79 Iowa 40 | Iowa | 1890
I. There is no controversy but that if the plaintiff substantially performed the contract the measure of his recovery is the contract price, with interest. Appellant contends that if the work, though defective in some particulars, so that it was not completed in the manner specified in the contract, was 'yet of real, substantial value to the defendant, for the purposes for which it was intended, then the plaintiff is entitled to recover the contract price, less any damage the defendant has sustained by reason of the non-performance of the contract. Appellee contends that, in case the contract was not substantially performed by the plaintiff on its part, it is not entitled to recover anything, as the work was never accepted by the defendant, and is not of the kind and quality contracted for. The court instructed the jury that, to recover under the first count, the plaintiff must show that it had substantially performed the contract on its part, and that, if it had, the measure of recovery would be the contract price, with interest. As to the second count, the jury were instructed that if the workmanship and materials were
II. The right of a party to recover when he has not fully performed his contract has been the subject of much discussion and some conflicting opinions. Many respectable authorities hold that, where there is a contract, the only remedy is upon the contract, and that recovery can only be had thereon upon proving a substantial performance on the part of the party asking to recover. Such is not the rule in this state. “ It is now the settled doctrine in this state that a party who has failed to perform in full his contract may recover compensation for the part performed, less damages occasioned by his failure.” Wolf v. Gerr, 43 Iowa, 339. The question was first settled in Pixler v. Nichols, 8 Iowa, 106, an action to recover for work done in part performance of a contract to work for six'months, wherein the court says: “But where all that is shown is that, upon an agreement to labor for six months, the plaintifE labors four months and refuses to labor any longer, and sues for the value of the labor performed, we think he is entitled to recover as upon a quantum meruit; and need not, as a condition precedent, first show that he had performed his entire contract, or that he left the service of his employer upon good cause. We are satisfied with the rule established in Britton v. Turner, 6 N. H. 481, giving its full weight for the protection of the employer, in such cases, to the qualifying rule, that, where the contract is broken by the fault of the party employed, after part performance has been received, the employer is entitled, if he so elect, to put the breach of contract in defense, for the purpose of reducing the damages, or showing that nothing is due, and to deduct what* it will reasonably cost to secure
III.- The measure of recovery recognized in all these cases, and in Corwin v. Wallace, 17 Iowa, 374, is
IY. That the verdict is contrary to the law, as given in the instructions, and to the evidence, is very apparent. There was no question made as to a large part of the work; no complaint against the furnace, the