2 N.W.2d 814 | Minn. | 1942
Plaintiff was a tenant on defendant's farm in Clay county, Minnesota. In August 1938 defendant proposed buying some steers to fatten for market. According to plaintiff's testimony, defendant agreed to buy the steers and furnish free pasture, plaintiff to feed them through the winter. They were to be "sold off of the grass" the next fall. Plaintiff's compensation for his work in *168 keeping them was to be one-half of what the cattle brought on the market after deducting their original weight.
Twenty steers were brought to the farm by defendant in August and September 1938. They then weighed on the average a little less than 400 pounds.
Twice in the fall of 1939 plaintiff mentioned selling the steers, but defendant advised waiting, and so plaintiff continued caring for them. Again, in October 1940, plaintiff brought up the subject of selling the steers, and he testified that defendant replied: "Hell, what little you have in the steers don't amount to anything. * * * They are my steers, and I will sell them when I please." Examined by his own counsel, defendant testified that he wanted possession of the steers to prepare them for market and that when they were marketed he did not intend to pay plaintiff his share of the price.
Plaintiff testified that the reasonable value of his labor in keeping and caring for the cattle was two dollars a day. It was estimated that in October 1940 the steers averaged between 950 and 1,000 pounds in weight, and that they would bring somewhere between seven and eight and one-half cents per pound on the market. According to defendant's testimony on cross-examination, if the steers had been sold then, plaintiff's share of the price would have been about $450.
The court charged the jury that plaintiff "has elected to treat the contract as rescinded, as he had a right to do if you find that defendant breached it, and to recover the reasonable value of the services rendered." The court also charged that ordinarily "the rights of contracting parties are measured by the terms of their contract," and "generally speaking the measure of damages for a refusal to comply therewith is the value of that which was to have been received, but when the medium is such that its value cannot be definitely ascertained its value may be considered equivalent to that of the services in question, and in such case recovery may be had for the value of that service." The court then instructed the jury to determine whether the value of that *169 which plaintiff was to receive under the contract as compensation for keeping the cattle could be definitely ascertained. The measure of recovery embodied in this charge is assigned by defendant as error.
As supporting the instruction, counsel for plaintiff relies upon the case of Brown v. St. P. M. M. Ry. Co.
Where one party repudiates or breaches a substantial part of his contract, the other may choose to rescind and recover in quasi contract the value of his performance. Engel v. Mahlen,
Although the instructions on this were erroneous, they were more favorable to defendant than, under the law, they should have been, and hence he is in no position to complain. George E. Lennon, Inc. v. McDermott,
Order affirmed. *171