Truitt v. Guenther Lumber Co.
Truitt v. Guenther Lumber Co.
Opinion of the Court
Opinion by
The plaintiff brought this action to recover the balance due for lumber sold to the defendant on written orders given from time to time as the lumber was required. There was no dispute in regard to the amount of the plaintiff’s claim; the defense was that the plaintiffs had not shipped all of the lumber ordered and which they agreed to deliver, as a result of which, the defendant sustained a loss arising from the increase in value of lumber of the kind contracted for, which loss exceeded the amount of the plaintiffs’ claim and was a valid set-off against the plaintiffs’ demand. A verdict was rendered for the defendant for
The learned trial judge instructed the jury that the failure of the defendant to pay the plaintiff’s account when it became due did not relieve the plaintiff from its duty of making deliveries under the contracts; and that unless an agreement was made, as alleged between Miller for the defendant company and the plaintiffs, that no more shipments need be made, if the draft referred to was not paid, the defendant was entitled to set off its loss because of nondelivery against the plaintiff’s claim for the lumber already delivered. The question whether the plaintiff had a right to rescind the contract because of the default of the defendant in making payment at the times agreed upon by the parties was thus excluded, and the only inquiry submitted, with respect to the plaintiff’s liability for the set-off, was whether there was an express agreement between the defendant’s agent and the plaintiffs at the time the protested draft was drawn, under which the plaintiff was excused from performance because of the nonpayment of the draft. The evidence offered was partly in writing and partly parol. The defendant alleged payment according to the terms of the contract; the plaintiffs denied such performance and asserted on the contrary that there was a clear default on the part of the defendant. In such circumstances the evidence carried the case to the jury if the plaintiffs could stand on their right to demand payment according to the contract. This the learned court said they could not do because the orders for the lumber constituted divisible contracts, and default by the defendant in making payment on one order would
The judgment is reversed with a venire facias.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Truitt v. Guenther Lumber Company
- Cited By
- 3 cases
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- Published
- Syllabus
- Contracts — Sales—Breach of contract — Installment delivery — i Failure to pay — Refusal to further deliver. Where the consideration of the contract is single, the contract is entire, whatever the variety of items embraced in it, but where the consideration is apportioned expressly or impliedly to each of the items, the contract is severable. If by a contract the goods are to be paid for at each delivery, the refusal to pay for any one delivery, without sufficient cause, authorizes the rescission of the contract. In an action of assumpsit to recover the balance due for lumber sold and delivered on various orders given at various times, the defense was that the plaintiff had'failed to make delivery in accordance with the terms of the contract, and that the defendant was, therefore, justified in refusing payment. Under such circumstances the case was for the jury to pass upon the good faith of the plaintiff in refusing further deliveries because of the failure on the part of the defendant to make settlement, and it was error for the court to charge, as matter of law, that such failure to pay within the period fixed by the contract for lumber already delivered would not excuse the plaintiff from the duty to make other deliveries. The intention of the parties with respect to performance disclosed by the testimony and the documentary evidence was to be taken into consideration in ascertaining the rights of the parties. The question was not one, therefore, purely of law, but should have been disposed of on the facts as disclosed in the evidence.