35 Cal. 229 | Cal. | 1868
The plaintiffs, as parties of the second part, and defendants, as parties of the first part, entered into a contract containing the following covenants: The parties of the second part agree to go upon said premises and take possession of all the personal property and mill, and to sell, manufacture, and deliver to parties of the first part two million feet of merchantable and clear sawed lumber, to be in length from twelve to twenty-four feet, and sawed to the order of the parties of the first part; said orders to be furnished always in advance, and to include all the merchantable sawed lumber that comes from the saw, but to include only such dimensions as are usually sawed by mills in this vicinity for this market; and for any extra size or dimension that may be required, to be paid for at an extra price. Said parties of the second part further agree to and with the parties of the first part to commence operations at said mill on or before July 20th, 1866; and to manufauture at least fifty thousand feet per month while they may occupy and use the
The plaintiffs entered upon the performance of their covenant, and before, the 1st day of January, 1867, sawed and delivered to the defendants merchantable clear sawed lumber to the amount of three hundred and nineteen thousand five hundred and twenty-eight feet, in all respects as required by the contract, which lumber was received and paid for by defendants. During the months of April and May, and up to the 8th of June, 1867, the plaintiffs sawed and delivered to the defendants one hundred and four thousand two hundred and seventy-three feet of lumber which was received, but not paid for. Upon the 11th of June, 1867, in addition to the lumber so delivered to and hauled away by defendants, the plaintiffs had at their sawmill of merchantable clear
This action is brought to recover the contract price of the lumber delivered, but not paid for, and damages for breach of the contract by the defendants in declaring the contract at . an end, and refusing to receive any more lumber under it.
The Court, in addition to other facts stated, found the value of the lumber delivered, and not paid for, at the contract price (including a small amount furnished outside the contract), to be one thousand sixtyrseven dollars and fifty-six cents; that the amount of lumber remaining to be delivered is one million five hundred seventy-six thousand feet; that the cost of manufacturing and delivering said
The defendants insist, that the facts found disclose a breach on the part of the plaintiffs, which justified them in declining to receive any more lumber, on the ground, firstly, that a portion of the lumber delivered was neither merchantable nor clear sawed; secondly, that plaintiffs had not manufactured and delivered the lumber as fast as the contract required.
We will dispose of these questions first. There is nothing-in the first ground. The unmerchantable lumber hauled away by defendants’ teamsters was taken by them of their own accord, and contrary to the express orders of the plaintiffs. Plaintiffs never desired or expected defendants to receive it, or pay for it as a pai-t of the lumber called for by the contract, and so notified them. The plaintiffs were in no way responsible for the acts of defendants’ teamsters in hauling it away.
Whether there is any force in the second ground relied on by defendants, depends upon the construction to be given to the covenant quoted, and this, it must be confessed, is somewhat obscure, not to say ambiguous. The defendants claim the construction to be, that plaintiffs are to manufacture and deliver not less than fifty thousand feet each and every month from July 20th, 1866, to May 20th, 1867, and at least eighty thousand feet per month thereafter. The District Court, however, held the covenant to be satisfied by a delivery of three hundred thousand feet before the 1st of January, 1867, at the rate of not less than fifty thousand feet per month from
Conceding a breach to have occurred on the part of the defendants, it is claimed on their behalf, that the'plaintiffs had but one of three courses to pursue: Firstly, to rescind the
It may be that the monthly payments called for' by the contract were absolutely necessary to. enable the plaintiffs to perform their covenants, and that without such payments it would have been impossible for them to proceed. It would require a large amount of capital for plaintiffs to proceed in the manufacture of lumber for a period of three years without receiving payments. Besides, they were compelled to erect and did erect a new mill for the express purpose of enabling them to fulfill their contract. It would be equally
The case of Masterson v. Mayor of Brooklyn, supra, was similar in principle to this. The suit was for breach of a contract, whereby the plaintiff covenanted to furnish for a specified price, all the marble required to build the City Hall in the City of Brooklyn, to be delivered from time to time, as required by the Superintendent, and paid for in instalments as the work progressed. After the delivery of something over fourteen thousand feet, which was paid for, the defendants suspended the work, and like the defendants in this case, “refused to receive any more materials from the plaintiffs,
In the case of the Town of Royalton v. R. and W. Turnpike Company, there was a contract, by the terms of which the defendant covenanted lo support and keep in repair, for the term of twenty years, a bridge which the plaintiff was bound to maintain, in consideration of which the plaintiff covenanted to pay the defendant the sum of twenty-five dollars per annum for the entire period of time. The defendant supported the bridge for a period of eight years, and then committed a breach by suffering it to go to decay, and refusing to support it longer. The suit was upon the contract
How, what was done and what was said might be done in
The cases cited by defendants are not in conflict with the authorities referred to in this opinion. Most of them do not touch the precise question, and are therefore not in point. The case of Rogers v. Parham,, 8 Cobb, 190, is against the respondents, and sustains the views here taken. The same may be said of Girard v. Taggart, 5 S. & R. 19, so far as it hears upon the question. There was a sale of teas at auction, to be paid for in sixty, ninety, and one hundred and twenty days, the purchaser, on delivery of the teas, to give notes with approved indorsers. The purchaser finally refused to take the teas or give the notes. Thereupon the vendor sold the teas again at a much lower price, and sued at once to recover the difference. In the language of the Chief Justice, the action was “ special, on the breach of the contractUpon the question as to when the action could be brought, and the measure of damages, Mr. Justice Gibson said: “ The breach having put an end to every idea of further performance by either, is a violation of the contract in all its parts, for which the seller-may recover whatever damages he can prove he has sustained. The buyer, after having disaffirmed the sale, so far as he could by acts of his own, must not be permitted to treat the contract as still existing for the purposes of being
In this case the difference between the contract price and cost of performance, or the clear profits upon the amount of lumber remaining undelivered, the Court found -to be six thousand three hundred four dollars and seventy-nine cents, which sum should have been added to the amount for which judgment was rendered.
Judgment reversed, and the District Court directed to enter judgment upon the findings in accordance with the views expressed in this opinion.