63 F. 84 | 8th Cir. | 1894
If the vendee of personal property, to be delivered and paid for in installments, refuses, upon the demand of the vendor, to accept and pay for a substantial part of an installment according to the contract, will the fact that he does so in good faith, and in the belief that he is not required by the contract to receive any of the property so rejected, deprive the vendor of his right to refuse to further perform the contract on his part? This is the principal question presented by this case.
September 19,’ 1892, the Cresswell Ranch & Cattle Company, Limited, a corporation, the plaintiff in error, sold to William Martin-
The contract on which this action was based was an entire contract. It was a contract for (he sale of 5,021 cattle for $140,-588, and the $5,000 earnest money paid at the time the contract was made was paid on account 'of the entire purchase. The subsidiary provisions of the contract, that the price was' $28 for each steer, and that there were to be five deliveries of the cattle, no more made as many contracts of this one as there were to be installments of cattle delivered than it made as many as there were cattle to be delivered. Norrington v. Wright, 115 U. S. 188, 203, 6 Sup. Ct. 12; Iron Co. v. Naylor, 9 App. Cas. 434, 439. Nor was the vendees’ breach of this contract slight or in an immaterial part. It was substantial, and went to the very root of the contract. It consisted in their refusal to accept 282 cattle, and to pay $7,896 for them, at the time and place they agreed to accept and pay for them under the contract. These cattle had been gathered by the vendor from a range 40 miles square by the labor of many men for many days and driven near to the railroad station to be delivered to the vendees. Their refusal to take them imposed upon the vendor the necessity of gathering other cattle from this extended range in the same manner to carry out its contract in the face of the fact that the vendees had refused to accept nearly three hundred cattle that complied with its provisions. A plaintiff cannot maintain his action for the breach of a contract made with him by a defendant unless he can establish such performance on his part as will entitle him to demand performance of the defendant. A prior substantial breach of the contract on the plaintiff’s part is ordinarily a conclusive answer to an action for a subsequent breach on the defendant’s part. In their complaint the vendees recognized this principle, and alleged that they “have in all things kept and performed the said contract upon their part,” but that the cattle company, on November 19, 1892, refused to perform on its part. The verdict does not rest, however, upon proof of this prior performance on the part of the vendees, but upon the facts that, before they charge any breach upon the cattle company, they had themselves failed to perform a substantial part of the contract, but that they then in good faith believed that they were not so failing. Nor was this exercise of good faith and belief by mistake, or without notice of the fact. It was a willful and determined exercise of faith. The vendor insisted, at the time, that these cattle weighed over 900 pounds each, weighed some of them in the presence of one of the vendees on some defective scales that indicated' that its claim was well founded, and demanded that the vendees should accept them. All this may not have demonstrated the weight of the cattle, though it seems to have proved it to the satisfaction of the jury, but, although the judgment of the vendor’s agent was liable to be at fault, and although the scales were defective, this was ample warning to the vendees to determine the weigh!, of these cattle in some way correctly before they rejected them. They had, by the express terms of the contract, reserved to
First. It is the breach itself, and not the good faith or belief of the party who commits it, that causes and measures the damage of the injured party. The injury to the vendor in the case before us
Second. The rights and remedies of parties for breaches of civil contracts ought not to depend on the good faith and belief of those who violate them, because these are so difficult to ascertain. The proof of the existence or absence of such good faith and belief is peculiarly within the knowledge -and control of the violators themselves. Frequently they alone know what they believe, and whether or not they are acting in good faith. It would always be difficult, and often impossible, to establish their bad faith or their belief that they were violating their contracts, without their testimony, and generally impossible to do so with it. The rights and remedies of parties for the breach of civil contracts ought not to be so placed at the mercy of those who break them. It would be intolerable that parties to continuing contracts should be compelled to perform them on their part until they could prove that the other contracting parties, who were constantly breaking them, were doing so in bad faith, and in the belief that they had no right to do so.
Our conclusion is that the right of a party to a continuing contract to refuse to make subsequent performance on his part, after the other contracting party has refused, upon full notice and demand, to perform a substantial part of the contract on his part, is not dependent on the good faith of the latter, nor on his belief that he is not violating the contract, but rests solely upon the fact whether or not he has violated or failed to perform a substantial part of the contract that the agreement required him to perform. Norrington v. Wright, 115 U. S. 188, 204, 205, 6 Sup. Ct. 12; Filley v. Pope, 115 U. S. 213, 6 Sup. Ct. 19; Rolling-Mill v. Rhodes, 121 U. S. 255, 261, 264, 7 Sup. Ct. 882; Beck & Pauli Lithographing Co. v. Colorado Milling & Elevator Co., 3 C. C. A. 248, 52 Fed. 700, 703, 10 U. S. App. 465, 470; Philip Mills v. Slater, 12 R. I. 82; Smith v. Lewis, 40 Ind. 98; Hoare v. Rennie, 5 Hurl. & N. 19; Pope v. Porter, 102 N. Y. 366, 371, 7 N. E. 304; Dwinel v. Howard, 30 Me. 258; Robson v. Bohn, 27 Minn. 333, 344, 7 N. W.357; Reybold v.Voorhees, 30 Pa. St. 116, 121; Stephenson v. Cady, 117 Mass. 6, 9; Branch v. Palmer, 65 Ga. 210; Fletcher v. Cole, 23 Vt. 114, 119.
In Norrington v. Wright, supra, most of the authorities cited by counsel for the defendants in error in this case in support of their contention that the failure of the vendees to accept a part of one installment of the cattle would not authorize the vendor to refuse to make the subsequent deliveries, are carefully reviewed, and disapproved or distinguished from cases like that before us. It would be idle to review them here again. In that case 5,000 tons of iron rails were sold to be shipped at the rate of about 1,000 tons per month. The vendor shipped 400 tons the first month and 885 tons the second, when the defendant refused to accept the rails, because
“A statement descriptive of tlie subject-matter, or oí some material incident, such as the time or place of shipment, is ordinarily to be regarded as a warranty, in the sense in which Unit term is used in insurance and maritime law; that Is to sa.y, a condition precedent, upon the failure or nonperXormance of which the party aggrieved may repudiate the whole contract.”
An attempt is made to distinguish this case from that at bar, because in the former the default; occurred in the delivery of the first installment, and in the latter in the acceptance of the fourth installment. But it is a distinction without any substantial difference. The reason why the vendor could not recover in Norrington v. Wright was that he liad committed the first breach of the contract, and that relieved the vendee from subsequent performance on his part. For the same reason the breach committed November 11, 1892, relieved the cattle company from any subsequent performance on its part. If a default on the first installment by one party relieves the other contracting party from the performance of all the stipulations of the contract, by so much the more will a default on a later installment relieve; Mm from all subsequent performance. It is the first breach which he commits, and not the number of the; particular installment to which it relates, that defeats the plaintiff, in these actions. Thus in Robson v. Bohn, supra, a contract was made May 19, 1873, for the sale of 123,000 feet of lumber, to be delivered at the rate of 20,000 feet pe;r week from the date of the contract, and the defendant agreed to give his promissory note for $3,000 at that time, to pay $2,000 in cash August 1, 3873, and to pay the balance on the full delivery of the lumber. lie gave his note for $3,000. The vendor delivered the lumber weekly until August 1, 3873. The vendee then failed to pay the $2,000 in cash, and the court; held that the refusal of the vendee to pay the $2,000 excused the vendor from the delivery of any lumber subsequent to August 1st. To the same effect are Dwinel v. Howard and Reybold v. Voorhees, supra. The rule is general that he who commits the first substantial breach of a contract cannot maintain an action against the other contracting party for a subsequent failure to perform, and it rules this case.
Finally, it; is contended that the cat tie company waived the breach committed by the vendees, and that, even if there was error in the instruction we have been considering, it was error without prejudice, and the judgment should be affirmed. The claim of a waiver rests upon the fact that; the cattle company received payment November 14, 1892, for the 698 cattle that the vendees accepted, and the claim that its agent then told the vendees to come at some later date for more cattle, and arrange; to gather and deliver them. It is difficult' to see how the cattle company waived any of its rights by insisting upon its acknowledged right to deliver and receive payment for the 698 cattle the vendees accepted, especially in view of the fact that these cattle were, according to the verdict,
There are other questions discussed in the briefs, but, as the case must be retried, and these questions may not arise upon a second trial, it is unnecessary now to notice them. The judgment is accordingly reversed, with costs, and the cause remanded, with directions to grant a new trial.