27 S.W.2d 1017 | Ark. | 1930
This suit was begun by appellant against appellee to collect $900 balance due on a contract alleged to have been made for tuition and board of appellee's minor daughter for the school year 1927-1928. The appellee lives at Malvern, Arkansas, and his sixteen-year-old daughter was attending school in Little Rock, and, while attending school in Little Rock, she wrote to a number of schools for catalogues. After receiving a number of of catalogues, she decided she wanted to attend the Holton-Arms School, and she so informed her parents, and they agreed that she might attend this school. She took the catalogue home, but her father never examined it, and neither the girl nor her parents had ever noticed what is called "the agreement" in the catalogue. The catalogue contained the following: "The school reserves the privilege of asking pupils to withdraw for infraction of the honor rules of student government. Pupils are entered for the entire year, and no reduction is made for either absence or withdrawal. Tuition is payable half yearly in advance on the opening day of school and on the first day of February." In addition to this, the daughter signed an application which contained a number of blanks to be filled, and, among other things in the application, it was *807 stated that the price varied from $1,400 to $1,800, according to the size and location of the room, and the daughter selected a room, the price of which was $1,800. This catalogue received by the daughter was for 1926-1927, and she attended the Holton-Arms School that year, and, before leaving in June, 1927, she notified the plaintiff verbally that she was coming back for the school year 1927-1928. No contract was signed, and no additional catalogue furnished at that time. She went back to school in the fall of 1927, and remained at the school until December 14, 1927, when she went home. On December 31, 1927, Mrs. Holton received the following telegram from Mrs. Cook: "Regret that Verna is not returning to school. Letter following." She also received the following letter, written January 4: "I regret very much to say that Verna will be unable to return to school. I have been considering the matter; therefore I delayed writing you."
The evidence tends to show that she did not go back to school because she became wholly incapacitated from pursuing her studies at the school by reason of defective eyesight, and for that reason alone did not return to school at the close of the Christmas vacation of 1927. It is unnecessary to set out the evidence in full. The court found in favor of the defendant.
The only question for our consideration is, whether the fact that the appellee's daughter becoming incapacitated relieved him from liability for tuition and board for the balance of the year.
It is earnestly contended by the appellant that the facts show that the parties entered into an entire and indivisible contract, and that the appellee is liable for the board and tuition for the entire year whether the absence or withdrawal of appellee's daughter was voluntary, or whether it was caused by illness or incapacity to pursue her studies. There is some conflict in the authorities, and appellant calls attention to a number of authorities relied on to sustain her contention. *808
The first authority to which attention is called by appellant, and which is relied on, is a statement of the law in 24 R.C.L. p. 630. It is stated in that paragraph: "A parent is bound by a provision in a school catalogue that pupils may be entered only for the entire year, and that no money will be refunded if the pupil is withdrawn or expelled, if such provision was known to him when he entered his child. In such case the contract is entire. The fact that a pupil is incapacitated by illness does not relieve the parent from liability for tuition during that time." It will be observed, however, that this statement of the law is based on the fact that the provision was known to the parent when he entered his child. The section quoted from and relied upon by appellant contains the following, after the statement quoted by appellant: "It has been held that there can be no recovery of tuition if the pupil is prevented by illness from attending school at all. This is on the ground that the parties must have acted on the assumption of the continued ability of the promise to give, and the promisor to receive the proposed instruction." There is cited under this section, Stewart v. Loring, 5 Allen (Mass.) 306, 81 Am. Dec. 747. The court in that case said: "But if we may suppose the real purpose of the writing to have been to insure the plaintiff in advance that his school should be patronized, and that the defendant would be a pupil, then the answer, as it seems to us, might be reasonably made that the party, without any fault of his own, was from subsequent in health rendered physically incapable of attending the gymnasium as a pupil. The parties must have acted upon the assumption of the continued ability of the promisee to give, and the promisor to receive, the proposed instruction."
The next case to which attention is called by appellant, is Hall v. Mount Ida School for Girls,
The next case relied upon by appellant, is Pierce v. Peacock Military College (Tex.)
The next authority referred to, is Sedgwick on Damages, which cites the International Text Book Co. v. Martin,
The next case to which attention is called by appellant, is Vidor v. Peacock (Tex.)
The case of William v. Stein,
The next case relied upon by appellant is Kentucky Military Institute v. Cohen,
There are one or two other cases referred to by appellant, but the cases involving simply a breach of contract, or voluntary withdrawal or expulsion, have no application here. The question here is, whether the incapacity of the pupil to receive instruction discharges the parent from liability.
"In all contracts in which the performance depended on the continued existence of a given person or thing, a condition is implied that the impossibility arising from the perishing of the person or thing shall excuse the performance. In none of the cases are the terms in words other than positive, nor is there any express stipulation that the destruction of the person, or thing, shall excuse the performance, but that excuse is by law implied, because from the nature of the contract it is apparent that the parties contracted on the basis of the continued existence of the particular person or chattel." 6 R.C.L. 1005.
Contracts to perform personal acts are considered as made on the implied condition that the party shall be alive, and shall be capable of performing the contract, so that death or disability will operate as a discharge when a contract is made like the one involved here. The parties must have acted on the assumption of continued ability for the school to give, and the pupil to receive instruction. This is implied in contracts of this character, unless this implied condition is plainly negatived by the contract itself. See Arlington Hotel Co. v. Rector,
We do not mean to say that parties could not contract so that there would be no condition implied, but in this case they have not done so. If for any reason, not the fault of appellant, the school had been destroyed, or it became impossible to give the instruction, this would excuse the appellant from complying with the contract. If a pupil without fault becomes incapacitated from receiving instruction, the parent is excused from performing the contract. The evidence in this case shows, and the trial court found, that the physical disability of defendant's daughter to further pursue her studies or to attend appellant's school rendered the performance of the contract impossible, and absolved appellee from all liability thereunder.
In the instant case, appellee's attention was never called to the provision in the contract, but Mrs. Cook testifies that when she wrote to appellant, and when she took her daughter to Washington, the appellant did not mention anything about the tuition to her, did not mention anything about the time she should leave her daughter, or about any contract. When she got ready to leave, she mentioned tuition to appellant, and appellant said there was no hurry about it, and she would send bill later. In the cases relied upon by appellant, the written contract itself in most of them called attention especially to provision in the catalogue, and made it part of the contract, and in other cases relied on there was no question of the incapacity of either party, and where it is shown that a pupil has withdrawn because of incapacity to pursue her studies, and there is nothing in the contract to the *813 contrary, it will be implied that the total incapacity of either party excuses the performance. Finding no error, the judgment of the Pulaski Circuit Court is affirmed.
Justices SMITH, HUMPHREY and BUTLER dissent.