123 P. 32 | Or. | 1912
Opinion by
The motion for judgment of nonsuit, filed by Courteney, specifies six grounds therefor; the third being that “plaintiff’s evidence shows that on October 12, 1906, plaintiff was in default for nonpayment of the moneys due for shooks purchased and delivered under said contract, and that while in default plaintiff canceled and rescinded the contract and refused to be further bound by it, and refused to make payment of the sums then due thereunder, to wit, the sum of $8,900.” Others of the motions followed the language of the statute in assigning the grounds of the motion, namely, “for the reason that the plaintiff has failed to prove a cause sufficient to be submitted to the jury.”
We will first consider the motions for non-suit. By the terms of plaintiff’s letter of the 12th of October, and the telegram and letter sent by the agency on October 13th, the contract was repudiated by each at approximately the same time, each claiming to have canceled it on account of the default of the other, and the cancellation was acquiesced in by both, as neither recognized the contract as in force thereafter. The trial court recognized these acts as amounting to a cancellation of the contract, and excluded evidence relating to matters occurring after October 12th.
In Lake Shore & M. S. R. Co. v. Richards, 152 Ill. 59 (38 N. E. 773: 30 L. R. A. 33), it is said: “It is well settled that, where one party repudiates the contract and refuses longer to be bound by it, the injured party has an election to pursue either of three remedies: (1) He may treat the contract as rescinded, and recover upon quantum, meruit, so far as he has performed; or (2) he may keep the contract alive for the benefit of both parties, being at all times himself ready and able to perform, and at the end of the time specified for performance sue and recover under the contract; or (3) he may treat the repudiation as putting an end to the contract for all purposes of performance,” and sue for damages for a breach. This question is discussed in the dissenting opinion in Livesley v. Krebs Hop Company, 57 Or. 352 (97 Pac. 718: 107 Pac. 460: 112 Pac. 1).
In Graves v. White, 87 N. Y. 463, 465, it is said:
“The doctrine of these authorities is that the refusal of one party to perform his contract amounts on his part to an abandonment of it. The other party thereupon has a choice of remedies: He may stand upon his contract, refusing assent to his adversary’s attempt to rescind it, and sue for a breach, or, in a proper case, for a specific performance; or he may assent to its abandonment, and so effect a dissolution of the contract by the mutual and concurring assent of both parties. In that event, he is simply restored to his original position, and can neither sue for a breach nor compel a specific performance, because the contract itself has been dissolved.” Lawrence v. Taylor, 5 Hill (N. Y.) 107; Hayes v. Stortz, 131 Mich. 63, 65 (90 N. W. 678) ; Drew v. Claggett, 39 N. H. 431.
“We * * decline to make further payments thereunder and hereby notify you that unless you comply with our requirements aforesaid, * * we shall consider the contract at an end and hold you liable for all loss.”
Plaintiff thus acted independently of defendants’ repudiation of the contract, and abandoned it without knowledge of defendants’ act. Making a demand that defendants give a guaranty for future fulfillment of the contract, “and without which we shall consider the contract at an end,” was a repudiation of it. As said in Johnson Forge Co. v. Leonard & Co., 3 Pennewill (Del.)
“If a default by one party in making particular payments or deliveries * * is accompanied with an announcement of intention not to perform the contract upon the agreed terms, or if, in the language of the court below, the default is accompanied with a deliberate demand, ‘insisting upon new terms different from the original agreement,’ the other party may treat the contract as being at end.”
In that case, the court held that the right of the seller to rescind for the default of the purchaser depends upon his not being in default himself. This is also made a controlling element in Ballou v. Billings, 136 Mass. 307. See, also, Purcell v. Sage, 200 Ill. 342 (35 N. E. 723).
“The courts are agreed that if a default in one item of a continuous contract of a divisible nature is accompanied with an announcement of intention not to perform the contract, upon the agreed terms, or, what amounts ,to the same thing, if the failure to fully perform is delib'erate and intentional, and not the result of inadvertence or inability to perform, the rule we have been discussing*183 (namely, default in payment where the installments are numerous,, extending over a considerable period of time, will not discharge the contract) does not apply. The other party, under these circumstances, may treat the contract as being at an end.”
See Stephenson v. Cady, 117 Mass. 6; Rugg & Bryon v. Moore, 110 Pa. 286 (1 Atl. 320) ; Blackburn v. Reilly, 47 N. J. Law 290, 308 (1 Atl. 27: 54.Am. Rep. 159).
The case of Harber Bros. Co. v. Moffat Cycle Co., 151 Ill. 84, 96 (37 N. E. 676, 679), is very much in point upon this question. The action was upon a contract for the sale of bicycles, deliveries to be made in installments, and payment for each shipment within thirty days. Both parties were in default. The court said:
“The question here distinctly presented as the controlling one is whether a vendee who has accepted goods delivered under an express contract, but not at the time or in the quantity required by it, with knowledge of the default of the vendor in those respects, but has himself failed, without legal excuse, to pay for them according to it, can maintain an action on the contract for such a default of the vendor. We think the general rule everywhere recognized is against it. * * Pennsylvania Coal*184 Co. v. Ryan, 107 Ill. 226; Bradley v. King, 44 Ill. 339; Stewart v. Many, 7 Ill. App. 517. For appellant, the attempt is made to evade the force of these decisions by the claim that appellee was first in default, whereby appellant was damaged in the amount exceeding the price of the goods received, for which he failed to pay, and from that time until the suit was brought always had a just claim for damages by appellee’s default exceeding the amount for which appellant was in arrears. * * But the question is not whether, upon a fair settlement, offsetting damages against price, appellant really owed anything, but whether, accepting the machines under contract, it performed that contract on its part as to payment.”
In Stephenson v. Cady, 117 Mass. 6, where several executory contracts were made on different days for the sale of goods, and expressly relating to each other, the price to be paid upon successive deliveries-, for one delivery the purchaser refused to pay, unless the seller would give security for the entire fulfillment of the contracts. It was held that the seller was released from all obligation to perform, and plaintiff could not maintain an action for a breach by defendant. In view of the fact that the plaintiff was also in default in performance of the contract and had repudiated it, it has no remedy thereon to recover damages for defendant’s breach by default.
The judgment is affirmed. Affirmed.