39 Ky. 32 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1839
delivered the opinion of the Court.
This action was brought by Mason, against Hawley, upon a covenant executed by each, whereby Mason agreed to deliver to Hawley, between the 15th and 20th of October, 1837, fifty well fatted hogs, to weigh two hundred and upwards each, to consist entirely of barrows and spayed sows, and to be delivered in good merchantable order; for which, Hawley agreed to pay, on delivery, four dollars and sixty two and one half cents per hundred pounds gross.
The plaintiff, in his declaration, avers that, on the 16th of October, 1837, he did tender and offer to deliver to the defendant, on his own farm, fifty fatted hogs, that weighed two hundred and upwards, all of which were barrows and spayed sows, well fatted and in good merchantable order at the time. But that the defendant failed and refused to receive said hogs, and to pay therefor four dollars and sixty two and one half cents per hundred pounds gross, for what they would weigh.
The defendant in his plea, traverses every circumstance of the alleged tender, and upon this traverse, issue was joined.
The witnesses say ‘he appeared to be pleased with the hogs,’ said ‘they were fine, good-looking hogs,’ and seemed willing to take them if he could get them without the money; which being refused, he offered eighty dollars by way of compromise; which being also refused, he then required that the steelyards should be applied to the hogs, and commenced making preparations for weighing them. But Pollett, saying he would not weigh them unless the defendant paid him the money, drove them on six or seven miles further, and tendered them in fulfilment of another contract. The opinions of the witnesses as to the weight of the hogs offered to Hawley, are somewhat variant; but the actual weight of some of them, on the morning before, and the morning after the tender, with some other facts distinctly proved, tend strongly to the conclusion that there were not fifty, and not much more than half that number, of the hogs tendered, that weighed as much as two hundred pounds each. Evidence was, however, admitted, against the objection of the defendant conducing to prove that Pollett had other hogs in the neighborhood, which were subject to his order, and which would have come up to the requisite weight.
On this evidence, the Court instructed the jury, in effect, that if the defendant expressed himself satisfied with the hogs tendered, and made no objection to them as not coming fully up to the requisitions of the contract, he was estopped to deny that the hogs were not such as the plaintiff was bound by the contract to deliver; and the propriety of this instruction, to which the defendant excepted, presents the principal question now to be considered.
It has often been determined that, in cases of mutual concurrent covenants, where the acts to be done are sim
The avowed inability of the defendant to pay the money when the plaintiff offered performance, should be deemed sufficient to dispense with all subsequent formalities on the part of the plaintiff; but it had no retroactive efficacy, and certainly did not cure substantial defects in what plaintiff had already done, nor dispense with the necessity showing that he was, not only willing, but ni fact able and ready, to perform, at the time and place at which he charges the breach to have been committed by the defendant.
In this case, the plaintiff, both by his conduct out of doors, and by his pleading in Court, has staked his right recovering on this covenant, upon the sufficiency of the acts done by him on the 16th of October, to entitle him to an action for the failure of the defendant. He was bound, under the issue, to prove that he was them and there prepared, as well as that he then and there verbally offered, to do all that by his contract he would have been bound to do, if the defendant had been then and there ready to comply on his part. This, without the technicality of a tender of the precise number of individual hogs, is the substance of that offer of performance which he has averred, and which he was bound to prove, in order to entitle himself to damages for the inability of
Whether we look to the pleadings and issue, or to the facts, either as proved, or as supposed in the instruction, the idea of a technical estoppel is entirely inapplicable and inadmissible. By the pleadings, the naked question of a sufficient tender, or of an offer of performance on the part of the plaintiff, is put in issue, and no estoppel is relied on. According to the general doctrine of estoppel, this state of the pleading left the fact, at large, to be made out by such proof as the parties could command—and to be determined by the jury, upon the evidence before them. There are, indeed, cases in which, in consequence of the relation between the parties, or of some solemn act, one of them is concluded as to certain facts, though the estoppel be not pleaded. And there are cases in which, if a party is silent, or asserts a falsehood, when he should speak, he will be precluded afterwards from taking advantage of such acts or omissions as may have been induced by his silence or false affirmation. It has also been considered that, the actual acceptance of goods under a contract for the delivery of goods of the same species, unless induced by fraud or other peculiar circumstances, should preclude the party accepting
The plaintiff having chosen his time for tendering performance on his part, and requiring it of the defendant, and having been permitted to make such preparations, and such demonstrations of readiness as he thought proper, had no right to require any aid from the defendant, in proving that his demonstrations of readiness were sufficient.
And the defendant having at once avowed his inability to receive and pay for the hogs according to the contract, was under no further obligation either to speak or to remain silent. He certainly had a right to suppose, and probably did suppose, that the hogs which had been driven three or four miles for the purpose of being tendered to him, under the contract, and of testing his ability to perform his part, were such as the contract required. Having no exact knowledge on the subject, he had no right to say that they did not weigh enough; and having no money to pay for them, he had no right to require the application of the steelyards to them. The utmost effect that can be reasonably allowed to his failure to make specific objections, and to the expressions of satisfaction referred to in the instructions, but which can scarcely be so denominated, is to say that they conduced to prove that he supposed the hogs to be such, in point of weight and other qualities, as he was bound to take, under the contract. And the utmost effect that can be reasonably given to the mere inference of such a supposition, founded on appearances and on the representations of the plaintiff who undertook to know the facts, rather than on any means which he himself had of knowing them, is to say that, in the absence of all other testimony, it might, perhaps, be sufficient to prove that the facts were as he supposed them to be. Even this might be going too far; and we certainly do not mean now to decide that it is not. But we are satisfied that there is no circumstance detailed in the evidence, which could have given to any expression or act or omission of the defendant as now proved, the effect of estopping him from denying that the hogs, or any fifty of them, weighed two hundred pounds
But desisting from the further pursuit of this question, we are of opinion that, the instruction, whether considered with a view to the issue made up by the pleadings, or to the evidence which was before the jury, was erroneous and misleading.
We are also of opinion that the Court erred in the admission of the testimony objected to by the defendant, and which went to show that there were, at the time of the alleged tender, other hogs in the neighborhood, which the plaintiff might have tendered, but did not, and which the witness said would have weighed two hundred pounds and upwards. The issue related solely to the tender averred in the declaration, and did not bring in question the ability of the plaintiff to have made, either then or afterwards, a tender of other and more suitable hogs. And if, as is supposed in the reason given for admitting this testimony, there was any presumption arising in the case, that the defendant had rejected the hogs because they were deficient in weight, for which, however, we see no ground, still, as this presumption itself related to a matter not within the issue, it furnished no ground for the introduction of rebutting evidence which was itself irrelevant. Besides, we do not perceive how a fact of which it is not shown that the defendant had any knowledge, could have operated upon his conduct or motives;
Whether the jury were authorized, even under the instruction given, to find the verdict as rendered, we deem it unnecessary to decide as a distinct question; inasmuch as the errors above noticed, which were committed in the progress of the trial, and were certainly calculated to affect its result injuriously to the defendant, required that a new trial, which was moved for on these grounds as well as others, should have been granted.
The judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded for a new trial, to be had on principles not inconsistent with this opinion, and without payment of cost.