39 Me. 382 | Me. | 1855
— As the lumber, payment for which is sought to be recovered in this action, was never surveyed, it is insisted that the plaintiff’s cannot maintain their suit. This branch of the defence rests upon the provisions of R. S., c. 66, § § 2 and 17. But we think the case is not within the spii’it of the Act upon which the defendant relies. By the contract between the parties, the plaintiffs agreed to sell the defendant “ boards sufficient to make ten thonsaud sugar box shooks, at their mills in Bath, for thirty cents for each and every box of the common size of sugar box shooks,” &c. The contract, it will be perceived, was not for any definite quantity of boards, nor was the price dependent upon the contents as ascertained by a survey. The price could only be ascertained when the box shooks should have been manufactured. A survey would have boon a mere idle ceremony and for no effective purpose whatever. Neither party had any interest in ascertaining the amount of such survey, as the result affected no one.
The contract under which the boards were delivered was not fully performed. The defendant claims to deduct from the amount, which would otherwise be due, the damages sustained by reason of the failure on the part of the plaintiff to perform his contract.
The early authorities in England and in this country are adverse to the allowance of the reduction claimed. The desire to avoid litigation, and to settle in one case mutual claims growing out of the same contract, has led to the allowance of claims for damage arising from fraud, failure of consideration or non-performance of the contract in reduction of damages. The defendant claims, that he has sustained damages from the failure on the part of the plaintiff to deliver boards sufficient to make the quantity of sugar box shooks specified in the contract. The evidence
The default to be taken off and the cause to stand for trial.