28 N.C. 46 | N.C. | 1845
Covenant on the following instrument, executed by the defendants to the plaintiff:
"On or before 1 August, 1844, we promise to make the number of fifty wheat fans after the Lomax model for Samuel Dwiggins, value received of him. Witness our hands and seals, this 30 January, 1844.
"The above-mentioned fans are to be made in a workmanlike manner. The said Dwiggins agrees to furnish the materials for the above mentioned fans on or before 20 February, 1844."
The breach alleged is that the defendants did not make the fans by 1 August, 1844, and the declaration does not aver that the plaintiff furnished materials for them. After oyer, the defendants pleaded (47)non est factum, performance generally, and also that the defendants had requested the plaintiff to furnish to them the materials for making the said fans, and that he refused and failed so to do; and thereon issues were joined.
On the trial the plaintiff offered, of course, no evidence that he furnished any materials, and the defendants moved the court to instruct the jury that for the want of it the plaintiff could not recover. But the court *46 was of opinion that the covenant of the defendants bound them to make the fans absolutely, and that the plaintiff need not show that he furnished the materials, and, therefore, refused the instruction.
The defendants then proved by a witness that in April, 1844, the defendants made for the plaintiffs ten fans out of materials furnished by him, and commenced several others, and were ready to make the number, but that they could not complete those which were begun nor make any others, for the want of materials, which the plaintiff failed to supply. The defendants then moved the court to instruct the jury that if they believed the witness they ought to find for the defendants. But the court held that such failure on the part of the plaintiff would give to the defendants an action on the covenant against the plaintiff, but did not excuse the defendants for not making the fans by the time appointed, and, therefore, that the plaintiff was entitled to recover. Verdict and judgment for the plaintiff for $113, and the defendants appealed. The Court is of opinion that the instructions were erroneous. It seems impossible to mistake the meaning of the parties. In construing their agreement its stipulations are to be held to be dependent or independent, as will effect the apparent intention. Although the books are overloaded with adjudications upon the question, there are really no technical rules to govern us, but every agreement is to be judged of according to its own terms and the nature of the transaction to which it relates. Here it is clear that the engagement of the defendants was not absolute that they would make the fans at all events. Possibly, it might have been so held upon the words as the instrument seems at first to have been drawn, in which the defendants bind themselves "to make for" the plaintiff fifty fans. But that does not constitute the whole agreement, for before executing it the defendants added after the words of formal conclusion, these others: "The said Dwiggins agrees to furnish the materials for the above fans on or before 20 February, 1844"; and that addition modifies most materially the indefinite terms in which the agreement had been before concluded. Those words could not have been intended as a covenant on the part of the plaintiff, for the breach of which the defendants might have their action, since the plaintiff did not, in truth, execute the deed, but only accepted it. They were, therefore, intended to qualify the preceding engagement of the defendants, which from the generality of its form was susceptible of misconstruction, and to make it more specific in two particulars. The one was that, although the defendants were *47 "to make" the fans, that should not be held to mean that they were to make them out and out, but that they should make them out of the plaintiff's own materials — that is to say, that they construct them merely. The other was that, inasmuch as the plaintiff required the fans to be done by the 1st of August following, and it would require a considerable period to construct that number, they would only bind themselves to do the work by that particular day if the plaintiff would put the materials in their hands long enough to enable them to work them up by the day; and they fixed on 20 February, (49) 1844, as the latest day of delivery. Such is the plain common sense of the transaction, and a fair interpretation of the instrument. What is said about the acts of the plaintiff was not intended to give the other party an action against him, but to modify the engagements of the defendants themselves; and it so qualifies it as necessarily to amount to a condition precedent. The order in which the provisions are found in the instrument does not control the construction; for it is a trite observation that they will be transposed so as to effectuate the intention which is to be collected from the order in point of time in which the several acts of the different parties are to be performed. Now, as the plaintiff chose to furnish his own materials, and, therefore, to pay the defendants for making only, and as the defendants were to make the fans out of the plaintiff's materials, it follows, of necessity, that before the defendants could do anything, or be intended to do anything, the plaintiff must first find the materials with which the work was to be made.
But it was said at the bar that this construction must be wrong, inasmuch as it is to be collected from the agreement that the defendants had been paid, and that they ought not to keep the price without doing the work. With that we have nothing to do at present, as the only question now is whether this action can be sustained on the covenant. But suppose the defendants may retain the sum paid them, who is in fault? For if a person will hire another to work for him, and then will not give him any work to do, the employer has himself alone to blame. And if the defendants have been paid, it was for making fifty fans out of the plaintiff's materials, and for nothing more; and that they were ready to do. But the plaintiff wishes to recover from them as if they had been paid for making and had covenanted to make the fifty fans out of their own materials. Surely nothing could be more unjust or opposed to the meaning of the parties. The defendants were not to do a stroke of work but upon materials furnished by the plaintiff, (50) and as he furnished none, they have not broken their covenant.
PER CURIAM. Venire de novo.
Cited: Stafford v. Jones,