121 P. 649 | Okla. | 1912
This was an action to recover money alleged to be due on a contract made and entered into by the parties hereto on or about June 24, 1907. The petition shows: That at said date Davidson had been appointed master in chancery, probate commissioner, and referee in bankruptcy of the United States Court for the Western Judicial District of the Indian Territory, sitting at Muskogee, by Hon. William R. Lawrence, judge of said court, and that he acted as such master in chancery, etc., from said date of appointment up to the time of the admission of the Indian Territory and Oklahoma into the Union as the state of Oklahoma, to wit, November 16, 1907. That soon after said appointment Gaskill, who will hereinafter be referred to as plaintiff, entered into a verbal contract, the terms of which were, in substance, as follows: Plaintiff was to enter the office of defendant and render him general assistance in conducting the business of his said office as such master in chancery, etc., to take and transcribe stenographic notes of testimony introduced at the hearing of cases before defendant as such master in chancery, etc., and attend to the duties of general office stenographer and clerk in the office of said defendant, and bear one-half of the expenses of maintaining said offices and of proper handling of the work in connection therewith. In consideration thereof defendant was to turn over and pay to plaintiff a sum equal to one-half of all fees, perquisites, and emoluments received by him as such master in chancery, etc., and the duties, obligations, and liabilities of the parties should begin July 1, 1907, and continue to accrue until the date of the admission of Oklahoma into the Union. Plaintiff alleged that he duly, promptly, and faithfully performed each and every term, obligation, and condition imposed upon him by the terms of the said contract, either personally or through others employed for that purpose, who satisfactorily and properly rendered and performed all services required and contracted for under said contract, and whose services were performed and accepted by defendant, pursuant to the terms of said contract and within the time required thereunder; that his share *42 of the proceeds of said offices from the 1st day of July to the 16th day of November was $3,880, of which sum $1,880 had been paid; that there was due plaintiff from defendant under the terms of the contract the sum of $2,000. Plaintiff further alleged that after his duties under said contract had been performed, and after the admission of the state of Oklahoma into the Union, he made demand of defendant for the amount due, but defendant refused, and still refuses, to pay any part thereof. Defendant answered, and, in addition to a general denial, alleged that he had paid plaintiff all claims and demands arising out of said agreement as therein set forth. By agreement of parties the cause was referred to Hon. R. C. Allen, as referee, with instructions to report his findings of fact and conclusions of law, which was done, his report being filed July 6, 1909, the recommendations of which were that judgment should be rendered in favor of plaintiff in the sum of $546 and interest. Defendant filed a motion to set aside the report of the referee and for a new trial, and also filed exceptions to the conclusions of the referee, all of which were overruled and denied by the court, and judgment was entered in accordance with the recommendation of the referee. From this judgment defendant appeals, and assigns four propositions, upon which he asks for reversal of said judgment, namely: First. The contract between the parties was entire and indivisible. Second. The contract was not fully performed. Third. The suit being on an entire contract, not fully performed, the plaintiff was not entitled to a judgment. Fourth. If the contract be not entire, but severable, the plaintiff has been paid. The defendant in error raises no other points, but in arguing the case discusses together the third and fourth propositions, and the second and third propositions.
In order to clearly understand the issues, it is necessary to know what the contract was. Plaintiff in error, without objection from the defendant in error, has set forth the contract in his brief; the same being as follows:
"The Contract. The contract between the parties was not reduced to writing, but, briefly stated, is as follows: That the *43 plaintiff below, being a member of the bar and an expert stenographer, and having had one year's experience in the defendant's office as master of chancery, probate commissioner, and referee in bankruptcy in the United States Court for the Northern Judicial District of Indian Territory, was employed by the defendant to perform and conduct the stenographic and clerical work in the same office held by the defendant in the United States Court for the Western Judicial District of Indian Territory for the period from July 1, 1907, to the admission of Oklahoma as a state. The compensation agreed on was that the defendant should pay the plaintiff one-half of the net fees of the office during said period of time, the plaintiff to pay one-half of the total expenses; that, should the employment of other help be necessary, the compensation of such other help should be considered as office expenses, to be borne by plaintiff and defendant equally, which agreement was later modified so that the compensation of such persons as it might be necessary to employ to help in the work should be charged to and paid by the plaintiff himself."
Was this an entire and indivisible contract? We think it was. Plaintiff, by his own pleadings, alleges full performance of all precedent conditions, and thereby practically admits that defendant's obligation to pay is conditioned upon plaintiff's performance in full of the terms and conditions of the contract. The referee in effect finds the contract to be as alleged by the defendant, and the rule is that, where one party contracts to do certain work and the other to pay a certain price for the same, the contract is entire. See Meek v.Daugherty,
"It was possible to ascertain the receipts for any particular piece of business, but the net profits from the whole office could not be shown until the transaction was complete in all its details, and finally closed, so that no more work would have to be done with reference to it."
In 2 Parsons on Contract (8th Ed.) p. 517, the author says: *44
"If the part to be performed by one party consists of several separate and distinct items and the price to be paid by the other is apportioned to each item to be performed, or is left to be implied by law, such a contract will generally be held to be severable. * * * And, if the consideration to be paid is single and entire, the contract must be held to be entire, although the subject of the contract may consist of several distinct and wholly independent items."
In Massey v. Taylor, 5 Cold. (Tenn.) 447, 98 Am. Dec. 429, it was held that a person employed for a specified time, and for certain wages, and who is discharged by his employer for cause, cannot recover stipulated wages on the contract, but may recover on quantum meruit for the worth of his services to his employer, but not to exceed the contract price. In the case at bar no attempt is made to recover on quantum meruit or quantumvalebat, but this is an action to recover on a special contract. In this case plaintiff relies on his sickness as excusing a strict compliance and completion of his contract, and claims that by reason thereof he should recover upon the contract itself, and not upon quantum meruit, and cites some authorities which apparently sustain that idea, but we believe the great weight of authority holds to the opposite view. Counsel for plaintiff in error cite Huyett Smith Mfg. Co. v.Chicago Edison Co., 59 Am. St. Rep. 282, where, in a note by Judge Freeman, it is said:
"Even conceding that an act of God does excuse nonperformance, we do not see that it authorizes a recovery upon a contract that has not been performed. Otherwise stated, an act of God, even if it does excuse nonperformance, does not entitle either party to a recovery for a part performance of the contract."
See, also, Doster v. Brown,
"It requires them to do what they have agreed to do. If inexpedient impediments lie in the way, and a loss must ensue, it leaves the loss where the contract places it. If the parties have made no provisions for a dispensation, the rule of law gives none. It does not allow a contract fairly made to be annulled, and it does not permit to be interpolated what the parties themselves have not stipulated."
What, then, constitutes an entire contract? In an exhaustive note found in 59 Am. St. Rep. 277, it is said an entire contract is indivisible. The whole must stand or fall together.Norris v. Harris,
The entirety of a contract depends upon the intentions of the parties, as well as on the fact that the consideration is single, and the divisibility of the subject-matter, or the mode of measuring the price, does not affect the question. The covenants of an entire contract are, of course, material and dependent, and covenants are to be considered dependent or independent, according to the intention of the parties. The general rule of law gleaned from the cases is that, while a special contract remains open and unperformed, the one whose part of it has not been performed cannot recover for what he has done until the whole contract is completed. It is, however, an exception to the rule *46
that there can be no recovery on a contract to do an entire piece of work for a specified sum unless the work is done, and the exception is that if one has entered into a special contract to perform work for another, and the work is done, but not in the manner stipulated so that he cannot recover on the contract, yet, if the work is accepted and used and any benefit derived therefrom, a recovery may be had on a quantum meruit
(Hayward v. Leonard, 7 Pick. [Mass.] 181, 19 Am. Dec. 26), and this rule that a party who has failed to fully perform his contract cannot recover for a part performance applies only to entire contracts such as the one sued on in this case, and not to severable contracts, which are in legal effect independent agreements upon different subjects, although made at the same time. If, therefore, this is an entire contract, and of that question there seems to be no doubt, then the full performance is necessary in order to warrant a recovery. There is no obligation to pay until the complete performance of the entire contract. Crane v. Knubel, 34 N.Y. Super. Ct. 443; Id., 43 How. Prac. 389. Conditions precedent control over the equity of the case. Maloney v. Rust,
Defendant in error contends that the action on the contract was properly brought, but in a way attempts to excuse its full performance by saying that he was prevented by sickness. An act of God or inevitable accident does not, as we understand it, excuse the nonperformance of a contract, wherein there is no provision made for such contingencies, although it is otherwise as to a duty imposed by law (Adams v. Nichols, supra); but, *47 even conceding that his sickness precluded the performance of his contract, it certainly does not warrant a recovery on that part of his contract that has not been performed (Huyett Smith Co. v. Chicago Edison Co., supra). We think there can be no question but that the contract is entire on both sides, and that there is no other standard of measurement by which plaintiff's pay, or rather his part of the profits, can be estimated, except by taking the whole income from the office on one side and the entire period of time covered by the contract on the other side. Then, this being an entire and indivisible contract, can we say from the report of the referee that it was fully performed? We think not. On the contrary, it is clearly shown that it was not fully performed. Findings 5 and 6 of the referee plainly show the contrary, as may be seen by an examination thereof.
"(5) The plaintiff entered the office of the defendant on July 1, 1907, as provided in the contract, and personally worked in said office until September 17, 1907, at which time plaintiff became ill and did not return to the office until October 14th or 15th; that after his return he worked intermittently at said office until October 26, 1907, at which time plaintiff left on account of his ill health, and did not return until after statehood.
"(6) That the services agreed to be performed by the plaintiff, or rather services performed by plaintiff before his departure on the 17th day of September, 1907, were after that time and until November 17, 1907, performed by the defendant by employing night hours and Sundays in the performance of such work, and by employing stenographers who were paid by defendant."
Also his conclusion of law No. 2, which is really a finding of fact:
"I further conclude that the plaintiff did not at any time voluntarily leave the defendant's office or willfully abandon it, but was forced on account of sickness to quit; that the plaintiff is entitled to one-half of the net income of the office from July 1, 1907, to November 16, 1907, which, deducting amount heretofore paid him, amounts to $546." *48
The referee does not say that plaintiff performed his contract by substituting other persons in his place to do the work; on the contrary, there is no finding of fact on the subject, and under the law announced by the court in Brooks v.Garner,
"Where a plaintiff declares upon a contract and alleges full performance on his part, without any count upon a quantummeruit, he is bound to prove that he has fully performed the contract." (Taylor v. Beck,
"A full and substantial performance by plaintiff must be shown before he can recover under the contract, for an entire contract cannot be apportioned in so far as it has been performed, and rescinded as to the residue." (Johnson v.Walker,
"We hold the law to be that, where there is a special agreement, the party who was to execute it must do so before he can recover anything. * * * It is a general rule of law that a contract must be performed according to the terms of the agreement before the party can have any right of action." (Helm v. Wilson, 4 Mo. 41, 28 Am. Dec. 336.)
"Where there is a special contract, the plaintiff cannot recover the stipulated price unless there has been a full performance on his part." (Marshall v. Jones,
"Failure to comply with the terms of a special contract destroys the right to recover under the contract." (Morford v.Mastin, 6 T. B. Mon. [Ky.] 609, 17 Am. Dec. 168.)
"Where an action is brought upon a contract of this nature, the defendant has a right to require the plaintiff to prove the precedent performance on his part before he will be entitled to recovery, and the court will not countenance any departure from the rule which will allow a party to abandon his undertaking at pleasure and resort to a quantum meruit where a part only of the agreement has been performed." (Eldridge v. Rowe, 2 Gilman [Ill.] 91, 43 Am. Dec. 41.)
In this case, also, discussing the cases where a party has been allowed to recover for a partial performance, the court said:
"They are to be regarded as exceptions to the general rule, and that in such case the party must not sue upon the original agreement, as he cannot prove performance in full, but must resort to an action on the new agreement which the law implies, and recover upon a quantum meruit, or quantum valebat, whatever *50 compensation he may reasonably deserve to have for his labor."
Counsel for defendant in error contends that this case is an exception to the general rule, that where there is a part performance of a contract of service, and the party is prevented by sickness from a full performance, the remedy is upon the contract itself, and not upon a quantum meruit, and cites some authorities which seemingly support that view, but the overwhelming weight of authority is against that view. The case of Britton v. Turner,
Having reached this conclusion, it necessarily follows that the judgment of the district court of Muskogee county should be reversed.
By the Court: It is so ordered.