61 Minn. 482 | Minn. | 1895
This is an action brought by the plaintiff, as surviving partner of the firm of Wolf & King, to recover a balance claimed to be due for the construction of a portion of the defendant’s line of railway. The complaint alleges two supposed causes of action, to each of which the defendant demurred on the ground that neither states facts constituting a cause of action. From an order overruling the demurrer the defendant appealed.
1. The complaint for a first cause of action alleges, among other things, substantially, that in January, 1893, the firm of Wolf & King entered into three written contracts with the president and representative of the defendant for the grading, clearing, grubbing, and construction of the roadbed of its railway for a certain stipulated price for each of the general items of work and labor to be performed; that the firm entered upon the performance of such contracts, but in the latter part of February, 1893, in bhe course of such performance, unforeseen difficulties of construction involving unexpected expenses, and such as were not anticipated by the parties to the contracts, were encountered. That the firm of Wolf & King found that by reason of such difficulties it would be impossible to complete the contracts within the time agreed upon without employing an additional and an unusual force of men and means, and at a loss of not less than $40,000 to them, and consequently they notified the representative of the defendant that they would be unable to go forward with the contracts, and unable to complete or prosecute the work. Thereupon such representative entered into an agreement with them modifying the written contracts, whereby he agreed that if they would “go forward and prosecute the said, work of construction, and complete said contract,” he would pay or cause to be paid to them an additional consideration therefor, up to the full extent of the cost of the work, so that they should not be compelled to do the work at a loss to themselves; that in consideration of such promise they agreed to forward the work rapidly, and force the same to completion, in the manner provided in the specifications for such work, and referred to in such contracts. That in reliance upon the agreement modifying the former
It is claimed by appellant that the complaint shows no consideration for the alleged promise to pay extra compensation for the work; that it is at best simply a promise to pay the contractors an additional compensation if they would do that which they were already legally bound to do. The general rule is that a promise of a party to a contract to do, or the doing of, that which he is already under a legal obligation to do by the terms of the contract is not a válid consideration to support the promise of the other party to pay an additional compensation for such performance. 1 Chitty, Cont. 60; Pollock, Cont. 176 (161); Leake, Cont. 621. In other words, a promise by one party to a subsisting contract to the opposite party to prevent a breach of the contract on his part is without consideration. The following cases sustain and illustrate the practical application of the rale. Ayers v. Chicago, R. I. & P. R. Co., 52 Iowa, 478, 3 N. W. 522; McCarty v. Hampton B. Ass’n, 61 Iowa, 287, 16 N. W. 114; Lingenfelder v. Wainwright B. Co., 103 Mo. 578, 15 S. W. 844; Vanderbilt v. Schreyer, 91 N. Y. 392; Reynolds v. Nugent, 25 Ind. 328; Robinson v. Jewett, 116 N. Y. 40, 22 N. E. 224; Wimer v. Worth Tp., 104 Pa. St. 317.
If the allegations of the complaint, when taken together, are ivt¡ legal effect simply that the contractors, finding by the test of experi-. ence in the prosecution of the work that they had agreed to do that
It is claimed, however, by the respondent, that such is not the proper construction of the complaint, and that its allegations bring
The doctrine of these cases as it is frequently applied does not commend itself either to our judgment or our sense of justice, for where the refusal to perform and the promise to pay extra compensation for performance of the contract are one transaction, and there are no exceptional circumstances making it equitable that an increased compensation should be demanded and paid, no amount of astute reasoning can change the plain fact that the party who refuses to perform, and thereby coerces a promise from the other party to the contract to pay him an increased compensation for doing that which he is legally bound to do, takes an unjustifiable advantage of the necessities of the other party. To hold, under such circumstances, that the party making the promise for extra compensation is presumed to have voluntarily elected to relinquish and abandon all of his rights under the original contract, and to substitute therefor the new or modified agreement, is to wholly disregard the natural inference to be drawn from the transaction, and invite parties to repudiate their contract obligations whenever they can gain thereby.
There can be no legal presumption that such a transaction is a voluntary rescission or modification of the original contract, for the natural inference to be drawn from it is otherwise in the absence of any equitable considerations justifying the-demand for extra pay.
But where the party refusing to complete his contract does so by~reason of some unforeseen and substantial difficulties in the performance of the contract, which were not known or anticipated by the parties when the contract was entered into, and which cast upon him an additional burden not contemplated by the parties, and the opposite party promises him extra pay or benefits if he will complete his contract, and he so promises, the promise to pay is supported by a valid consideration. In such a case the-natural inference arising from the transaction, if unmodified by any equitable considerations, is rebutted, and the presumption arises that by the voluntary and mutual promises of the parties their respective rights and obligations under the original contract are waived, and those of the new or modified contract substituted for them. Cases of this character form an exception to the general rule that a promise to do that which a party is already legally bound to do is not a sufficient consideration to support a promise-
On the other hand, where no unforeseen additional burdens have been cast upon a party refusing to perform his contract, which make his refusal to perform, unless promised further pay, equitable, and such refusal and promise of extra pay are all one transaction, the promise of further compensation is without consideration, and the case falls within the general rule, and the promise cannot be legally enforced, although the. other party has completed his contract in reliance upon it. This proposition, in. our opinion, is correct on principle and supported by the weight of authority.
What unforeseen difficulties and burdens will make a party’s refusal to go forward with, his contract equitable, so as to take the case out of the general rule and bring it within the exception, must depend upon the facts of each particular case. They must be substantial, unforeseen, and not within the contemplation of the parties whenjhe contract was jma.de. They need not be such as wouKTTegally justify the party in his refusal to perform his contract, unless promised extra pay, or to justify a court of equity in relieving him from the contract; for they are sufficient if they are of such a character as to render the party’s demand for extra pay manifestly fair, so as to rebut all inference that he is seeking to be relieved from an unsatisfactory contract, or to take advantage of the necessities of the opposite party to coerce from him a promise for further compensation. Inadequacy of the contract price which ' is the result of an error of judgment, and not of some excusable/ mistake of fact, is not sufficient^- /
The cases of Meech v. City of Buffalo, 29 N. Y. 198, where the unforeseen difficulty in the execution of the contract was quicksand, in place of expected ordinary earth excavation, and Michaud v. MacGregor, supra, p. 198, 63 N. W. 479, where the unforeseen obstacles were rocks below the surface of the lots to be excavated, which did not naturally belong there, but were placed there by a third party,, and of the existence of which both parties to the contract were ignorant when the contract was made, are illustrations of what unforeseen difficulties will take a case out of the general rule.
Do the allegations of fact contained in plaintiff’s ..first alleged cause of action bring his case within the exception? Ci'early' not;
2. The second cause of action is supported by a different and a valid consideration. It fairly appears from the allegations of the complaint as to this cause of action that the defendant, by changing its line and by its defaults, had so far delayed the work of construction as to legally excuse the contractors from their obligation to complete the work within the time originally agreed upon, and that to execute the work within such time would involve an additional expense. Thereupon, in consideration of their waiving the defaults and the delays occasioned by the defendant, and promising to complete the work in time, so that it could secure the bonds,
So much of the order appealed from as overruled the defendant’s demurrer to the supposed first cause of action in the plain
So ordered.
Buck, J., took no part
See Grant v. Duluth, M. & N. Ry. Co., supra, pp. 396, 397.