97 Minn. 293 | Minn. | 1906
This action was tried on the theory that the plaintiff and respondent had fully and completely performed two certain contracts with the defendant and appellant for the driving and separating of certain logs in the Mississippi river and certain lakes through which that river
First. On cross-examination of the plaintiff by the defendant he had testified, in answer to many dexterously put questions, in effect that to “sort” logs meant to separate logs bearing marks of the owner in question from the general mass of logs belonging to other persons.- On redirect examination he was asked:
The object of sorting logs is that they may be placed ready for sawing without being mingled with the logs of anybody else —that is the object of sorting logs?
This was objected to as incompetent, irrelevant, and immaterial, and not redirect examination. The objection was overruled, and the witness answered:
*295 To get the man’s logs, his own logs together, to get each man’s logs by themselves.
That, if the plaintiff separated the logs of the defendant from the logs of all other persons' at the booms * * *, he has fulfilled his contract, otherwise not.
The defendant insists that there were only two theories upon which the plaintiff could have recovered, namely, (a) that the defendant, having purchased all the logs with which its logs were mixed and intermingled, such purchase worked an abandonment of the contract, and the plaintiff would be entitled to recover as upon a new contract the reasonable value of the services performed by him; or (b) that plaintiff could have sued upon his contract for the labor actually performed thereunder, and his measure of damages would have been the contract price less the cost of sorting the logs. Inasmuch as no evidence was introduced by plaintiff tending to support either basis of damage, which was the fact, it argues, plaintiff cannot recover.
The question then remains whether the plaintiff can recover for performance of the contract or is driven to an. action for damages as for its breach. The defendant, in support of his contention that there was no proof sufficient to recover damages for a breach of the contract, cites a number of cases, applying in greater or less detail the familiar rules for damages laid down in Hadley v. Baxendale, 9 Exch. 341. None of them bear any particular resemblance to this case, except Glaspie v. Glassow, 28 Minn. 158, 9 N. W. 669. There the plaintiff, who had contracted to drive certain logs described by marks to a given boom, brought an action to recover the contract price, alleging full performance. The defendant denied performance, and claimed that he had driven the larger part of the logs himself, and had paid the men for doing the work. This defense was sustained by the evidence. Gilfillan, C. J., held: “The case is therefore one where the plaintiff was prevented by the defendant without just cause from fully performing his contract.” He accordingly applied the proper rule of damages for breach of a contract.
In the case at bar, however, there was no breach of contract, except defendant’s refusal to pay. It is elementary that a contract may be broken in any one of three ways: A party to it -may (1) renounce his liability under it; (2) may by his own act make it impossible that he should fulfil its obligations; (3) may totally or partially fail to perform what he has promised. Anson, Cont. 280; Clark, Cont. 443.
2. The plaintiff obviously did nothing to make it impossible to fulfil all the obligations of his contract, nor did the defendant. It is true that, as a purely incidental result of the defendant’s purchase, he thereby rendered it unnecessary for the plaintiff to do certain manual labor; but that did not prevent the execution of all that was required by the contract. On the contrary, so far from hindering the work, defendant’s •conduct incidentally, but effectively, aided in its literal and substantial performance. In Glaspie v. Glassow, supra, on the contrary, the defendant, by driving the logs which the contract required plaintiff to ■drive, made performance by plaintiff of the contract impossible.
3. The plaintiff performed all that he was required to do under the terms of the contract. “Performance is, as the term implies, such a thorough fulfilment of a duty as puts an end to obligations by leaving nothing more to be done.” Hare, Cont. 569. The plaintiff did three things: (1) He floated the logs; (2) he drove them; (3) he delivered them so that they were not intermingled with the logs of any other person, and so that they were, within the technical meaning of the contract, “sorted.” He did all he contracted to do. The defendant re
The defendant in effect received the full beneficial performance of the contract. He was not entitled to personal performance by the plaintiff himself. See cases collected 11 Cent. Dig. col. 1514, § 1251It •was immaterial whether the plaintiff sublet the contract or did the work by other contractors wholly, or whether he did the work himself, or whether he received gratuitous assistance from natural agencies, from third persons, or from the defendant himself. The contract did not re•quire that the work should have been done at plaintiff’s expense, so long .as.no charge accrued against the logs of the defendant, nor that plaintiff should go through specified mechanical operations. The plaintiff did undertake to deliver logs, at the place named, separated from the logs belonging to other persons. Such logs the defendant received. The .performance was not substituted as in Draper v. Randolph, 4 Har. 454; Halpin v. Manny, 33 Mo. App. 388; Foster v. City of Joliet (C. C.) 27 Fed. 899; Viall v. Hubbard, 37 Vt. 114; but assisted. There was ■no default in quality, quantity, time, or place. The defendant could •not complain that plaintiff had failed to do certain work which would have been necessary had it not been for defendant’s own conduct.
The situation is much the same as if defendant, or some one else, had '•opened a dam, so that by an inundation of the banks the operation of ;putting the logs afloat would have been done accidently with decreased •expense to the plaintiff, or as if in driving the logs, while they were •.under the plaintiff’s control, such flood had created a current through •some of the lakes and had carried the logs by that current and had obviated the necessity on plaintiff’s part of employing a steamboat, as he
The case of Glaspie v. Glassow, supra, would have been in point if the defendant here had taken possession of the particular logs involved in this contract, and asserted dominion of ownership over them by putting men paid by himself to sort them. The time for the defendant to have secured a reduction in the contract price because of the saving of labor to the plaintiff with respect to sorting logs was before the other logs were purchased; the manner, by a new agreement, determining the decrease in the contract consideration. No such new agreement was in fact made. The consideration of the actual contract was entire. The plaintiff was not to be paid twenty five cents for driving or thirty three cents for assorting, but fifty eight cents in two instalments, namely, one when the logs were driven below a certain place, and the remainder when the logs were finally assorted and boomed.
This is one of the cases in which a party for whom another is doing work, as for example, upon the construction of buildings or bridges, is held responsible for the full contract price, although he, by his own conduct, directly affects and alters the labor and expenses involved in the performance of the contract by the contractor according to its terms. Manville v. McCoy, 3 Ind. 148; McKee v. Brandon, 2 Scam. 339; McLane v. De Leyer, 56 N. Y. 619; Robinson v. Baird, 165 Pa. St. 505, 30 Atl. 1010; Board v. O’Connor, 137 Ind. 622, 35 N. E. 1006, 37 N. E. 16. This case is, however, sui generis. No specific authority has been found which aids much in its determination. There is some analogy between the principles it involves and those applied in Walsh v. Hyatt, 74 App. Div. 20, 77 N. Y. Supp. 8; and in Tweedie v. McDonald (D. C.) 114 Fed. 985.
Order affirmed.