85 N.Y.S. 1034 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1903
The defendant, the owner of about 32,000 acres of land in the Adirondacks with about 424,000 cords of pulp wood thereon, agreed -to sell and deliver to the plaintiff at Watertown, N. Y., or an equivalent place, rossed pulp Wood at nine dollars per cord, the delivery, from 11,000 to 12,000 cords per year, to begin the first day of June, 1900, and to continue for ten years at the rate of about 1,200 cords per month for ten months of each year, with the right to the plaintiff to continue said contract for ten years more at twelve dollars per cord. It was provided further that the defendant need not deliver more pulp wood than could be obtained from said lands, it was excused in case it could not deliver on account of fire or condemnation by the State, and it was not to sell the land or wood to jeopardize or prevent its performance of said contract; and further “ Party of the second part (plaintiff) shall make such advance of money to the party of the first part (defendant) as it may request during the progress of the work, but party of the second part need not advance more than approximately the cost of work done. * * * It is further agreed that the said party of the second part shall be deemed to have an equitable interest in said pulp wood for advances made by them as hereinbefore provided.”
The defendant entered upon and continued in the performance of the contract until April 12, 1900, when it claimed to rescind the same on account of the plaintiff’s failure to make advances as agreed. Thereupon the plaintiff brings this action, alleging its performance and defendant’s refusal to perform, and that it had sold a part of the lands to the Brooklyn Cooperage Company, and asks specific performance, and that the defendant be enjoined from selling the land or the wood elsewhere.
The Appellate Division (55 App. Div. 225) dissolved the injunction granted in this action upon three grounds:
*104 (1) That it was not probable that a court of equity would enforce, a specific performance of the contract as it was practically a sale of personal property.
(2) That upon the papers it was doubtful if the plaintiff could recover at all, as it must show that it was performing its contract fully, and if there had been a substantial breach by it in making the advances as alleged by the defendant, that might furnish a good ground for rescission.
(3) On account of the difficulty and danger of enforcing such and so indefinite covenants by injunction.
The Court of Appeals (173 R. T. 149) reversed the decision of the lower courts, dismissing the complaint at the trial upon the first ground stated above, and held that taking all the allegations of the complaint as true it might furnish grounds for equitable relief, if not for specific performance, at least for an enforcement of the negative covenant not to sell the land. The second ground advanced by the Appellate-Division for vacating the injunction was not before the Court of Appeals and not considered by it, and is, therefore, so far as it decided the point, the law of this case. That court practically held that a substantial breach of the agreement to make the advances, as alleged by the defendant, if proved, would furnish a good ground for a rescission of the contract. An unintentional or unimportant violation, or an act done through ignorance or perhaps excusable mistake, ought not to be sufficient ground for a rescission of a contract involving important values. But there can be no question that a willful and intentional departure from a contract, where the defects of performance pervade the whole and are so essential as substantially to defeat the object which the parties intended to accomplish, that such defects are ample grounds for rescission. St. Regis Paper Co. v. S. C. L. Co., 55 App. Div. 225 ; Miller v. Benjamin, 142 N. Y. 613; Wharton & Co. v. Winch, 140 id. 287; Norrington v. Wright, 115 U. S. 188.
It is not necessary that the defaulting party actually abandon the contract, or show an intention so to do, in order to enable the other party to rescind; he may want to retain the contract and its benefits, but be unable to perform as agreed, or may wish to annoy or coerce, or deprive the other
It is believed there is no case where a party to an executory contract may experiment with the other and deliberately refuse to perform its material obligations, and from the mere fact that he still wishes to continue the contract but only seeks to annoy or oppress the other, or deprive him of his rights, that he can thereby take from him his right of rescission. A party, therefore, to an executory contract who deliberately violates its terms in a material respect does so at his peril, and the injured party may rescind notwithstanding the fact that the delinquent may hope to continue to receive the benefits of a contract, the obligations of which he has repudiated.
The fair meaning of this contract with reference to the advances is that the defendant shall cut and handle this wood in a reasonable and proper manner, and that the actual cost of so doing shall be advanced from time to time by the plaintiff upon the defendant’s request, but the plaintiff need not, however, advance more than approximately the cost of the work done. If such cost on these lands would be greater than at other places, nevertheless it would control the advances, for the parties contracted with reference to such cost and not the cost at other places. The contract is for a sale and delivery of rossed pulp wood, of a certain quality, and such wood obtained from other lands would comply with the contract, for the plaintiff gets the kind of wood he buys, and it is not suggested that the wood from these lands is better or
The contract was practically agreed to in July, 1899, was dated August twenty-ninth, fixes about August fifteenth as the time to begin cutting for the next June delivery, was signed by the plaintiff September twenty-eighth, and was
The cost of cutting, skidding and hauling to the stream the wood from the part of the land where the defendant was cutting was greater than on the ordinary Adirondack lands on account of the mountainous and broken surface of the country, and it actually cost the defendant at least two dollars per cord to cut and skid the wood. The work was on the foot hills of Mount Seward, and it was necessary to sloop a great part of the logs down. This fact, and other extra handling of the logs, made the work slow and the product from the work of the men and horses less than on ordinary ground, and the cost per cord larger. .So that at first the plaintiff had the right to be surprised as to the amount demanded by the defendant as the cost of the work done, and had the right to investigate and determine whether the sums required were greater than such cost. The plaintiff was in fact paying one dollar and fifteen cents per cord for cutting' and skidding upon ordinary ground, not involving the difficulties and extra work here found.
The plaintiff sent Mr. Smith, an experienced woodsman, familiar with such work, to the woods, who remained there three or four days, learned the number of men and horses employed, the wages paid and the number of cords skidded. And defendant made a written report to him covering these subjects, and he saw the wood that was cut but not skidded or scaled. He saw the physical condition of the country and the manner in which the work was done, and that the work was much greater and the expense much larger than upon the ordinary job. He knew the work was being carefully and economically done by competent and skillful men, and was
As a matter of fact the plaintiff did not at any time advance the cost of the wonk as required by the defendant, or any fair approximation of the cost. October seventh defendant properly requested an advance of $2,500 on account of the work therefor done, and suggested that it would make its requests about the first and fifteenth of each month. Eeceiv
It is unnecessary to follow through the correspondence. After the contract, all the matters between the parties are in. writing and appear in the exhibits. The defendant was repeatedly asking for money,the plaintiff continually neglecting to pay the same and offering the same excuses. There is no dispute as to the meaning of the contract as its terms are not ambiguous, and the correspondence shows that the plaintiff did not question that the defendant was entitled to advances approximately to the cost of the work done, and, as we have seen, after the return of Mr. Smith from the woods upon his first visit, there was no honest misunderstanding on the part of the plaintiff as to the cost of the work done. When it proposed an arbitration it suggested that the arbitrators settle the matter upon the correspondence and contract! at an intermediate point, showing that it was not desired that the arbi
It will not do to say that the plaintiff would not for technical reasons, or to annoy the defendant, or to compel it to make an adjustment of outside matters, or to pay the interest upon moneys which it was legally entitled to without such payment, imperil a contract of the great value represented here. The acts of the parties must he viewed by the situation as it then was. The plaintiff was building a large pulp mill in which it intended to use this wood, but was delayed so that instead of being ready for business in June, 1900, as expected, it was not ready until July, 1901, and pulp wood would suffer detriment if kept over unless it remained in the water. In June, 1900, at Watertown, rossed pulp wood was worth only from nine dollars to nine dollars and fifty cents per cord, and this wood, the plaintiff advancing the cost during the progress of the work, would approximate the latter figure. So that at the time this correspondence was going on it is not easy to say that either party had the advantage over the other on account of the value of pulp wood at Watertown. But since the alleged rescission pulp wood has very rapidly increased in value, and each June has seen a very material advance in its price, so> that the contract now, if in force, is of very great value.
We therefore find that the plaintiff did not make the advances as requested, approximately with the cost of the work, but with a knowledge of the cost and an understanding of the terms of the contract, deliberately and intentionally refused and neglected such advances as requested, and such refusal and neglect were not caused by any inadvertence or by any misunderstanding of the facts.
At the time each request for an advance was made the cost of the work done was equal or greater than the sum requested. In one of the later reports the defendant erroneously stated the amount of wood by 600 cords. The error was unintentional, the defendant acting in entire good faith, -and the refusal of this advance at the time was not put upon the error in the report, and in the next request the error was eliminated when the defendant requested a smaller amount than formerly asked. And at the time of this errone
While the expense of cutting, Skidding and drawing to the stream was very large on account of the nature of the' land worked, it nevertheless appears that the defendant could deliver -the wood at Watertown, paying all the expenses, and realize from two to three dollars per cord over and above the actual cost of the work done. The total advances on account of the work was $25,000, the actual cost of the work done was $87,827.98. By reason of plaintiff’s refusal and neglect to make the proper advances the defendant was compelled at different times to borrow large sums of money to pay the necessary cost of the work done, and paid interest upon such loans.
Two items entering into the above aggregate of cost of work done require further consideration.
(1) The defendant has a Eew York office and a Tupper Lake office and has charged to this job the salaries and expenses of this Tupper Lake office amounting to $1,635.03 for the eight months during which the contract was being performed. For four months of that time the defendant was performing some other work carried on through said office which practically occupied onet-third of the time of the office force while in progress, allowing for which one-third $272.96 should be deducted from the above aggregate.
(2) The defendant also has charged to this job the bedding and certain tools and implements which were in camp from the year before of the value of $2,197.98. While the property was worth the sum charged, it is claimed that at the most only the use of said property can be charged against this job. This may be so, but we must remember that the defendant was entering upon a contract for ten years, and at plaintiff’s option for twenty years, and that the whole of this perishable property would be used up long before the ten years, and much of it during the first year,
After the plaintiff had unreasonably neglected or refused the several proper requests of the defendant for advances, and the defendant had repeatedly, directly and impliedly, threatened to cease performing the contract' for that reason, the plaintiff, with knowledge of the approximate cost of the work done, and with an understanding of the terms of the contract, suggested an arbitration. The defendant, through its attorney Mr. Badger, consented, and as a speedy means of arriving at a result, suggested that each party take its foreman and they select a third arbitrator, to which the plaintiff replied that it had named an arbitrator in a sealed envelope enclosed, requesting the defendant to do the same, and that the arbitrators meet at an intermediate point and arbitrate the difference between the companies upon the corn tract and correspondence.' The contents of the sealed envelope was “ Gifford Penchót, or any one designated by him.” As he resided in Washington, D. 0., it is not apparent what the plaintiff meant by an intermediate point. The defendant interprets the plaintiff’s consent to arbitrate as intending to bring in the old dispute about the timber land upon another contract referred to in some of the correspondence. The defendant had not the right to suggest an arbitrator' for the plaintiff, and the plaintiff had not the right to suggest that the arbitrators proceed solely upon the letters and correspondence and that they meet at an intermediate point, or that Mr. Penchot should select an arbitrator, or to
While a contract may provide for an arbitration for the ascertainment of amounts or particulars as a condition precedent to a recovery, a provision that all matters of dispute arising shall be arbitrated is not binding and may be disregarded. Haggart v. Morgan, 5 N. Y. 422; National Contracting Co. v. H. R. W. P. Co., 170 id. 439; Hamilton v. Liverpool, L. & G. I. Co., 136 U. S. 254.
It is only necessary to consider the discussions between the parties about the arbitration in order to determine whether the plaintiff was thereby lulled into a state of repose, and in that way led into a position of a seeming forfeiture of its contract. I find that this is not so. The. demands for money were continued, as well as the statements that the work could not go on without the advances. ■ The plaintiff sends its Mr. Smith a second time to investigate
The plaintiff’s action proceeds entirely upon an allegation of full performance by it and a breach by the defendant. It seeks no relief from its own default, but is clearly in default itself. IJpon receiving the notice of rescission the plaintiff offered to excuse the defendant for sending it, but did not offer to change its method of making advances, claimed it had made the advances promptly as requested, and proposed to continue in the same way. It thus placed itself in a position of standing upon its full performance and the defendant’s default. It has taken the same position in the complaint in this action. The defendant entered upon the performance of the contract and at all times was ready, able, willing and desirous to carry out the same according to its terms, but was delayed and suffered great inconvenience and put to great expense on account of the default of the plaintiff in making the advances as agreed, and at the time of the last demand for payment and of the notice of rescission, the defendant was able and ready to perform and carry out its contract with the plaintiff if the plaintiff had complied with its provisions, and the defendant was justified in electing to rescind the said contract, and did legally rescind it, having offered to return the money advanced, with the interest thereon, with its notice of rescission.
Judgment for defendant, with costs.