Ashbrook v. Hite
Ashbrook v. Hite
Opinion of the Court
The question in this case arises upon the sufficiency of the facts stated in the amended petition of the plaintiff to constitute a cause of action.
The petition, it will be observed, does not allege that the sheep were sold by the defendant to other persons before the day fixed by the contract for their delivery to the plaintiff. The allegation is merely that they were thus sold before the bringing of the suit, and the suit was not brought till about four weeks after the time of delivery agreed upon. It would be entirely consistent" with the statements of the petition, to assume that the alleged sale was made a week or a day before suit brought. There is also an entire absence of any allegation that the plaintiff was ready and willing, at the proper time and place, to perform the contract on his part, by accepting the delivery, and paying the residue of the contract price. And the defendant is charged with no such default as a refusal to
The question, then, is, whether a subsequent resale of the property by the vendor to another, under these circumstances, will, per se, give the original vendee any legal claim upon him, in respect to the partial payment previously made under the contract.
The plaintiff’s counsel seem to assume, in their argument, that the agreement stated in the petition is such as to constitute a completed sale, and that the property in the sheep, though not the right of possession, passed by the contract to the purchaser. But the petition describes the contract rather as an agreement for a future sale and delivery. “ He agreed to sell,” etc., “ to be weighed and delivered at,” etc., “ on or before,” etc.; and it is certain that the sheep were to be weighed, and their price thus ascertained before delivery, by the vendor, or at least not by the purchaser alone. Under these circumstances, the rule is, that the property does not pass. 1 Parsons on Contr. 440, 441. Such sale is, at most, but conditional; the weighing and delivery on the one side, and the-payment of the remaining purchase money on the other, are conditions precedent to the passing either of the right of property or-tho right of possession. By the terms of the contract in this case, we have no doubt that the sheep were to be kept until the day of delivery, by the vendor, at his own expíense *and risk. But were it otherwise, the petition evidently does not contemplate a recovery of the value of the sheep as upon an unlawful conversion of them to the defendant’s use. It is not averred generally that the sale was wrongful, nor are facts stated which show it to have been so. It may have been made upon due notice to the vendee, in the proper assertion of the vendor’s lien for the unpaid balance, of the purchase money; and the proceeds may have been insuf
This case, it will be perceived, grew out of a contract for the sale of real estate. The purchaser made a partial payment on the contract, but afterward refused to execute it further. TTpon a subsequent resale of the premises by the vendor, the purchaser brought this action of assumpsit to recover the money paid on the contract. The case is analogous to the present one, and the reasoning of the coui't is entirely applicable here.
The same principle is affirmed in Hudson v. Swift, 20 Johns. 23; Green v. Green, 9 Cowen, 46; Battle v. The Rochester City Bank,
The sale of the property in this case, by the defendant, was not in violation of his obligations under the contract, but the mere exorcise of his rights, in accordance with its implied stipulations. And the plaintiff having, by his voluntary default, abandoned the contract, the defendant might certainly maintain an action against him for its breach, and at the same time treat the property as his own. Both these rights are co-existent, and the assertion of the one does not preclude the exercise of the other. If he failed to make himself whole by the resale of the property, at a fairprice, he might proceed by action to recover such ^damages as would make up the deficiency. There is no injustice in this. It merely places the party not in default where he would have stood had the agreement been performed. But if the resale of the property was, per se, a rescission of the contract, no action could th&reafter be maintained upon it, and this measure of justice would be denied to a blameless party.
"We are fully aware that embarrassing questions have arisen, and that a conflict of authorities may be found, in cases somewhat analogous to the present, where a party has sought to recover, in indebitatus assumpsit, for a part performance of a special contract for the sale and delivery of personal property, at a specified time and place, and to be paid for thereafter, on a day certain, and where the plaintiff has failed, without sufficient excuse, to deliver the whole within the time limited. The right to such relief was denied in Witherow v. Witherow, 16 Ohio, 238. That was a case of some hardship, and the propriety of a rigid application of the rule in such a case may certainly be questioned. But the propriety of any rule which would encourage the violation of contracts is at least equally questionable.
The rule in New Hampshire proceeds on the principle of giving ■ compensation for the breach, and requiring the party not in default to account for any excess of benefit he has received from part performance. Britton v. Turner, 6 New Hamp. 481. And, certainly, no rule is admissible which would be more favorable to the party in default.
It does not appear, in this case, that the plaintiff’s default was other than purely voluntary, or that the defendant has received from him anything which, under the circumstances, it would be
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.