106 Minn. 202 | Minn. | 1908
Plaintiffs and respondents, owners of a threshing outfit, entered in-to a verbal agreement with defendant and appellant to thresh defend
For present purposes, and for them only, it must and will be assumed,’ upon a construction most favorable to the defeated party, that plaintiffs agreed to thresh all of defendant’s crop. The essential question is whether the contract was entire and indivisible, in the sense that plaintiffs could not recover upon a quantum meruit or upon the contract to the extent to which it had been performed. On principle we are of opinion that plaintiffs could not recover. When they found that they were operating at a loss, they had the option to complete the contract, recover the contract price, and submit to the loss, or to abandon the contract, lose the work they had done, and be subject to whatever damages might be recoverable for the breach of the contract. The fact that plaintiffs had rendered services, the value of which defendant retained, did not entitle plaintiffs to recover on quantum meruit because of the contract and of the inability of defendants to return the services. “As said in Galvin v. Prentice, 45 N. Y. 162: ‘When the contract is entire, and onfe party is willing to complete the performance, and is not in default, no promise can be implied on his part to compensate the other party for a part perform
It would be obviously inconsistent with common justice that plaintiffs should recover pro tanto on the contract which they had substantially violated. They were in the wrong. They were not in a position to say to defendant: “We will perform the contract we have agreed to if it prove profitable. If we find it unprofitable, we will abandon it.” That would be to contradict the contract. Such reasoning is forbidden by its terms. Defendant did not agree in advance to a breach of the contract and 'to accept in lieu of performance the requirement that he pay plaintiffs for what they had done under the contract and for the balance to accept the right to try damages before a jury. Such speculation on the part of the plaintiffs it would be unreasonable to permit.
It is well settled in this state that the failure to perform an entire contract ordinarily defeats the right to recover on the contract. At-water, J., said in Mason v. Heyward, 3 Minn. 116, 122 (182, 190): “Where a party wilfully, or without cause, refuses to complete a contract which he has made, and upon the execution of which he has entéred, courts should never interfere to protect him from the consequences of his own wrong.” It is true that where, as in building contracts, there is a substantial performance, the court will not permit the owner of the land to retain the fruits of the labor and refuse to pay for it. Leeds v. Little, 42 Minn. 414, 44 N. W. 309. It is equally clear, however, that where there has been an intentional failure to complete the contract, or a departure so substantial as to be incapable of a remedy, there can be no partial recovery. Elliott v. Caldwell, 43 Minn. 357, 45 N. W. 845, 9 L. R. A. 52; Hoglund v. Sortedahl, 101 Minn. 359, 112 N. W. 408.
This view accords with prevailing authority. “A partial performance may be a defense pro tanto, or it may sustain an action, pro tan-to; but this can be only in cases where the duty to be done consists of parts which are distinct and severable in their own nature, and are not bound together by expressions giving entirety to the contract. It is not enough that the duty to be done is in itself severable, if the
Reversed and a new trial granted.