15 Wend. 493 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1836
The defendant presents no defence upon the merits. His defence is entirely technical, and raises two questions: 1. Whether the tender of the sulkey was equivalent to a delivery, and sustained the averment in the declaration that the sulkey was delivered; and 2. Whether the rule of damages should be the value of the sulkey, or the particular damages to be proved, resulting from the breach of the contract. There is no question raised here upon the statute of frauds. The contract is therefore admitted to be a valid one; and relating to something not in solido at the time of the contract, there is no question of its validity.
The plaintiff agreed to make and deliver the article in question at a particular time and place, and the defendant agreed to pay for it, on delivery, in a particular manner. The plaintiff made, and, as far as was in his power, delivered the sulkey. He offered it to the defendant at the place and within the time agreed upon. It was not the plaintiff’s fault that the delivery was not complete; that was the fault of the defendant. There are many cases in which an offer to perform an executory contract is tantamount to a performance. This I apprehend is one of them. The case of Towns v. Osborne, Strange, 506, was like this. The question here presented was not raised, but the defendant there sought to screen himself under the statute of frauds. The defendant bespoke a chariot, and when it was made, refused to take it; so far the cases are parallel. In an action for the value, it was objected that the contract was not binding, there being no note in writing nor earnest, nor delivery. The objection was overruled. In that case the action was broughtfor the value; not for damages for the breach of contract. This case is like it in that particular; this action is brought for the value, that is, for the price agreed on—and it is shown that the sulkey was of that value. The case of Crookshank v. Burrell, 18 Johns. R. 58, was an action in which the plaintiff declared against the defendant on a contract whereby the plaintiff was to make the wood-work of a wagon, for which the defendant was to pay in lambs. The defendant was to come for the wagon. The question was upon the statute of frauds. Spencer, Ch. J. states what had been held in some of the English cases, 4
The only remaining question, therefore, is as to the damages which the plaintiff was entitled to recover. It is true that the plaintiff does not recover directly as for goods sold ; but in the case of Towns v. Osborne, the plaintiff recovered the value of the chariot, and in Crookshank v. Burrell the recovery was for the value of the wagon. The amount1 of damages which ought to be recovered was not the question before the court in either of those cases; but if the value of the article was not the true measure, we may infer that the point would have been raised. Upon principle, I may ask what should be the rule ? A mechanic makes an article to order,
The question upon the action being prematurely brought before the expiration of the credit which was to have been given, cannot properly arise in this case, as the plaintiff recovers upon the special, contract, and not upon a count for goods sold and delivered.
New trial denied.