60 Mich. 159 | Mich. | 1886
Plaintiff sues for a balance alleged to-be due on the price of a bull-calf sold to defendant in October, 1882. The price agreed upon is alleged by plaintiff to-have been fifteen dollars, and by defendant to have been ten dollars. Six dollars is admitted to have been paid, five at first, and one dollar in subsequent dealings. Pour dollars-according to defendant, and nine dollars according to plaintiff, remained unpaid. This sum of four dollars, as both agree, was to be paid by services for breeding purposes of a certain bull then mentioned and owned by defendant, or, at plaintiff’s election, of the calf when grown. Without any fault of defendant, this performance was made impossible by the death of the calf and an injury to the bull.
So far as the amount of the original price is concerned,, the parties are in their oaths directly at variance. There-was testimony tending to show that defendant knew plaintiff supposed fifteen dollars to be the price agreed on. It i&
The court below having found that ten and not fifteen dollars was the agreed price, we cannot review that finding of fact, and it is of no consequence what effect this testimony might have had on the mind of any one else.
The only serious question is whether the contract was released by the impossibility of performance.
While a contract may be so framed as to make the contracting party absolutely bound at all events, yet such is not the universal rule. In the present case the services agreed upon could not be rendered under the contract unless one or the other of the two animals could be had for the purpose. Their continued existence entered into the consideration of both parties as an indispensable element of performance. This being so, and there being nothing in the contract to indicate a substituted performance as within the design, the case seems to fall within the rule that under such circumstances the existence of the means of performance is a condition without which, in the absence of fault, there can be no liability. This doctrine is very clearly stated in 2 Chit. Cont. (11th Ed.) 1076, 1078, and the citations. The doctrine is reasonable, and assumes that both parties become interested in the continued existence of the subject of the condition.
While the question is one of some consequence, we cannot but regret that so sharp a controversy has been continued on so small a matter.
The judgment must be affirmed.