3 Mich. 281 | Mich. | 1854
By the Court,
At the common law, a defendant was in no instance allowed to recover a judgment for damages for a positive claim against a plaintiff. To obviate the rigor of this rule of law, and as well to avoid a multiplicity of actions as to enable parties where there were mutual cross demands unconnected with each other, and arising upon contract express or impli
This remedy was, in the earlier periods of the law, of very limited application, and it is said, it is in cases where fraud entered into, but did not equitably go to the entire prevention of a recovery by the plaintiff, that we find the first cases of the defence in question in the common law Courts of England. Whether this be strictly true or not, it is certain that so much uncertainty involved the remedy, and it was so trammeled by the technical rules of the law, that it was but little use — the defendant preferring his cross action or the relief afforded by equity — and the term itself became obsolete. Yet the principle was always retained under the form of a diminution of damages, upon the equitable ground of avoiding circuity of actions, and we constantly encounter it in the boohs, and most frequently involved in a question as to the sufficiency of pleadings. But within a few years not only has the term been revived, but the doctrine has also, and as the rigid rules of the common law Courts have yielded to the influence of social progress, and the expansion of the commercial relations of society and the new developments of trade, common justice as well as common sense and convenience have adapted it to prevent wants, infused into it new vigor, and rendered it a valuable remedy in the administration of
But while it is said that by the application of the doctrine of recoupment, circuity is avoided, and the rights of parties adjusted' in one and the same suit, it must be understood that-
Ives vs. Van Eppes (22 Wend. 155) was action of covenant-on a sealed agreement by which the plaintiff contracted to complete a certain wall in a good, sufficient, and workman7 like manner, &c. Before the referees the defendant proposed to inquire into the character of the work done under the contract, in order to prove that it was of a quality inferior to what the contract required. This was not permitted, and a motion was made to set aside the report of the referees for that reason; the Court say “The offer came-under - the same category, r&eov/pmmt. Recoups is synonymous with defalk or discount. It is keeping back something which is due, because there is an equitable reason to withhold it; and is- now uniformly applied where a man brings an action for breach of contract between him and the defendant, and the latter- can show that some stipulation in the same contract was made by the plaintiff which he has violated;, the defendant may if he-choose, instead of suing in his turn, recoupe his damages arising from the breach committed by the plaintiff, whether they be liquidated or not. The law will cut off so much of the plaintiff’s claim as the cross damages may come to.” In Nichols vs. Dusenbury, (2 Comst. 283, 286,) Bronson, J. says of recoupment, “It'is in the nature of a cross action. The right of the- plaintiff to sue is admitted, but the defendant says he has been injured by a breach of another branch of the same contract on which the action is founded, and he claims,
It appears from these, and indeed, from all the authorities, .as well as from principle, that- the force of the remedy by recoupment is spent in the discount or abatement of the plaintiff’s claim, either partially or wholly, as the case may be. The defendant has his election to pursue this remedy, and thus save the expense and delay of his cross action, or he may maintain such action for the default or failure of the plaintiff, and for his damages, as may best subserve his interests. The defence then not being compulsory, but one of choice, the defendant can hardly urge with propriety that a hardship is imposed irpon him by denying him a judgment for his excess of damages, when such is found to exist.
It was suggested upon the argument, that if the defendant should choose to recoupe his damages, instead of resorting to a cross action, he would be barred from recovering any excess or further damages in a second action, by reason of the former adjudication, and from this was argued the hardship of the rule, denying him a judgment in this case. This suggestion, if well founded, can have little force in opposition to settled rules of law, for the defence is at the defendant’s option. But I no where find it adjudged that such would be the result. It is true that in Britton vs. Turner, (6 N. H. 481,) Parker, J., says, “ there may be instances, however, where the damage occasioned is much greater than the value of the labor performed, and if the party elects to permit himself to be charged for the value of the labor, without interposing the damages in defence, he is entitled so to do, and may have an action to recover his damages for the nonperformance, whatever they may be; and he may commence such action at any time after the contract is broken, notwithstanding no suit has been instituted against him, but if he elects
In Fabricatte vs. Lannitz, (3 Sand. S. C. R. 744,) this Suggestion of Judge Parker, that the defendant cannot sustain an action for further damages, is approbated. Rut in neither case was the question before the Court, and the suggestions are only important as shewing the universality of the doctrine that the defendant, by recoupment can only reduce the plaintiff’s damages, and takes nothing in that action for his excess of damages.
But in Mendell vs. Steel, (8 M. & W. 854,) this question of the right to maintain an action for further damages was before the Court, and Parke, B,, after discussing to some extent the origin and present extent and application of this doctrine of diminution or reduction of damages by the defendant, uses this language: “It must, however, be considered that in all cases of goods sold and delivered with a warranty, and work and labor,, as well as the case of goods agreed to be supplied according to a contract, the rule which is found so convenient, is established; and that it is competent for the defendant in all of those, not to set-off by a proceeding in thé nature of a cross action, the amount of damages which he has sustained by a breach of the contract, but simply to defend himself, by showing how much less the subject matter of 'the action was worth by reason of the breach of contract, and to the extent that he obtains, or is capable of obtaining, an abatement of price on that account, he must be considered as having received satisfaction for the breach of contract, and is precluded from recovering in another action, but no more. All the plaintiff could by law be allowed in diminution o'f damages on the former trial, was a deduction from the agreed price, according to the difference at the time of delivery between the ship as she was, and what she ought to have been,
It was also urged at the bar, that “ if the question were to foe settled by the good sense of the thing, or by general principles of justice and equity, uncontrolled by the force of arbitrary rules and precedents, there could be no doubt as to the result. It would be at once said, let the whole matter be settled in one suit; let the litigation, the controversy, and the bootless accumulation of costs cease;” and it is insisted that acknowledged principles and adjudicated cases authorize -.this result. If the rule should be found to be, that a defendant, by an election to recoupe his damages, shall be deemed to have waived all claim to further damages than are necessary to defeat the plaintiff’s recovery, still, unless it can.
The strong resemblance, and to some extent, analogy, be
The instances and extent to which this right of recoupment may be exercised by the defendant, is to a considerable degree yet unsettled. In some of the States the remedy has been so liberally extended, that it is regarded as in the nature of a cross action under which nearly or quite all claims which might be made the subject of cross actions may be recouped, while in others, and in England, it is confined within much narrower limits. In this Court the question of its application has never arisen, nor is it before us in this case. We have only endeavored to establish the proposition that the' defendant by availing himself of the right to recoupe, does not entitle himself to a judgment for an. excess -of damages, if one be found to exist in his favor, and that such is the universal rule.
It must be certified to the Circuit Court for the County of Wayne as the opinion of this Court, that the defendants are not entitled to judgment against the plaintiffs for the excess of their damages, as found by the special verdict over the amount of the freight earned by the plaiutiffs.