52 N.C. 290 | N.C. | 1859
In November, 1852, the plaintiff sold and agreed to deliver to the defendants 1,500 pounds of pork on 1 January, 1853, at 6 cents per pound, and the defendants agreed to pay for the pork in two notes and a judgment, and also an account which they had against the plaintiff. The defendants held two notes against the plaintiff, one for $25.86 and one for $16.57, and a store account for goods sold and delivered amounting to $17.54; also a judgment in the hands of one Brayhill for collection.
The plaintiff did not deliver any pork according to his contract on 1 January, 1853. He delivered 271 pounds about the middle of that month, and this, at 6 cents per pound, amounted to $16.26, which amount the defendants endorsed on the note for $25.86, leaving a balance upon that note of $9.40. The plaintiff afterwards, to wit, on 24 January, 1853, delivered 762 pounds of pork, and also, on (291) that day, sold and delivered to defendants some corn, tallow, and a raw hide, the pork amounting to $45.72, and the corn, tallow, and raw hide to $6.48. A memorandum of the pork, corn, tallow, and raw hide was made by one of the defendants, at his dwelling-house, and delivered to the plaintiff, with directions to deliver same to Mr. Martin, a clerk in the store, and have the same entered to his credit upon the books. Mr. Martin entered the price of the pork, etc., to the credit of the plaintiff upon the books, and paid 75 cents to Thomas Dula, and charged the same to the plaintiff.
The plaintiff returned to the store the next day, on the 25th, and asked Martin to look over the books and see how the accounts stood. Martin and plaintiff looked over the books together, the defendants being present. After ascertaining what was due upon the notes, and the amount of the book account, the notes were delivered up to Dula, and the balance for the pork, corn, etc., was ascertained to be $18.49. This balance plaintiff demanded in cash. The defendants refused, because the plaintiff had not delivered all the pork, and had not delivered up an order which defendants had given him on Brayhill for the judgment against him. The plaintiff then said he would deliver the balance of the pork the next day, and he would then see if the defendants would not pay him.
The court charged the jury that if the contract for the pork had not been altered, the plaintiff could not recover; that he had agreed to deliver 1,500 pounds of pork on 1 January, and as he had delivered 1,033 pounds only, he had no right to recover anything until he had delivered the whole; that it was competent, however, for the parties to change this contract if they thought proper, and the only question in the case was, Had they altered or modified their contract? *226
The court further charged that there was evidence of a change or modification of the contract; that the endorsement on the note of $16.26, the amount of the first lot of pork, and the delivery up of the (292) notes to plaintiff was evidence of a change or modification of the contract; that it was for the jury to say whether there had been a change or not; if they were satisfied that the parties agreed to settle their accounts as they then stood, that the plaintiff was entitled to recover.
Under these instructions, the jury found a verdict for plaintiff. Judgment. Appeal by defendant.
The statement of the case now sent does not set out how the remainder of the price of the pork was to be paid. This, we presume, was through inadvertence, as the variance was not referred to on the argument, and in the case when before us, Dular v. Cowles,
The principle has been acted upon in two recent cases, Johnson v. Dunn,
The principle is this: where a contract is entire, and not made divisible by its terms, one of the parties cannot take advantage of his own default, either from laches or from a willful refusal to perform his part, for the purpose of putting the contract out of his way, so as to (293) enable him to maintain assumpsit on the common counts, and thereby evade the rule, that while the special contract is in force general assumpsit will not lie, and the contract is considered to remain in force until it is rescinded by mutual consent, or until the opposite party does some act inconsistent with the duty imposed upon him by the contract, *227 which amounts to an abandonment. This is as plain as we can find language in which to state the principle.
What amounts to an abandonment is a question of law, and his Honor erred in not deciding it. He also erred in leaving the jury in a situation liable to be misled in consequence of the indefinite words in which his instructions were given. "It is for the jury to say whether there had been a change or not." What kind of change? To what extent? In what particulars? In whose favor was the change allowed as an indulgence?
The instruction ought to have been that the plaintiff was not at liberty to treat the contract as annulled, and could not recover on the common counts, unless the defendants had abandoned the contract, and that to amount to an abandonment they must have done some act which was inconsistent with the duty imposed on them by the contract, and there was no evidence of any such act.
For the sake of illustration: If the contract had been that the remainder of the price of the pork was to be paid in cash, and the defendants had refused to pay the remainder in cash, insisting upon paying half in goods, that would have been an act inconsistent with the duty imposed on them by the contract, and would have amounted to an abandonment; but there was no evidence that such was the contract. The plaintiff, in the last interview, said, "He would deliver the balance of the pork the next day, and then see if the defendants would not pay him." Does this mean pay all of the remainder of the price in cash? If so, that seems to be the kink in this little case, where the cost has already far exceeded the sum in controversy, and "the play has not been worth the candle." Thus furnishing another instance of the fact that small cases are more apt to become complicated than large ones; a skein of silk is (294) more easily tangled than a coil of rope.
On the argument Mr. Boyden insisted with great earnestness that the delivery of 271 pounds of pork about the middle of January, and the endorsement of the amount as a credit on one of the notes, was a payment! There can be no doubt of it; and it is exactly what the plaintiff ought to have done, save only that he ought to have delivered the whole, and ought to have done so sooner, to wit, on the day fixed by the contract.
The defendants might have refused to receive this parcel after the day, and sued for breach of contract: Surely they were at liberty to indulge the plaintiff by not insisting rigidly upon a strict performance on his part, and such indulgence gave him no cause of complaint. After this the defendants could have sued for a breach of contract in not delivering the balance of the pork within reasonable time. The same remarks are applicable to the delivery of the several parcels; so the defendants had a good cause of action for the nondelivery of the balance, and it would be *228 strange if the plaintiff also can maintain an action treating the contract as nullified — in other words, taking advantage of his own wrong and making the indulgence extend to him a ground of complaint! The policy of the law is to require parties to perform their contracts in good faith, and this policy should not be defeated by yielding to what may be called a "hard case." If one agrees to sell a horse at the price of $150, the money to be paid at ninety days, and the horse to be delivered when paid for, the vendee fails to pay at the day; afterwards, he offers to pay $50, which is received in part payment; afterwards he pays $50 more, and then refuses to pay the balance; he cannot get the horse, nor can he recover back the money, for it was not "received to his use," but in part payment for the horse. Is it hard that he should lose his money? And is it not right that he should be required to perform his contract (295) and not be allowed to evade it because he may think it a bad bargain?
One agrees to act as an overseer for one year at $250; in the middle of the year he does an act which justifies his discharge: he cannot recover the $250, nor can he recover pro rata wages. Lane v. Phillips,supra. If this be not law, the whole current of the cases must be changed.
PER CURIAM. Venire de novo.
MANLY, J., dissentiente.
Cited: Russell v. Stewart,