82 N.J.L. 189 | N.J. | 1912
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The action in this case was brought to recover for alleged breach of contract. The case
After the passage of the ordinance, and its approval by the mayor, the plaintiff took steps to fulfill what it conceived to be its obligation under the contract which has been recited, by assembling materials for the construction of the pipe called for thereby, and manufacturing the same in accordance with che specifications which had been submitted by the defendant. After Lhe ordinance was approved action under the contract between the city and the defendants was suspended, for the reason that the city found it would have difficulty in negotiating its issue of bonds, because of doubts which liad been raised concerning its power to do so legally. In this situation of affairs the defendants finally, and in January, 1908, in response to a demand from the plaintiffs that they should perform their contract, notified them that the contract did not bind them, and that they did not intend to carry it out. The present suit was thereupon begun.
The agreement upon which the plaintiffs base their right of recovery is expressly conditioned upon the due authorization on the 28th of August, 1907, of the bonds which were contemplated to he issued by the city of Hoboken for the raising of money to pay for the improvement. These bonds were not duly authorized by the dace specified, and, therefore, the agreement, by its very letter, ceased to be binding upon idle parties to it. Time was of its essence, and there is nothing in the proofs to show any waiter of this provision by the defendants. They were, consequently, protected by the provision referred to, and were under no obligation to perform it. The finding, therefore, on the part of the trial court in favor of the plaintiffs, was without legal justification, and the rule to show cause must be made absolute.
As this case must go back for a retrial, and a different situation may then be presented, we deem it proper to say that, in our opinion, the evidence offered by the defendants to show that no bonds were ever issued in accordance with the provision of the ordinance referred to in the contract, because of doubt whether the municipality had power to issue
We further think that the damages assessed by the trial court were excessive, for the reason that there was no proof that tbe raw and manufactured material acquired and manufactured by the plaintiffs for tire purpose of carrying out their contract remained on hand at the time of the trial; nor was there any proof of the amount of the loss sustained by their sale (if there was a sale thereof) after the refusal of the defendants to perform.