107 Ill. 226 | Ill. | 1883
delivered the opinion of the Court:
By a written agreement of May 26, 1880, appellant agreed to sell and dock for appellee 3000 tons of coal, to be hauled before May 1, 1881,—two-fifths to be stove coal, two-fifths chestnut coal, and one-fifth egg and grate coal. The price of the stove and'chestnut coal was to be $5.25 a ton, and the price of egg coal was to be $5 per ton, and, in addition, on each kind of coal appellee was to pay (as for storage) five cents a ton per month, from July 1, 1880, until the coal was taken away by appellee. This last charge was to be paid in advance. Appellee was to pay currently, as he received coal from time to time, so as to keep his account down to $200 or under, and to pay in full for all coal received during any given month before the 10th of the succeeding month. Appellee was to haul the coal for his own trade, and not sell to other dealers. For any non-fulfillment of any of the terms of the contract on the part of appellee, appellant had the right to cancel the contract and forfeit the security. Appellee was to give, as security for the fulfillment of the contract, his note for $1000', without interest, to run to November 1, 1880, secured by mortgage on certain land in Michigan, and might, at any time, take up the note by paying $1000. This note was not to apply in payment upon the current account, but payment of the note, if made, was to apply in payment of the last coal to he hauled under the contract. The note, and mortgage on the Michigan land, were given when the contract was signed. No definite time was expressly fixed by the words of the contract for the delivery of any part of this coal. The fair inference from the whole contract is, that it was to be called for and taken in such reasonable installments, from time to time, as would take all the coal before May 1, 1881. If taken in proportion to the time, it would require about 265 tons each month, to be taken and paid for by the 10th day of the succeeding month. The business of the appellant at Chicago was in charge of Henry S. Van Ingen. It had one dock at the corner of Indiana street and Kingsbury street, one at the corner of Sixteenth and Grove streets, and a place of delivery, part of the time, on Canal street near Kinzie street, and it had a main office in the city, where orders for coal were received and wffiere money was paid upon such orders. When any one was entitled to receive coal, the operators at the docks, or places of delivery, were directed by telephone from the main office to deliver coal. This mode of transacting the business was evidently known to appellee. What money he paid under this contract was always paid at the main office. Appellee began to haul coal soon after the contract was made, and continued, from time to time, in each month, to receive coal until April 30, 1881, and according to his own testimony he “got as much as he wanted up to February 5, 1881,” and “got 105 tons in the first five days of February, 1881,” and during the residue of February and the month of March he received tons, and 168 J-|- tons in April,—in all, he received 1912-l-Z- tons, being 1580J%tons of stove and chestnut coal, and 332 tons of egg and grate coal.
The complaint of appellee is, that at divers times in the months of February and March, and a part of April, 1881, appellant failed to deliver to him coal when called for, and for that reason, he says, that of the 2400 bushels of stove and nut coal mentioned in the contract he failed to receive 819-2% tons, and of the 600 tons of egg coal mentioned in the contract he failed to receive 268 tons. The decree of the circuit court recognized this claim as well founded, and in stating the account allowed him as damages for the supposed default of appellant, the sum of about $2880.96, of which about $710 was allowed for supposed defaults in not delivering egg coal, and about $2170.76 for failures to deliver stove and chestnut coal. After deducting $389.64, an unpaid balance upon coal actually received, a decree was entered against appellant for $2491.33. This decree was affirmed in the Appellate Court, and the case comes here for review.
The record does not seem, in any view, to furnish any ground for the allowance of this $710 for supposed failures to furnish egg coal. Appellee testifies that during the times of the alleged failures to furnish coal, -there was, at the coal yard of appellant, “a pile of large egg coal, * * * and that coal was there for me. * * * 'They nevgr refused me that coal,—that was large egg. ” As to the allowance of damages for the failures to deliver stove and nut coal we must look further into the record.
Appellee, soon after he began to haul under the contract, began paying, and paid currently from time to time, so as to keep his debit account down to a point not exceeding $200, until in the month of September, 1880. At the end of that month his debit balance for coal already taken was $455.50. At the end of October it was $561.18, and at the end of November $559.55, and in December his debit balance reached $613.23, and so remained to the end of that month. In the latter part of December, 1880, upon the suggestion of appellee that his teams, scales and office furniture were liable to seizure by a creditor, he gave to Mr. Yan Ingen his note for $S00, payable June 1, 1881, with interest, and secured the same by a chattel mortgage, duly recorded, upon the personal property mentioned, which was accepted. Appellee testifies that he proposed to appellant’s manager to give the chattel mortgage “as additional security” for “the amount of money that was standing out,” and that the manager accepted the same “as'security.” Again he testifies: “The note and chattel mortgage were executed as security for the amount I owed the company.” Again: “He,” the manager, “demanded payment of the $613 balance. The agreement was * * * I should pay this" $613 from time to time, as gradually as I could pay it. * * * I was to pay something on this $613, and get it down right along, currently. - He said I would have to have it all paid by May 1; he said I would have to pay it all up, and pay on it just as I pleased. ” Being asked as to the coal he should get in the meantime,—whether' he was to pay cash for that,—he answered: “I considered I always paid cash.” A direct answer being demanded, he said: “No, sir, that was not the arrangement anything outside what I had been doing before. The arrangement was not that I was to pay cash for coal as I got it, and bring down this $613. I said I did not want to pay that until it expired. He said I could go ahead and pay part of it as I went along, and I agreed to that, and I agreed that at no time should any coal be sold to me in excess of that sum,—in excess, of this $613.” In an earlier part of his testimony, speaking of the chattel mortgage, he said: “There was no modification of the contract made when that mortgage was given.” The witnesses for appellant give a version of this transaction somewhat different from that given by appellee, the only material difference being that they understood appellee’s engagement in the original contract to keep his debit balance down to $200, was not affected by this new arrangement, 'and hence the company was not bound to let him have coal on a credit at all until the debit balance was brought' down to that sum, whereas appellee evidently inferred from what • was said that he was not to be allowed to buy any more coal on a credit, so as to increase his debit balance beyond the $613, and perhaps so as not to increase from any point to which it should be reduced, so long as it was not reduced below the $200. Rejecting all other testimony on the subject, and taking all of the testimony of appellee into consideration, the most favorable inference to appellee that can reasonably be indulged is, that he was to have no right to receive any more coal on a credit so long as his debit balance remained as high as $613, and that he should so pay, from time to time, as gradually to reduce that debit balance. And it would seem, too, that after being partially reduced, he was not to be allowed again to increase his debit from the point to which it had been reduced, until it ■should fall below the sum of $200.
After this arrangement was made appellee continued to haul coal, and pay from time to time, but he did not reduce his debit balance below $613 until the last of March. The sheet of aggregate bills, given in evidence by appellee, shows that at the end of the next succeeding month (January, 1881,) his debit had increased to the sum of $762.08, and without further payments, so far as the proofs show, in the five days of February, 1881, he had been permitted to take and haul away 105 more tons of coal. Thus far he makes no complaint of his treatment by appellant. But some-time in the succeeding week (whether before, on, or after the 10th of the month is not shown,) he complains that his teams were sent to one of the yards or docks of appellant for coal, and appellant’s operatives there failed to furnish them coal, and that while he received coal from time to time until April 30, 1881, still it occurred that he applied often for coal when it was not furnished. His.debit balance at the end of February, 1881, was $660.65, and at the end of March it was $389.87, and at the end of April it was $389.64. It is not claimed that his debit balance was, after September, 1880, ever reduced as low as $200. There is no proof in the record tending to show that he ever, at any time, failed to get coal when he offered to pay cash for it. The proof does tend to show that often when his teams came for coal appellant had no stove or chestnut coal on hand, and that he waited until it came in on the cars. Sometimes this • delay was a day or two. During all this time he was from day to day urged to make payments on his account, and from time to time did so, and on the other hand he was daily applying for coal, and getting it at some times, and at others failing to get it.
- It is insisted by appellee that appellant waived the right to insist on payment of money concurrently with the application for coal, because the contract was never declared can-celled for appellee’s default, and because the failures to deliver coal were not placed, at the time, upon the ground that he was in default in payment, but upon the ground that appellant’s stock of coal was, for the time, exhausted. We do not see that the failure ■ to cancel the contract by appellant can be held to be a waiver of performance of its requirements on the part of appellee. Not having cancelled the contract, the appellant simply occupies the same position it would occupy had the cancellation clause been omitted. As to the failure to demand money in advance, or concurrently, it does not seem to us to constitute such a waiver. Had the market price been lower than the contract price, and had appellant sued appellee for a failure to take the coal at times when it was not applied for, as well might appellant have claimed success without proving an offer to deliver and a demand of the money, and this upon the ground that such offer was waived by the fact that appellee did not have the money. Appellee, while his debit balance was over $613.23, had clearly no legal right, under the contract, to receive coal without concurrent full payment. The mere fact that appellant sometimes indulged him, and permitted him to do so, did not render appellant liable to further do so at times when it failed to so furnish it. It is appellee who is seeking to enforce this contract. Before he can do so he must show performance, or its equivalent, of all conditions precedent or' concurrent to be done by him. By the terms of the contract that part of the price for each ton of coal to be paid as for storage, was to be paid in advance. There is no pretence that this wras ever offered to be done, or that this was ever waived. Appellant seems to have been willing to deliver coal when it was on hand, and appellee seems to have been willing to have paid for coal when he had the money on hand. Appellant at times was out of coal, and appellee was out of money. Appellant constantly dunned appellee for what was over due, and appellee importuned appellant for coal. Neither responded to the other’s demand,—appellant for want of coal, and appellee for want of money. Each seems to have acquiesced, for the time, in the want of performance of the other, and neither can complain that the entire contract was not performed.
After a most careful consideration of all the proofs in this case, we find no just ground upon which appellee can properly have a decree for compensation for the loss of profits he might have made had he had money to fulfill his contract, and appellant had had all the coal he needed.
The judgment of the Appellate Court in this case is therefore reversed, and the cause remanded, with directions to reverse the decree and dismiss the bill.
■ Judgment reversed.