Kettle v. Harvey

21 Vt. 301 | Vt. | 1849

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Bennett, J.

This case comes before us upon exceptions to the decision of the county court, in holding that the trustees were not chargeable upon the facts contained in the disclosure. The leading facts are, that the principal debtor and the trustee Hurd, on the sixteenth day of June, 1846, entered into a contract under seal, by the terms of which the principal debtor took upon himself to repair a certain meeting house, belonging to the Congregational Society in Sandgate, in whose > behalf Hurd was acting, according to' certain stipulations contained in the contract, and to be completed on or before the first day of October, then following; for which Hurd covenanted, on his part, to pay him two hundred and seventy five dollars, — one hundred and twenty five dollars of which was to be paid in money, when the job was completed, and fifty dollars in lumber, to be delivered at White Creek, in the state of New York, *304on or before the fifteenth day of July, 1846, and the remaining one hundred dollars by the first day of March, 1847, fifty of which was to be paid in store pay, at some one of the stores in White Creek, and the remainder in lumber, to be delivered to the principal debtor in White Creek. This process was served on the eighth day of September, 1846, and before the work was completed by the principal debtor; and upon which he voluntarily abandoned the work, without the fault or concurrence of Hurd, leaving Hurd to get the work completed in the best way he could ; by means of which the society sustained more or less damage.

Nj> question is raised, and none can be, but what, by his covenants, Hurd had made himself personally liable to the principal debtor, for the payment of the contract price, provided Harvey had performed on his part. By the disclosure it appears, that the fifty dollars, payable in lumber by the fifteenth day of July, 1846, had been paid before this suit was brought, and that certain farther payments had been made by Hurd to Harvey, on the contract, and that he had assumed to pay to certain creditors of Harvey farther sums of money on the contract. If Harvey, upon abandoning the work, were entitled to recover of Hurd a pro rata compensation, it is quite probable, that there might be a balance in his hands, after deducting such damages, as had arisen from the non-performance of the contract by Harvey. But we think he could not maintain an action to recover a pro rata compensation. The work was abandoned by Harvey voluntarily, and without the fault of Hurd, and the contract was an entire one. In such case it is well settled, that there can be no pro rata recovery.

It is true, that the covenant on the part of Hurd, to pay to the principal debtor the first fifty dollars in lumber, must be regarded as independent. But the instalment of one hundred and twenty five dollars, by the terms of the contract, was to be paid upon the completion of the work; and the remaining one hundred dollars were not to be paid until several months after the work was, by the contract, to have been completed. It does not follow, that, because Hurd covenanted to pay a part of the two hundred and seventy five dollars, before the entire contract was performed, the covenants are therefore independent throughout. It is the common language of courts, that the dependence, or independence, of covenants depends *305upon the good sense and meaning of the contract. It was a remark of Lord Mansfield, that “ their precedency must depend on the order of time, in which the intent of the transaction required their performance.” This contract, by its own terms, provides, that one hundred and twenty five dollars shall be paid on the completion of the service; and this necessarily renders the service, so far, at least, a condition precedent; and we think, that the meaning and good sense of the contract make the performance of the service a. condition precedent to the payments, which were to be made subsequently to the performance of the work. The intention of the parties is to be discovered from the order, in time, in which the acts are to be done, rather than from the arrangement of the covenants, or the structure of the instrument. See 2 Smith’s Lead. Cas. 12; Thorpe v. Thorpe, 1 Salk. 171; Cunningham v. Morrell, 10 Johns. 204; Johnson v. Reed, 9 Mass. 78.

To charge a trustee, the principal debtor must have a cause of action against him. Maine F. & M. Ins. Co. v. Weeks & Tr., 7 Mass. 438. The attaching creditor takes the place of the principal debtor; and if there is no cause of action, there is no right to be attached. In the case of Robinson v. Hall, 3 Met. 301, the contract was entire, and the service was to be paid for, when the work was finished; and it was held, that the principal could not be adjudged the trustee of the laborer, until the whole work was completed. We think, then, there was no right belonging to the principal debtor in this case, that could be attached. Besides, as the last instalment was to be paid in store pay at some one of the stores at White Creek, New York, and in lumber delivered at the same place, it might be well questioned, whether so much of the claim was such a demand, as could be the subject of the trustee process, even if Harvey had performed his entire contract.

It is not necessary to inquire, whether the principal debtor’s claim against the trustee was so far contingent, at the service of the trustee process, as to preclude a right to attach it.

The result is, the judgment of the county court is affirmed.