5 Denio 406 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1848
The plaintiff agreed to furnish and deliver to the defendant certain descriptions of lumber, at specified prices, to be delivered on or before a certain day, and payment was to be made when it was all delivered and accepted. He had delivered a considerable portion of the lumber before the day fixed for the delivery by the contract ; but as he had not delivered it all by that day, it is clear that he could not under the contract recover even for what he had delivered, as the contract is an entire thing, and the delivery of the whole of the lumber by the day was a condition precedent to the right to the payment for any part.
The plaintiff claims that he was relieved from the consequences resulting from the want of a strict performance of this agreement by a subsequent parol agreement, by which the defendant stipulated that if he would furnish a certain bill of oak timber by the following spring, he would be satisfied in regard to the first agreement. Conceding that it was competent to modify the original sealed agreement by a new agreement by parol, and that such new agreement was fully proved, it only modified the first agreement by extending the time for the delivery of the lumber, and altering the bill of specific lumber to be delivered. The prices under the former agreement were to govern, and the provision in the old agreement that payment was to be made when all the lumber was delivered, was also
Motion granted.