31 Del. 200 | Del. Super. Ct. | 1921
delivering the opinion of the court: The question before the court is, whether the said injunction issued in the state of Illinois relieves or excuses the defendant from the performance of its obligations under the contract.
In the leading case of Dermott v. Jones, 2 Wall. 1, 17 L. Ed. 762, the Supreme Court said:
“ It is a well settled rule of law, that if a party by his contract charge himself with an obligation possible to be performed, he must make it good, unless its performance is rendered impossible by the act of God, the law, or the other party.”
This statement of the law is not disputed, and it is conceded that- the non-performance of the contract by the defendant was not caused either by the act of God, or by the other party, the plaintiff.
The single issue raised by the demurrer then is, whether the injunction issued by the Illinois federal court was an act of the law that made impossible the performance of the contract by the defendant, and excused the breach complained of.
In Klauber v. Car. Co., 95 Cal. 353, 30 Pac. 555, cited by plaintiff, the court said:
“No case has been cited in which it has been held that interference by a writ sued out by a private litigant will excuse performance of a contract, although it may deprive the contractor of the means of performance. It is not prevented by operation of law. It is the act of an individual, and not of the government.”
This language was approved and adopted in Sample v. Fresno Flume & Irrigation Co., 129 Cal. 222, 61 Pac. 1085.
In the above cases the party securing the injunction or receivership was a private litigant.
The cases on the subject are not numerous, neither are they uniform in holding that an injunction secured by a private party will not excuse performance of a contract. But they do seem to be uniform in holding that where the contract is lawful and possible of fulfillment, such an injunction will not excuse a breach. And there is also uniformity in this; that where the injunction or other judicial interference is caused by the fault of the defendant it will not excuse the performance of his contract.
In the leading case cited by the defendant, Kansas Union Life Ins. Co. v. Burman, 141 Fed. 835, 848, 73 C. C. A. 69, 82, it was said:
“ In principle there can be no distinction between an injunction granted on the interposition of the state, in the exercise of the sovereign right of visitation and one granted by the court at the suit of a stockholder on the ground that the transaction of the two corporations is in contravention of the charter granted by the sovereign. * * * The situation is little different, in the concrete, from that where, on account of the nature of the contract, it is evident that the parties dealt on the assumption of the continued existence of the thing to which it relates, the subsequent destruction of which, in law, will excuse performance.”
In that case the contract was held to be ultra vires, so that the very basis upon which the action was brought was void, and the court held that the injunction was such vis major as excused performance of the contract. The law itself made performance impossible.
Other authorities relied on by the defendant are Baily v. De Crespigny, L. R. 4 Q. B. 180; Moller v. Herring, 255 Fed. 670, 167 C. C. A. 46, 3 A. L. R. 624; Crise v. Lamhan (Md.) 11 Atl. 842; Webb Granite & Co. v. Worchester, 187 Mass. 385, 73 N. E. 639; and 13 C. J. 646, and the cases there cited.
There can be no question, of course, that where performance is made impossible by governmental act, that is, by constitution
But the contract in the present case was not unlawful, nor was its performance made impossible by the government. A private litigant, a stockholder of the defendant company secured an injunction which enjoined the execution of the contract in question, and for a time at least made its performance by the defendant impossible without violating the court’s order.
Did this judicial decree excuse performance of the contract by the defendant? It does not distinctly appear for what cause the injunction was issued, but it was issued against the defendant company at the suit of a stockholder and it may-have been because of some act or fault of the company. In such case it is generally held that performance is not excused.
The cases relied on by the plaintiff are mainly from California. There is one from Tennessee. The Civil Code of California (section 1511) provides that, “want of performance * * * is excused’’.when it is prevented by the “operation of law.” This language is somewhat different from that generally held to excuse performance, viz.: “an act of the law.” The former might reasonably be construed to mean, constitutional or statutory law, or as some of the cases say “an act of the government”; . whereas the latter expression could be very reasonably held to embrace a decree of court.
But regardless of any such possible distinction we think the California cases may be distinguished on a more substantial ground. It should be noted that while the language employed by the courts in those cases is very comprehensive and embraces apparently all cases where the thing that prevents performance is secured by a private litigant, they all follow and rely on the Klauber Case, supra. In that case suit was brought to foreclose a mortgage given by the ° defendant on all its property, and a receiver was appointed who took the property into possession, so that it could not carry out its contract with the plaintiff to extend its railway, etc. The court held that it was not impossible to perform the contract because
And likewise in the case of Union C. & P. Co. v. Campbell, where an injunction was relied on by the defendant, it was held, under section 1511 of the Civil Code that it was no excuse.
“It was an act of individual and not of government. The defendant should have made an effort to dissolve the injunction. It is not the law operating on the facts which creates the difficulty but the use of a judicial writ by a private litigant. The contractor could have kept his contract alive by obtaining from the board of supervisors an extension of time. He took no steps to procure a dissolution of the injunction, but simply waited until the plaintiff in that action dismissed the proceeding.”
In this case also performance was not shown to be impossible.
In South Memphis Land Co. v. McLean Hardwood Lumber Co., Supra, the court said:
“There is highly respectable authority for the proposition that judicial process, order, or decree may constitute such vis major as to relieve a party from an otherwise absolute obligation.” (Citations.)
“ On the other hand, there is excellent authority for the proposition that an injunction in a suit by a third party furnishes no excuse for non-performance of an express contract.” (Citations.)
But the court declined to say what the effect of the injunction woul4 have been had it made the performance of the contract impossible, because, at most it forbade the running of the railway at grade, and defendant did not “show that it was impossible for the railway company to reach Railroad avenue * * * otherwise than by crossing the Illinois Central tracks at grade.”
We think it unnecessary to comment further than we have on the cases cited by the defendant. In some of them, notably the leading case of Kansas Union Life Ins. Co. v. Burman, the contract in question, as already said, was unlawful when made, and in others the legal proceeding interfering with performance of the promise was one that the defendant could not remove.
The vital question is — not whether the interfering act was governmental or individual — but was performance made impossible by a judicial proceeding that defendant could not prevent or control?
This statement of the law is, we believe, in harmony with the rule laid down in 3 Williston on Contracts, § 1939, and other text writers, and practically with all the cases, if the decisions are considered in the light of the facts of each case, and not with respect to the general language sometimes, used in the opinion.
But while we think that an injunction secured by a private litigant may be such an act of the law, and such vis major as will excuse the performance of a contract, we are also of the opinion that the plea setting up such excuse must show that the injunction relied upon as a defense made performance impossible, and also that it was not secured by the act or fault of the defendant. A party will not be permitted to escape liability under his contract by securing or consenting to an injunction. And, if the defendant could have secured a dissolution of the injunction it did not make performance of his contract impossible, within the meaning of the law. It must appear that the injunction was not secured by the act or fault of the defendant, and also that an effort has been
And the court are also of the opinion that the injunction pleaded as an excuse for defendant’s failure to perform its contract would not prevent the plaintiff from recovering judgment and collecting the same from any assets the defendant may have outside the jurisdiction of the court that issued the injunction. To be a complete answer, therefore, to the declaration the plea should show that there are no such assets. This fact is not shown, and for this additional reason the court are constrained to sustain the demurrer.
We think it unnecessary to express an opinion on other questions raised by the plaintiff.