171 Wis. 401 | Wis. | 1920
The jury found that the defendant accepted the sight draft for $500 as a first payment on the house-ice contract on condition that plaintiffs should promptly pay the balance then due on the stack ice and that the plaintiffs did not promptly make payment of such balance. This finding was essential in order to constitute the delinquency of the plaintiffs, if any, in making payment for the stack ice a breach of the house-ice contract. We have carefully searched the record for evidence to sustain this finding of the jury, but we are unable to find a scintilla of evidence to support it. On the contrary, the evidence, taken as a whole, to our minds, negatives any such understanding. ' There is not a word of evidence indicating that the defendant Means entertained any anxiety or dissatisfaction because of the unpaid balance on the stack ice, or that at any time he was pressing for payment. His letter of June 12th, in which he states that they would “load the last car of stack ice tomorrow,” does not suggest any dissatisfaction on his part
A breach of the contract on the part of plaintiffs excusing defendant from further performance must'rest solely upon the finding of the jury in response to the third question of the special verdict, which was to the effect that on June 25, 1919, more than a reasonable time had elapsed for the making of payment by plaintiffs for the cars of ice shipped June 16th, 17th, and 18th after receipt by plaintiffs of railroad weights. Granting that an unreasonable time did elapse, a breach of the contract is not the necessary or inevitable result. It depends “on the terms of the contract and the circumstances of the case.” Sub. 2, sec. 1684t — 45, Stats.; Ambler v. Sinaiko, 168 Wis. 286, 170 N. W. 270. The question is therefore whether, under the terms of the contract and all the facts and circumstances, the failure of plaintiffs to pay for the ice shipped on June 16th, 17th, and
We have now to take into consideration the provision of the contract calling for “satisfactory arrangements for the payment, at the conclusion of which defendant wrote plaint-P. J. Buckley or his assigns of railroad weights” at the time of making the $500 payment, and the prior course of dealing between the parties under the stack-ice contract, which was very similar. We have seen that $100 was paid down on the stack-ice contract; that the first car of ice shipped was paid for immediately, but the remainder of the stack ice, amounting to $249.48, was shipped without further payment, at the conclusion of which defendant wrote plaintiffs that he would immediately start shipment ypon the house-ice contract. There was no protest of past practices, no withdrawal of credit, and no indication that a different manner of payment was expected. In view of the course of dealing between the, parties under the stack-ice' contract and the interview between Wilbur and Means on the 19th of June, it is clear to us that plaintiffs had a right to assume that similar dealing with reference to the house-ice contract was satisfactory to the defendant. In view of this course of dealing it was the duty of the defendant to bring home to plaintiffs the fact that he expected prompt payments for each car of the house ice shipped, if it was his intention to insist and rely upon that construction of the contract. Granting that he had a right to insist upon that manner of
By the Court. — Judgment reversed, and cause remanded with instructions to enter judgment for plaintiffs for the amount of their damages as indicated in the opinion.