything more than the physical possession of the certificates. It was still in the possession of their trustee, and was of no more benefit to Plumb than it would have been in possession of Snell, Taylor & Co. He could then have taken it at any time on payment of the money, although no contract had ever been made with Humphreys. Then the argument is too swift in reaching the point where the tender is kept good, before any tender is made. The delivery to Humphreys was no tender to Plumb, and the record is barren of evidence of any other. The agreement of October 17th expired by its own terms May,' 1, 1879. Appellees then had two months left in which to procure the certificates and offer them to appellant. The trustee could not, after that date, accept the $42,600 and deliver the stock to him. Any payment made by Plumb to Humphreys after that date would have been made at his peril. He was not obliged to apply to appellees for an order on Humphreys, while Humphreys could not deliver it without an order. The trust having expired and the stock remaining in the trustee’s possession, there is no principle of law which imposed upon the purchaser the additional burden that would have been necessary to secure possession from Humphreys.

The second answer of defendants in error is that Plumb, in April or May, 1879, renounced the contract, and therefore they were not bound to make a tender. There was evidence to prove that Plumb did tell Taylor that he could not carry out the contract. Treating this statement as a renunciation, we have this simple change wrought in the relation of the parties, viz.: the defendants in error might have accepted it as a breach of the contract by Plumb, and brought suit for damages at once. Plumb’s statement did not amount to a discharge of the contract, except at the election of the" defendants in error. He could not elect for them, and thus confine their remedy to an action for damages for the breach. They might still insist on performance of the contract, and on tendering performance of their part, sue for the whole purchase money. In Anson on Contracts, pp. 271, 272, the author says: “Itis now settled that a renunciation of a contract by one of the parties before the time for performance has come discharges the other if lie so chooses, and entitles him at once to sue for a breach. * * The promisee may therefore treat the contract as broken as soon as the promisor has announced his intention to break it; but if he will not accept the renunciation, but continues to insist upon the performance of the promise, the contract remains in existence for the benefit and at the risk of both parties.”

No evidence was introduced tending to prove that defendants in error elected to treat the contract as broken by Plumb. They waited until after the time for performance elapsed, then brought this action for the purchase price, and the amount of the recovery was §12,600 and interest. The failure to make a tender of the certificates of stock is a fatal objection to the judgment.

In addition to what has been said, it may be added that no effort was made to prove any assignment, transfer or confirmation by the receiver of Snell, Taylor & Co. The agreement sued on admitted that there was then a receiver for that firm, and it must be presumed that no valid transfer could be made of any firm assets without action by the receiver and the court appointing him. This goes to the root of the title to such interest in the stock as Snell, Taylor & Co. had, and no court can hold a purchaser liable for the price while that infirmity remains.

The judgment of the Circuit Court is reversed and the cause remanded.

Reversed and remanded.