122 A. 420 | Vt. | 1923
These parties entered into a written contract by the terms of which the plaintiff was to build a house for the defendant for a specified sum, payable in installments as therein provided. For present purposes, it may be stated broadly that one of these installments fell due, and that the defendant wrongfully refused to pay it, and refused to go on under the contract except upon an unwarranted condition. Thereupon, *99 the plaintiff abandoned the work and brought this action of contract using the common counts as his complaint. At the close of the plaintiff's evidence, the court granted the defendant's motion for a verdict, and the plaintiff excepted. During the discussion of this motion, the plaintiff expressly declined to seek a recovery on a quantum meruit basis, and limited his claim to the overdue and unpaid installment; and he adheres to this position in this Court. In these circumstances he cannot maintain his suit.
He concedes that his right to so recover, depends upon the divisibility of the contract. But the contract, being for a finished structure for a gross sum for the work as a whole, and its complete fulfillment being manifestly contemplated by the parties as the basis of their arrangement, is an entire contract, and is not made divisible by the fact that the price for the work is payable in installments. This is sufficiently shown byCreamery Package Mfg. Co. v. Russell,
The defendant's failure to make the payment called for by his engagement was a breach of the contract that went to its essence. The situation thus presented to the plaintiff did not, in the respect here involved, differ from what it would have been if the defendant had prevented him from carrying out the contract, as inDerosia v. Ferland,
This right of abandonment is, not infrequently, spoken of as the right of rescission. It was so characterized at the argument; which prompts us to suggest, in passing, that technically it differs from the right of rescission in that the contract may still be resorted to by the party not in default for the recovery of his damages. Earnshaw v. Whittemore,
When the plaintiff was ready to bring his suit, he had a choice of remedies: He could sue upon the contract and recover his damages for its breach; or, disregarding the contract, he could sue in general assumpsit for a reasonable compensation for what he had done. Chamberlain v. Scott,
Our conclusion that the plaintiff cannot recover the overdue installment is supported by Preble v. Bottom, supra. That case involved a building contract essentially like the one we have in hand. The plaintiff there agreed to build a house for the defendant for a specified sum, a certain part of which was to be paid by a day named. The defendant failed to make this payment when due, though it was demanded. The plaintiff thereupon abandoned the work and brought suit. The case was tried before auditors, who reported, inter alia, that if the plaintiff was entitled to recover the installment, the balance his due was *101 $78.30; but if he was entitled to recover only in proportion to the work actually done, the balance in his favor was $53.30. It was urged that the plaintiff was entitled to recover according to the agreement, and that any other rule would defeat the contract of the parties and substitute another in its stead. But it was held that the recovery should be for a pro rata compensation according to the contract price, and judgment was given for the last-named sum, — thus denying a recovery of the installment.
The plaintiff insists that the contract was modified by an oral agreement fully carried out by the plaintiff, and that this takes the case out of the rule herein applied. But the modification is referable to and became a part of the original contract and does not, in the respect here involved, affect the rights of the parties.
Judgment affirmed.