Buford & Co. v. Funk
Buford & Co. v. Funk
Opinion of the Court
Opinion by
Furgus Buford & Co., commenced this suit against Henry Funk, on an account for an engine and sundry items from their machine shop. Defendant’s answer sets forth a special contract and claimed damages, on the ground that the engine had not been furnished according to contract. The replication
The court refused to receive testimony of the foregoing facts, and decided that this was not the right form of action; that the action should haye been founded on the agreement set forth in defendant’s answer; and that said answer was a bar to this action. Therefore, the court gave judgment against the plaintiffs, to which they excepted and took an appeal.
Under the Code, all teehnical forms of action and of pleadings are abolished; § 1733. Several causes of action may be united in the same petition, provided they affect all the parties thereto in the same capacities, and if suit on all might be brought in the same county; § 1751.
The petition in this case was founded upon an account, and a copy of the account is annexed to the petition, as required by § 1750. This account includes an item of $600 for an engine, which was the subject of a written agreement. It also includes a long list of other items not included in the agreement, amounting to over $300. The price of the engine, and the price per pound for castings are the same in the account and in the agreement. The agreement then supports the account. So far as they are concerned, independent of other evidence, there is no conflict or variance between them. But the account claims the price of many items not referred to in the written instrument, and which appear to have beenfurnished independent of that instrument. If, then, plaintiffs had a
The engine was charged in the account as having been furnished by the plaintiffs to the defendant. This assumes that their part of any contract in reference to said engine had been performed, and they accordingly sue for the price of the engine. They do not, it is true, sue on a special contract, or on special counts. They sue under the Code, by a general petition on account, as they might have sued at common law, on common counts.
It was decided in Gibson v. Povell, 5 Smedes and Marsh., 712, where the declaration contained a. count upon a special contract, and also the common counts, and where the plaintiff failed to show a right /to recover on a special count, that he might recover on the common count, where the case showed that if there had been no special contract, he might have recovered under the common counts. When wo consider that this principle of pleading was decided at common law, the propriety of authorizing a recovery on a petition, under the Code, founded upon an account in harmony with the special contract, cannot be questioned.
In Massachusetts, it is held that when a special contract has been performed, so that an obligation to pay money is all that remains, a declaration on the common counts is sufficient; Fulton v. Dickinson, 10 Mass., 287. As the contract in the present case had been performed, so far as the plaintiffs were concerned, and as nothing but payment remained, it follows that plaintiffs might recover under a general petition.
1. By having the plan .of the engine, materially changed.
2. By not being ready and willing to have the same set up on two different occasions when plaintiffs were ready, .and offered to do so.
3. By acknowledging long after the contract, the. correctness of the account on which the suit was, founded,
and which included the price of the engine furnished by .plaintiffs.
In Byrd v. Bertrand, 2 Eng., 321, A, B and C, agreed with D in writing, under seal, that they would build a house for him, and have it completed by a certain day. They failed to complete the work by the time. It was then agreed by C and D, that C should go on and complete the work according to the specifications in the original contract. Held, that this was a new contract, but that the original contract was admissable in evidence to show the terms and stipulations of the new contract.
So in Munroe v. Perkins, 9 Pick., 298; after a special contract had been made, the defendant verbally promised the plaintiff that he should be paid for his labor and stock, and should not suffer, and under that promise he proceeded and completed the building. Held that plaintiff might maintain an action upon the parole agreement. See also; Delacroix v. Bulkley, 13 Wend., 71; Shaw v. Lewiston Turnpike Company, 2 Penn., 454; Baldwin v. Farnsworth, 1 Fairf., 414; Reed v. McGrew, 5 Ham., 380.
We find a case from Vermont particularly in point, in which a contract was made to deliver certain furnace
Apply the principle of that case to this. At the time stipulated in the contract in this case, plaintiffs offered to deliver the engine and put it up, but defendant was not ready and refused to have it done. Again, in three months, a like offer was made and refused. After keeping the engine on hand three months for defendant, and he still refusing to take it, the plaintiffs had a right to regard the contract as rescinded, and were no longer under obligations to furnish the engine under that contract. It would be unreasonable to say that plaintiffs were required to keep the machinery on hand, without payment or interest for a longer period than three '’months. This act of itself then amounted to a rescission of the contract so far as any obligation on the part of plaintiffs were concerned.
A violation of a contract by one of the parties to a written agreement, is sufficient to authorize the other party to abandon it, and sue for the injury sustained; Martin v. Chapman, 6 Port., 344.
After thus rescinding the written contract, the defendant obtained of plaintiffs as appears by the bill of exceptions, a different engine from that described in the original contract, and expressed himself as well satisfied with it» operation. This act also shows an abandonment of the written contract, and created a liability under a new parole contract. But it seems that this engine was furnished at the same price as that named in the written contract.
The third act of rescission of the original written contract, was at a still later period when defendant expressed
Under the foregoing views, it clearly follows that the court below erred:'
1. .In deciding the testimony to be inadmissible.
2. In deciding that this was not the right form' of action. *
3. In deciding that the action should have been founded on the original written agreement.
i. In deciding that defendant’s answer was a bar to plaintiffs’ action.
5. In rendering judgment against the plaintiffs.
Judgment reversed.
Reference
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