72 S.W. 54 | Tex. | 1903
The following questions have been certified for our determination:
"In this cause, now pending before this court on motion for rehearing, we are advised that a number of other claims of a like nature growing out of the same transaction are dependent upon the result of this case, and for that reason, and because this court is not unanimous in the conclusion already reached to affirm the judgment and are in doubt as to the correctness of our judgment, we certify for your decision the questions hereafter set out.
"The facts as disclosed by the record are as follows:
"Some time in the spring of 1898, T.S. Garrison, the appellant, induced J.W. Cooke and other citizens of Carthage, Texas, to execute and deliver to him the following instruments with the amount for which each was to be bound set opposite the respective signatures:
"`The State of Texas, Panola County. Know all men by these presents that we and each of us whose names are subscribed below, for and in consideration of T.S. Garrison constructing, equipping and operating a line of railroad from Timpson, Shelby County, Texas, to Carthage, Panola County, Texas, and the running of daily trains between said points for the accommodation of freight and passenger traffic on or before the 1st day of October, 1898, agree to pay the amounts set opposite our respective names to such persons as said T.S. Garrison designates, said amounts to be paid when the road is completed and daily trains are running over same to the town of Carthage. "`J.W. Cooke .......... $350.00'
"The time of completion to Carthage was subsequently extended by agreement of parties to November 1, 1898. The appellant proceeded with the construction of the proposed road, which was known as the Marshall, Timpson Sabine Pass Railroad, and by about the first of the year 1899 had completed it to within about half a mile of Carthage. Appellant then sold the road to the owners of a competitive railroad, the Texas, Sabine Valley Northwestern Railroad, and these parties by March 1, 1899, but not before, completed the proposed road to Carthage and had daily trains running thereon as stipulated in the contract. When the road was sold to them by appellant it was stipulated by him that it should be completed to Carthage as per contract, though it would have suited the purchasers better to construct it by a different route to another point. On the completion of the line to Carthage appellant demanded the subscription but appellee refused to pay, whereupon this suit was brought.
"Appellee defended, first, upon the ground that time was of the essence of the contract, and that, as the road was not completed by November 1st, his liability for the subscription did not attach; and second, that as the road was not built to Carthage by appellant, but was sold out to and completed by parties who already had a railroad to Carthage, he was discharged from liability.
"Parol evidence was admitted to the effect that the subscribers had *231 contracted that the road should be in operation to Carthage by October or November 1st, because they expected it, by competition with the other railroad, to affect the rate of freight on cotton to their advantage. A trial by jury resulted in a verdict for appellee.
"Questions: 1. Does the subscription contract show upon its face that time was of the essence of the contract?
"2. Did the trial court err in hearing proof as to the situation of the parties and the fact that the subscribers expected to derive benefit from the construction of the road by the date named, in the way of reduction in freight rates on cotton?
"3. Would the fact that appellant did not complete the road himself, but sold out to a rival road which completed it, constitute a defense to the action?
"4. If parol evidence as to the situation of the subscriber at the date of the contract is admissible in explanation of its meaning and in aid of its construction, must such evidence be confined to the subscriber in question, or may such inquiry include his cosubscribers who signed contemporaneously with him?
"5. Do the facts show that time was of the essence of the contract?"
"It is a familiar principle that in all cases where it is sought to enforce contracts consisting of reciprocal promises, and `where the plaintiff himself is to do an act to entitle himself to the action, he must either show the act done, or if it be not done, at least that he has performed everything that was in his power to do.' Accordingly, when by the terms of a contract one party is to do something at or before a specified time, and when he fails to do such thing within that time, he could not afterwards claim the performance of the contract if the stipulation as to time were construed according to its literal terms. The rule of the common law was that `time is always of the essence of the contract.' When any time is fixed for the completion of it, the contract must be completed on the day specified, or an action will lie for the breach of it." Pollock on Principles of Contracts, 462. The rule is also announced by the elementary text writers that, at law, time is in general of the essence of the contract. Bishop on Contracts, sec. 1344; Anson on Contracts, 331; Clark on Contracts, 596. See also Beach on the Modern Law of Contracts, secs. 617 et seq. We understand the rule to apply where one party agrees to pay money to the other in consideration of the doing of an act by such other within a specified time. In general in such a case the promise to pay can not be enforced, unless the act be performed within the time. Questions calling for its application have frequently arisen in cases like the one now before us — that is to say, in cases of subscriptions for the construction of railroads and other like improvements, and so far as we have been enabled to discover, where there is nothing on the face of the contract itself tending to show that time was not of the essence of the engagement, it has been nearly if not quite uniformly held, that *232
if the work was not completed within the specified time, the promisor was not liable. Such was the case of Slater v. Emerson, 22 How., 224. There "a railroad company became embarrassed, and were unable to pay the contractor, and a person interested in the company agreed to give the contractor his individual promissory notes if he would finish the work by a certain day," and it was held that the contractor could not recover because he had not finished the work within the stipulated time. The case was cited with approval and the rule was followed in the following cases: Hall v. United States,
A contract to pay money in consideration that the promisee will build a railroad by a certain time implies very clearly that that money is to be paid only on condition that the road be constructed within the time; and in our opinion time in such a case is of the essence of the contract. The fact that the parties by subsequent agreement extended the time for the completion of the road, shows that such was their own construction of the contract, and, even if it were a doubtful matter, ought to have a controlling effect in determining their intention. The cases mainly relied upon by counsel for appellant are Traer v. Stuart,
We answer the first question in the affirmative, and since the parol evidence introduced did not tend to show that the intention of the parties was not to make time an essential element in the agreement, we deem it unnecessary to answer the others.