77 N.Y.S. 8 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1902
On September 22, 1900, the plaintiff entered into a written contract with the defendants, of which the following is a copy :
“ T. D. Scanlon.
P. H. Wise.
“ Scanlon & Wise,
“ Tugs, Canal Boats, Etc., for Sale or Charier.
“ General Lighterage and Transportation, Harbor, River and Sound.
“ Scows, Covered and Derrick Barges. Yessels of Every Description.
Office 14 South St., cor. Broad St.
“ Telephone 2645'Broad.
New York, September 22nd, 1900.
“This agreement, entered into between Edward S. Walsh, party of the first part, and George W. Hyatt, Horace J. Suffers, of the second part, is as follows:
“ The party of the first part hereby agrees to furnish and operate for the parties of the second part his dredge No. 6 to unload refuse from scows in the Newark Bay.
“ For doing the above work the party of the second part agrees to pay to the party of the first part the sum of Fifty-five ($55.00) Dollars per day, not including Sundays, as no work will be done on that day.
“ Payment to be made on or before the 5th of each month for the number of days the dredge has been on the work for the previous month.
“ It is further understood and agreed that the party of the second part will charter the dredge for thirty (30) days from date of charter and will give ten (10) days’ notice previous to the expiration of the present charter whether the dredge is to continue on the work for the succeeding month or not.
“EDWARD S. WALSH.
“ GEORGE W. HYATT.
“ HORACE J. SHBERS.”
The action is to recovér the contract price, the complaint alleging full performance by the plaintiff, and the defendants contend that it comes within the rule that under such circumstances proof of matters excusing or waiving performance is not admissible, and a recovery may not be had upon that theory. There would be force iii the contention if the contract were one for the performance of any specific amount of work, but it is apparent that the essence of the contract is the charter by the defendants of the dredge and its crew for thirty days, the same to be operated for that period, it is true, by the plaintiff for the defendants’ benefit, but if the plaintiff furnished the dredge and crew for the required time, liability to pay the contract price would follow, although the defendants had no work to do, or the conditions created by them were such as to render work impossible.
In Tebo v. Jordan (147 N. Y. 387) the defendants chartered a tug to tow coal barges, and while the tug was engaged in the work the barges were stranded, as the defendants claimed, on account of the incompetency of the plaintiff’s pilot. The jury found that the accident resulted from perils of the sea for which, under the contract, the plaintiff was not liable, and the Court of Appeals held that he could recover the contract price until the time when the contract could be terminated by its terms. The point that the plaintiff had failed to prove performance was raised and apparently overruled. Moreover, the provision in the contract in the case at bar, by which the plaintiff agreed to operate the dredge in unloading scows, certainly depended upon the furnishing of such scows by the defendants at a place where they might be unloaded, and the principle which controlled the decision in Howard v. American
“ IVhen performance of a contract,” said the court in Smith v. Wetmore (167 N. Y. 234, 239), “is alleged by the plaintiff and denied by the defendant, it is competent for the plaintiff to prove that the defendant would not allow him to perform, or repudiated the contract, or had committed a breach of it himself, by hindering performance or refusing to abide by its obligations.”
If the contract in question, as has been said, was one solely for the performance of specific work, and such performance was prevented by the defendants, it may very well be that the only remedy would be found in an action for damages for breach of contract; but the contract including as it does a charter of the dredge, the plaintiff, if not at fault, was not compellable to accept a discharge of the vessel under the circumstances disclosed by the record and as the jury must have found them, but could recover the contract price on the theory of performance.
The defendants pleaded that the contract was executed by them in reliance upon false representations made by the plaintiff’s agent as to the power and capacity of the dredge for doing the work, and that upon discovering the fact that such representations were untrue, they rescinded the contract. The learned trial justice rejected the evidence offered for the purpose of proving such representations, and the ruling apjiears to be correct. There was no allegation of fraud, or that the representations were known to the plaintiff or Ms agent to be untrue, or that they were made with intent to deceive or for any fraudulent purpose. On the face of the pleadings, they constituted no sufficient ground for rescission. (Lefler v. Field, 52 N. Y. 621; Kountze v. Kennedy, 147 id. 124; Robinson v. Vaughan, 49 App. Div. 170.) There was no proof that the defendants did rescind the contract. There was evidence to the effect that they claimed that the plaintiff had broken the contract, and that they in consequence thereof ordered that the dredge be removed from the work, but no notice of rescission appears in any form. Nor did the defendants claim upon the submission
The other exceptions argued have been examined and no error found.
The judgment and order should be affirmed.
All concurred.
Judgment and order affirmed, with costs.