Lead Opinion
On the 30th of August, 1898, the defendants, by an executory contract in writing, agreed to sell and deliver to the plaintiff fifty thousand pairs of bicycle pedals, the goods *213 to be delivered and paid for in installments, as specified in the contract. It has been found by the trial court that the defendants delivered two thousand six' hundred and eight pairs of pedals under the contract, and refused to make further deliveries. When the fact is established that the seller of goods to be delivered and paid for in installments, as in this case, refuses to deliver the goods, that amounts to a repudiation of the contract and a breach of it, for which the buyer may recover damages. So we start in this case with a breach of a contract on the part of the defendants by their refusal to be bound by its obligations.
It is found that on the loth of March, 1899, the plaintiff commenced an action against the defendants in the City Court of Hew York for breach of this contract, in that they failed to deliver to the plaintiff the pedals which, by the terms of the agreement, the defendants were bound to deliver up to the first of March, 1899, to wit, nineteen thousand pair, of which the defendants had delivered only, the two thousand six hundred and eight pairs, and had failed to deliver sixteen thousand eight hundred and ninety-two pairs, which were to be delivered up to the first of March, 1899. This action was put at issue, and after a trial the plaintiff recovered judgment against the defendants for the full amount claimed in the complaint in the action as damages for the breach of the contract, which judgment has been paid by the defendants in full.
Subsequently and in February, 1900, the plaintiff commenced the present action to recover damages for a failure to deliver the balance of the goods, and both parties have pleaded the former suit and judgment. The plaintiff claims that it is conclusive evidence in his favor with respect to the existence, validity, terms and breach of the contract, while the defendants interpose it as a bar to the present action. This situation presents the question of law involved in the case. Judgment was given at the trial court in favor of the defendants and this judgment was affirmed on appeal. The question of law arising upon these facts is whether the former judgment concludes the plaintiff and is a bar to a
*214
second action to recover damages on the same contract. There can be no doubt that the contract was entire. It could not be performed on the part of the defendants without delivery of the property stipulated in the contract and the whole of it. As was said by Judge Bradley in
Brock
v.
Knower
(
We do not think that' the contention can be maintained. There is not, as it seems to us, any judicial authority in this state that gives it any substantial support. On the contrary, we think that the cases, so far as we have been able to examine them, are all the other way, and are to the effect that inasmuch as there was a total breach of the contract by the defendants’ refusal to deliver, the plaintiff cannot split up his demand and maintain successive actions, but must either recover all his damages in the first suit or wait until the contract matured or the time for the delivery of all the goods had arrived. In other words, there can be but one action for damages for a total breach of an entire contract to deliver goods, and the fact that they were to be delivered in installments from time to time does not change the general rule.
This question arose in this state at an early day. In
Miller
v.
Covert
(
It was held in the case of
Bendernagle
v.
Cocks
(
Colburn
v.
Woodworth
(
The English cases point to but two alternative remedies open to the buyer upon a breach of contract for the sale of goods to be delivered in installments. One is to sue upon repudiation for a total breach before the time for performance has arrived and the other is to await the time for full performance and then sue for the damages. Ho suggestion is to be found in any of the cases that I have observed, to the effect that the buyer had an option to bring successive actions as the time for the delivery of each installment matures. It is said in many of the cases that the injured party had an option, hut that ojition was not to- bring several successive actions, but to elect whether, upon a breach, he shall proceed to recover all his damages or to await the time for full performance. The cases in the English courts on this question are very numerous, but they were all reviewed and the rule approved and followed in the case of
Roehm
v.
Horst
(
We are unable to see how the contention of the learned counsel for the plaintiff can be reconciled with the case of
Samuel
v.
Fidelity & Casualty Co.
(
It is elementary law that a former judgment is a finality as to the claim or demand in controversy, concluding parties and those in privity with them, not only as to every matter which was offered and received to sustain or defeat the claim or demand, but as to any other admissible matter which might have been offered for that purpose.
(Cromwell
v.
County of Sac,
It was admitted upon the argument of this case, and is admitted upon the brief of plaintiff’s counsel, that the plaintiff could have recovered all his damages for a breach of the whole contract in the first action. The only contention is that he was not obliged to do so but could maintain as many other actions .as there were deliveries provided for in the contract in case of default. It does not seem to us that this proposition can be supported in reason or upon authority. The plaintiff claims in this action that the former judgment was conclusive as to him, that is, that it cuts off the defend
*218
ants from any defense which they might originally have made, and thus it is sought to make this case an exception to the general rule that estoppels must he mutual; that is, that in general if the j udgment is binding on one party it is equally binding in its effect upon the other. I think it would not be wise to engraft such a distinction upon the law of this state as was said in the case of
Sykes
v.
Gerber
(98 Pa. St. 179): “ The law does not tolerate a second j udgment for the same thing between the same parties, whether the claim is upon a contract or tort. * * * The general rule is that it is against the policy of the law to permit a plaintiff to prosecute in a second action for what was included in and might have been recovered in the first, because it would harass the defendant and expose him to double costs.”
(Guernsey
v. Carver,
We think the judgment below was right and should be affirmed, with costs.
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting). I dissent from the decision about to be made. I concede to the fullest extent' the principle that the plaintiff cannot split up a single cause of action, and that if he does a recovery on any part of the cause of. action bars a suit for the remainder. ‘ I also concede the principle that in an executory contract for the sale of a number of articles or of a quantity of material, to be delivered in installments and payment made therefor as delivered, in the case of a breach by either party as to one of the installments the other party may elect to treat the default as a complete breach of the contract, and maintain a suit for all his damages. I further concede that where there have been several breaches of a single, contract the plaintiff must include in his action all breaches which have occurred prior to the commencement of the action. But I insist that none of these principles controls the question before us, which is not whether the plaintiff upon the default in the delivery of the first installment of pedals could rescind the contract as' having been abrogated by the act of the defendant, reserving his right to recover damages, but whether he was obligedto adopt
*219
that course. Had he
not
as the aggrieved party the option
to
treat the contract as still continuing in force and, therefore, assert his right to recover damages for each default as it might occur ? There can be no question that there may be a continuous agreement or covenant for every breach of which a new cause of action arises. Such is a covenant to maintain and repair a gate across a right of way.
(Beach
v.
Crain,
So in
Parker
v.
Russell
(
The judgment appealed from should be reversed and a new trial granted, costs to abide the event.
Gray, Edward T. Bartlett, Werner, Hiscook and Chase, J.J., concur with O’Brien, J.,° Cullen, Ch. J., reads dissenting opinion.
Judgment affirmed.
