194 A.D. 205 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1920
The plaintiff complains that as defendant ceased to manu-. facture beer on or about February 15, 1918, the plaintiff was compelled to buy beer from the Ebling Brewing Company at prices in excess of the fixed price in the agreement, and has recovered a verdict for such excess.' In addition to denials, the answer sets up several defenses, of which one is: “ Upon information and belief, defendant alleges that the plaintiff, in violation of the provisions of this agreement, did sell, use and give away in the said premises beer, sparkling ales and bottled beer not manufactured by the defendant but manufactured by others.” The plaintiff testified that for some months in 1917, and, therefore, during the life of the said agreement, he bought beer from Trommer, an outsider.
But the learned court instructed the jury that the doctrine of substantial performance was available ' to the plaintiff. And after pointing out that in that period the said purchases from Trommer amounted to $200 and the purchases from the defendant amounted to $2,200, the court left it to the jury
True, the learned court did instruct the jury that the plaintiff must five up to the contract substantially and “ in good faith,” but none the less it permitted the jury to find performance of the contract although the plaintiff had broken it, upon consideration of the extent of that breach, although the evidence is plain that the breach was intentional and willful. But the “ good faith ” required is in an intention to perform the contract literally and exactly, and any shortcoming must not be intentional or deliberate or willful. As Boring, J., for the court in Sipley v. Stickney (190 Mass. 47) pertinently says: “ Where a contractor commits a willful default and yet "claims the contract price, he in effect claims that he has a right to break his contract. But he has no such right.”
The doctrine of substantial performance contemplates performance of the contract as it is made, and is in amelioration of literal and exact performance lest one who has fallen short honestly of letter and exactness shall lose all compensation for work or materials. The doctrine has no application if there was an intentional, deliberate and willful departure from
It may be that the plaintiff can establish waiver, estoppel or some fact of legal excuse for his breach of the condition precedent, but until then I think that he cannot recover on the doctrine of substantial performance. It does not seem necessary now to discuss the question whether the transfer to the Ebling Brewing Company was in itself a breach of the contract by the defendant within the doctrine of Ellis v.
The judgment and order must be reversed and a new trial be granted, with costs to abide the event.
Rich, Putnam, Blackmar and Kelly, JJ., concur.
Judgment and order reversed and new trial granted, with costs to abide the event.