153 N.W. 137 | N.D. | 1915
Lead Opinion
This action is to recover $2,400 damages as the purchase price of an engine plaintiff claims to have sold and delivered defendant, together with an additional $104 freight charge thereon. June 10, 1912, defendant executed and delivered the usual written machinery order to plaintiff. It was duly accepted. Before the stipulated time for delivery, defendant notified plaintiff he would not receive the engine and to cancel his order. Plaintiff refused cancelation, insisting upon full performance. On receipt of defendant’s written notice of revocation, and on June 29th, plaintiff wrote defendant as follows: “Referring to your letter of June 22d, in which you ask us to cancel your order, wish to say that we cannot do this. . . . The order contains no provision for cancelation, and like any other contract it cannot be abrogated or annulled without the consent of all the parties thereto. We will ship you the engine promptly on July 15th (the date specified for shipment in the order), and will carry out our part of the contract in every detail. We shall then insist that you carry out yours, and you have absolutely no grounds whatever upon which to refuse to do so.” Defendant’s reply, duly received, was: “Tours of the 28th of June, refusing to cancel order, at hand. . . . Now I positively will not receive said engine, and do not think you are giving me a square deal in trying to hold me up. If it is a case of damages, make a statement and I will consider it. But if you wish to go >o law, I am ready.” On July 15th, the earliest date fixed for performance, plaintiff tendered the engine to defendant f. o. b. at Porest River, according to the terms of the con
These are the findings. The appeal is from the judgment of dismissal, raising only the legal conclusions to be drawn from the findings. The decision is the answer to whether a suit can be maintained for the purchase price and freight added, as for damages suffered by the failure of the defendant to receive the stock engine ordered for future delivery to him, where before the time for delivery he had given plaintiff his unequivocal and unconditional notice of cancelation of his order, and that he would neither receive the engine nor pay for it; with defendant refusing to receive or pay for the engine and insisting upon his repudiation.
Plaintiff claims: (1) That the attempted cancelation and notice was ineffectual for any purpose, and amounted to but defendant’s offer that the contract might be canceled, which offer was rejected, leaving the written contract in force; under which, however, it was not obliged to tender the engine in the face of the defendant’s offer and refusal to receive it; but nevertheless it claims it did deliver it to him, and thereby parted with its title, and therefore can recover damages as for the purchase price, and (2) irrespective of the passing of title, the order should be construed as authorizing a recovery for $2,400 and freight, inasmuch as such is plaintiff’s contract rights, because payment was not conditioned upon the passing of title as a condition either precedent or concurrent. Defendant asserts that: (1) title did not vest in defendant, as the contract was repudiated before delivery, upon which repudiation an action for damages only for such breach is accorded to the seller, with the measure of damages recoverable fixed by § 7156, Comp. Laws 1913, as declared where the title does not pass to the purchaser; and (2) that a purchaser has a right to stop performance of an executory contract of purchase and sale by notice of its cancelation, and the question of
The questions presented are whether (1) this purchaser had a right to cancel his executory contract of purchase while it remained wholly executory; (2) the effect of his attempted cancelation thereof; (3) the measure of damages for the breach; and (4) the effect of cancelation to mitigate such damages.
The difficulty is not in passing upon the issues in the light of the common law alone, or of our statutes, declaratory thereof; but instead arises in their solution in harmony with both the common law .and consonant in reason with the holding and the principles announced in Stanford v. McGill, 6 N. D. 536, 38 L.R.A. 760, 72 N. W. 938; wherein was repudiated the common-law doctrine that there could be .an anticipatory breach of a wholly executory contract of .purchase and sale. Stanford v. McGill is the bulwark behind which the plaintiff is intrenched. Under the doctrine of that case it reasons that this .attempted cancelation is ineffectual except to relieve it from the necessity of making a tender; that the contract never was breached until refusal to accept the tendered property; that the attempted cancelation in no wise relieved defendant from his obligation to purchase and pay the purchase price, inasmuch as it constituted but a mere offer, the rejection of which left the contract unaffected; and under which it has performed promptly and punctually upon the first day upon which it could elect to perform; that it thereby cast title upon defendant and can recover the purchase price therefor that it can recover as damages for freight paid, because if it can disregard the cancelation at its pleasure, that cannot logically furnish a foundation for minimizing such damages necessarily incurred in moving the machine to Forest Eiver, that it'might be there for tender on July 15th; that under the reasoning of Stanford v. McGill it had the right to expect that, notwithstanding defendant’s attempted repudiation, he would nevertheless repent thereof upon a tender made to him, and perform; and that accordingly it had the right to make shipment and place itself in readiness to perform its part on the first day possible;
“A party to an executory contract may, always stop performance on the other side by an explicit direction to that effect, though he thereby subjects himself to the payment of such damages as will compensate the other for the loss he has sustained by having his performance checked at that stage of its progress.” 2 Mechem, Sales, § 1091. This is the settled law even in Massachusetts (which, together with North Dakota and Nebraska, is the only state rejecting the doctrine of anticipatory breach of executory contracts), as there declared in Collins v. Delaporte, 115 Mass. 159-162, in these words: “A party to an executory contract may stop its performance by an explicit order, and will subject himself only to such damages as will compensate the other party for being deprived of its benefits and is also recognized as the law in Parker v. Russell, 133 Mass. 74. But the application of this general rule of law seems inconsistent with the doctrine that there can be no anticipatory breach, but yet that the notice, although not operating to affect the contract rights in the least, nevertheless, as to damages recoverable, may in effect “stop performance.” As all the law is to this effect our holding could be based upon this principle alone as to this phase of the case. However, to do so, and to cite, affirm, or leave intact the declared doctrine in Stanford v. McGill, would seem to be applying a general rule of law
Recent authorities sustain the doctrine of anticipatory breach. 6 R. C. L. §§ 384-387; O’Neill v. Supreme Council, A. L. H. 1 Ann. Cas. 422 and note (70 N. J. L. 410, 57 Atl. 463), the opinion of which is by Justice Pitney, and contains an elaborate discussion and citation of authority, English and American. Roehm v. Horst, 178 U. S. 1, 44 L. ed. 953, 20 Sup. Ct. Rep. 780, declares that “the doctrine that there may be an anticipatory breach of an executory contract by an absolute refusal to perform it has become the settled law of England as applied to contracts for services, for marriage, and for the manufacture or sale of goods/’ citing the leading English case of Hochster v. De La Tour, 2 El. & Bl. 678, and other English cases, and stating; “This doctrine, which thus obtains in England, has been almost universally accepted by the courts of this country.” In the course of that Federal opinion, Stanford v. McGill is cited, and it, together with Daniels v. Newton, 114 Mass. 530, 19 Am. Rep. 384, followed as the authority in Stanford v. McGill, is repudiated. It says: “We think that there can be no controlling distinction on this point between the two classes of cases, and that it is proper to consider the reasonableness of the conclusion that the absolute renunciation of particular contracts constitutes such a breach as to justify immediate action and recovery therefor. The parties to a contract which is wholly executory have a right to the maintenance of the contractual relations up to the time for performance, as well as to a performance of the contract when due. If it appear that the party who makes an absolute refusal intends thereby to put an end to the contract so far as performance is concerned, and that the other party must accept this position, why should there not be speedy action and settlement in regard to the rights of the parties ? Why should a locus pcenitentice be awarded to the party whose wrongful action has placed the other at such disadvantage? What reasonable distinction per se is there between liability for a refusal to perform future acts to be done under a contract in course of performance, and liability for a refusal to perform the whole contract, made before the time for commencement of performance?” To the same effect see Wester v. Casein Co. 206 N. Y. 506, 100 N. E. 488, Ann. Cas. 1914B, 377; Holt v. United Secur. L. Ins. & T.
As to the assertion that title was vested in defendant, and that therefore it could sue for the purchase price, title could not be cast upon defendant in the face of his persistent refusal to accept title or the engine. There are cases where delivery may be constructively made or may be presumed, but that is not ours. The contract remains executory, and no title passes as on an executed sale until the buyer accepts a delivery of the property. Section 5536, Comp. Laws 1913; Nichols & S. Co. v. Paulson, 6 N. D. 400, 71 N. W. 136; Colean Mfg. Co. v. Blanchett, 16 N. D. 341, 113 N. W. 614; Reeves & Co.
Plaintiff has cited as sustaining a recovery with the purchase price as the measure of damages, with title cast upon defendant, a score of cases of conditional sale contracts where the property sold was delivered, but title for some cause was reserved as is usual for security purposes. Such is not precedent, as title passes in contemplation of law under a conditional sale contract, when the seller sues for the purchase price; the goods having been delivered, and it being solely at the option of the seller whether he will treat the title as vested, or retain it to otherwise enforce what in either event must be payment of purchase price. The purchaser in possession under a conditional sale contract has no option in that matter, the election being the right of the seller. Such are treated as executed sales for a purchase price for property delivered and received. This is already settled law here. Dowagiac Mfg. Co. v. Mahon, 13 N. D. 516-524, 101 N. W. 903, and Poirier Mfg. Co. v. Kitts, 18 N. D. 556, 120 N. W. 558; the latter decision holding that a vendor in a conditional sale contract may elect to waive his title and sue for purchase price. See 23 L. R. A. (N.S.) 145, and note, on effect of an action for the purchase price being a waiver of vendor’s right under a conditional sale contract to recover the property in specie. Appellant cites Dowagiac Mfg. Co. v. Higinbotham, 15 S. D. 547, 91 N. W. 330, as sustaining his theory that title passed without aceéptance of the property by defendant. That case must be understood as one in which a delivery was made to the carrier authorized to receive it as the agent of the consignee, with title passing on such delivery. Consult opinions in International Harvester Co. v. Pott, 32 S. D. 82, 142 N. W. 652.
Appellant cites 35 Cyc. 527, reading: “Where the buyer refuses to accept the goods or a part thereof, the seller, if he makes a proper tender, may nevertheless maintain an action for the price.” This is misleading unless considered in connection with the subject-matter immediately preceding it. The principle stated applies only where title has passed by an actual or constructive delivery, as an examination of the very cases cited will demonstrate, among which are White v. Solomon, 164 Mass. 516, 30 L.R.A. 537, 42 N. E. 104, the opinion
The purchase price cannot be recovered as the measure of damages in the absence of a provision in the contract to the contrary, unless title to the goods has vested in the purchaser, as the transfer of title .and payment therefor are in contemplation of law concurrent acts, ;and “if the buyer refuses to accept the goods even wrongfully, he can-mot be sued for the price, because the event on which he undertook to pay the price has not happened.” White v. Solomon, 164 Mass. 516, 30 L.R.A. 537, 42 N. E. 104; Reeves & Co. v. Bruening, 13 N. D. 157—166, 100 N. W. 241; Minneapolis Threshing Mach. Co. v. McDonald, 10 N. D. 408, 87 N. W. 993, construing § 7156, Comp. Laws 1913.
Plaintiff claims the right to recovér independently of the passing -of title, as on a contract stipulating for the payment of money without the passing of title being a condition either precedent or concurrent to payment. There are two equally conclusive answers to this contention: Eirst, there is no basis in the pleadings for such a claim, as it sues as for recovery of a purchase price of property sold and delivered ; and, secondly, the contract itself negatives such a claim, showing on its face to be a contract for the purchase and sale of personal property with payment by notes stipulated to be made as a condition concurrent upon delivery of such property, with title the considera
To summarize in conclusion. Defendant had the right to tender a breach of the contract by notice that he would never perform, which repudiation plaintiff might have elected to accept as a present and immediate breach. Stanford v. McGill, 6 N. D. 536, 38 L.R.A. 760, 72 N. W. 938, is to this extent overruled. Instead, it elected to keep the contract alive until the stipulated time for performance arrived, when, defendant not having withdrawn his renunciation, it could dispense with tender of performance and sue for damages. This it elected not to do, but chose to make a tender and afford defendant a further opportunity to receive it, in the event of which reception of the property, he could have been sued for the purchase price. However, he refused to receive either property or title, standing upon his repudiation of the contract, but thereby rendering himself liable for all damages accruing to the other party because of such breach. The measure of damages for breach is by § 7156, Comp. Laws 1913, and the common law, governed by a different rule from where title has been vested, in which event it is to be deemed to be the contract price. Section 7155, Comp. Laws 1913. As this suit is for the contract price for goods sold and delivered, it is not maintainable. There is an entire failure of proof of damages. As to the freight paid the findings do not disclose but what this expense was incurred after notice of repudiation operated to check further performance. That defendant did not observe it, if the freight expense was incurred thereafter, was at plaintiff’s own election, and taken at the hazard that it could induce defendant to later perform the» contract. It is in contemplation of law an enhancement of damages after notice of repudiation, and is not recoverable. Judgment affirmed.
Rehearing
On Petition for Rehearing.
Appellant’s counsel has petitioned for a rehearing. They assert that §§ 5775, 5821, and 5824, Comp. Laws 1913, “preserve a right to defendant to withdraw his repudiation; the time within which such right to withdraw may be made expires only with maturity of the obligation; the right thus preserved is as valuable to defendant as
The statutes cited constitute no guaranty to the repudiator of an executory contract that the other party must, in the face of notice given of a determined repudiation, nevertheless suffer the violator to remain in full enjoyment of all rights under the contract he would possess had he not repudiated. No such intent is manifest from the statutes in question. It is to the other party not in default to whom these statutes speak, and for whose benefit they stand. They have been in force since long before the decision of Stanford v. McGill, and will apply after the overruling of the doctrine of that case as fully as they did before. In fact, they have no application whatever to the subject under discussion, that of anticipatory breach. They support neither contention concerning it, nor aid in determining which of the two should be selected as the law of this jurisdiction.
As to the second contention, it is already answered by the statement that these statutes are not upon the subject under investigation. But if they were, the Codes are not exclusive where the statute is silent, but only where it speaks. A sufficient discussion of this question will be found in the decision of this court in Reeves & Co. v. Russell, 28 N. D. 265, 148 N. W. 654, where a similar contention, citing the same cases here relied upon, is treated at length.
Exception is taken by plaintiff to what counsel terms the overruling by dictum of Stanford v. McGill, as to the doctrine of anticipatory breach; and that this “should not be lightly done;” “that eliminating freight, there has been no enhancement or increase of damages.” In answer it may be said that “eliminating freight,” there would have been no necessity for counsel or the court to discuss anticipatory breach of contract; “eliminating freight,” there would have been no issue made of enhancement of damages; “eliminating freight,” there could have been no "dictum” concerning Stanford v. McGill. But there was no possibility of “eliminating freight” in considering the issues, as plaintiff has sued for its recovery, and assigned error on its