217 N.W. 107 | Minn. | 1927
The plaintiff threshed grain for the defendant in the fall of 1926. Frank Parr represented the defendant in the making of the contract. The defendant claims that the contract was an entire one within such cases as Bentley v. Edwards,
The weather was wet and threshing could be done only intermittently. The plaintiff before he made the agreement with Frank had agreed with one Hegman to thresh his flax. Frank knew this. After the plaintiff commenced threshing for the defendant there came a good day for threshing flax, the only one for a long time, and plaintiff moved his rig and crew and threshed the Hegman flax. The job was small. He promised to return and finish the defendant's grain. The same or next day, however, the defendant got another machine. The plaintiff had not agreed that when he commenced with the defendant's grain he would continue until it was threshed. He was to do it as soon as it was possible. It was understood that he had the Hegman flax to thresh. The plaintiff's moving off the defendant's job and threshing the Hegman flax when a fit time for threshing flax came was not a breach of an entire contract. He was entitled to recover for what he did.
Order affirmed. *255