delivered the opinion of the Court.
Tins is an action of covenant on an agreement :in which the plaintiff in error stipulated to erect for the defendant a building of a certain description, to be finished in a specified time, and in a workmanlike manner, for which the defendant agreed to give to the plaintiff fifty dollars in hand, thirty two dollars and fifty cents when the work was completed, and eighty two dollar's and fifty cents at a subsequent peiiod.
This suit was brought for all the payments. The defence was, that the work is not done according to the contract. Verdict and judgment for the defendant; from which an appeal has been taken by the plaintiff.
The plaintiff’s right to recover involves the construction of the agreement sued upon. If the covenants are entirely independent of each other, then the defence relied upon was invalid. If they are dependent, in whole or in part, to that extent the plaintiff could not recover without alledging and proving a performance upon his part.
It was decided by this Court in the case of Craddock vs Aldridge, (2 Bibb, 15,) that where any money is to be paid before the work is to be done, the covenants are independent; and in the case of Mason vs Chambers, (4 Litt. 253,) it is said that where the contract is entire and the performance of one side, constitutes the whole consideration of the performance on the other, if one side is to perform a small part first,. however small, it is evidence that he meant to waive the security of retaining his own performance and rest upon his action. But in the case of McClure vs Rush, (9 Dana, 64,) it is decided that the intention of the parties as collected from the whole-agreement, is to govern. If -upon the one hand it
if. on the other hand, it be manifest by the terms of the contract, that the instalment to be paid, is the consideration of the prior services to be rendered, then the performance of the service is a precedent condition to the payment of the money. This rule of construction seems to be most reasonable; each part of the contract where the performance is to be partial and not entire, is made to depend upon its own terms. Part of the stipulations may be dependent and part otherwise, and in such case no action can be maintained on those which arede. pendent, without counter performance, or something equivalent, while without such performance the action would lie for a breach of other stipulations. If the intention of the parties cannot be gathered from the terms of the contract, and there is nothing to give it construction but the partial performance on one side, then the rule laid down in the case of Craddock vs Aldridge may apply.
Applying these rules of construction to the contract sued on, it is evident that the agreement by the defendant to pay the sum of fifty dollars in hand, was an independent stipulation, and that the plaintiff had a right to demand its payment without any averment of perform, anee on his part, because it was to be paid befdfelhe"' plaintiff, by the terms of the agreement, was bound to do any part of the work. The payment of thirty two dollars and fifty cents was to be made when the work was completed. It was not due until that time, and the plaintiff, according to the evident intention of the parties, to show his right to demand it, had to averand prove performance on his part, agreeably to the contract. The subsequent payment of eighty two dollars and fifty cents is expressly stated in the agreement, to be for doing the work, manifesting by the terms used, the intention of the parties to be, that the plaintiff’s right to it was to be dependent on the performance of the prior service by him.
As the plaintiff then, had a right to recover the fifty dollars, without proving that he had performed or tender
Wherefore, the judgment is reversed and cause remanded for a new trial, and fuither proceedings in conformity with this opinion.