125 Mo. App. 139 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1907
On the third day of October, 1905, the defendant contracted with plaintiff to sell and deliver to it, f. o. b. Missouri Pacific Railway tracks at Rich Hill, Adrian or Butler, Missouri, or at all of said places, twenty-five thousand bushels of corn of No. 3 grade or better, at the agreed price and sum of thirty-five cents per bushel if delivered in November, 1905, or if delivered during the first half of December, 1905, thirty-five and three-fourths cents per bushel. According to the contract the corn was to be billed to West Wego, Louisiana. The corn was not delivered to plaintiff in the month of November, nor at the date of December 15, on which date plaintiff upon the floor of the Kansas City Exchange bought twenty-five thousand bushels of corn of the grade named in the contract at the price of forty cents per bushel, and immediately on that date notified defendant of its purchase of corn and requested him to remit to plaintiff the amount of damages plaintiff claimed it had sustained by reason of his failure to deliver the corn under his contract. The plaintiff’s suit is to recover said damages. Attention will be given to other evidence in the course of the opinion. The trial resulted in a verdict and judgment for plaintiff from which defendant appealed.
The evidence was, however, that a short time previous to the fifteenth day of December defendant had corn on hand which the plaintiff wanted defendant to deliver, but that defendant refused to deliver that corn and he placed his refusal upon the ground that at that time it was worth more money than the contract price. But under his contract he was not bound to deliver the corn at that time as he had several days yet to do so. And he did not notify plaintiff at any time that he would not deliver the corn within the time limited by his contract. The plaintiff acted prematurely in buying other corn to supply the place of that provided in the contract, and in demanding damages of defendant for failure to deliver such corn in time, as the defendant was entitled to the full half of the month of December to make such delivery. The time had not expired at two o’clock on the fifteenth of December. At least, he was entitled to the whole of that day to comply with his contract. [2 Parsons on Contracts, star page 661, 662.] It is true that the evidence showed that there was not sufficient com at the places mentioned available for delivery on December 15th; and the evidence also tends to show that it was not the intention of defendant to comply with his contract. But however that may have been,
We take it for granted that a party in order to recover on his contract must first show a compliance with its terms on his part or his willingness to do so, and that he was prevented from complying by the action of the other contracting party. It is but common justice to require a party who seeks to recover upon the letter of his contract to show that, he has lived up to the letter of the same himself.
The defendant asked the court under the evidence to direct the jury to return a verdict in his favor which the court refused. This was error. Under the evidence defendant was entitled to a verdict. Reversed.