57 N.J.L. 427 | N.J. | 1894
The contract between the plaintiff and defendant is contained in the printed rules of the latter. Under the special agreement thus arising the plaintiff had paid to the defendant the sum of money for which judgment was given in his favor in the court below. The defendant was an association, its general scheme being that each subscriber who had made thirty-six successive monthly payments of $10 each should be entitled to a lot of land-to be selected in accordance with the rules of the association. The plaintiff’s case, stated generally, is that he had paid to the association the sum of $720, for which he was entitled to two lots, for which he had received no deeds, although he had repeatedly demanded them from the officers of the association. The payment of the money not being denied and the failure to deliver the deeds ■being admitted, the association rested its defence upon proof of the non-payment of certain penalties by the plaintiff and tendered to him in open court the deeds in question, claiming that mere delay in their delivery did not justify the rescission by the plaintiff of the special contract under which he had paid his money into the association. The court before whom the case was tried (a jury having been waived) refused to give judgment for the defendant, who thereupon took this writ, assigning error amongst other grounds upon this refusal of its motion.
An executory contract that contains no stipulation for its rescission and that has not been induced by fraud, may, in general, be rescinded by one party only when the other expressly refuses-to perform, or has rendered himself incapable •of performing it, or has otherwise evinced his abandonment of it. Mere delay in the execution of a contract whose terms would be satisfied by performance within a reasonable time does not of itself entitle the other party to rescind. To have this effect, the implication arising from the non-performance of the contract must be inconsistent with its being still in force. The damages resulting from an unreasonable delay may be recovered in an action on the contract; but money
Judgment should have been given for the defendant.
The judgment of the Supreme Court is reversed.
For affirmance — None.
For reversal — The Chancellor, Chief Justice, Dixon, Garrison, Lippincott, Reed, Van Sycicel, Bogert, Brown, Krueger, Smith. 11.