Belisle v. Berkshire Ice Co.

120 A. 599, 98 Conn. 689, 34 A.L.R. 108, 1923 Conn. LEXIS 40
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedApril 4, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 120 A. 599 (Belisle v. Berkshire Ice Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Belisle v. Berkshire Ice Co., 120 A. 599, 98 Conn. 689, 34 A.L.R. 108, 1923 Conn. LEXIS 40 (Colo. 1923).

Opinion

Burpee, J.

The only question presented in the appeal of the Berkshire Ice Company is whether, if the ice taken and disposed of by that company in the course of its business was of the quality contracted for, the trial court erred in allowing interest on the contract price from November 1st, 1919, to the date of the partial payment made without prejudice on June 1st, 1921, and thence on the remainder to the date of judgment. The court has found from the evidence that this ice was of that quality, and we have not been called on to correct its finding in that particular. The appellant does not contend that under such conditions it is not liable to pay any interest; it complains only about the time fixed as the starting point for reckoning the interest. By the terms of the agreement this sale was made for cash. This defendant knew that the plaintiff by his contract with the American Ice Company was bound to pay promptly the sight draft attached to the bill of lading on each cargo shipped, and in the light of this knowledge this defendant drew up its con *696 tract with the plaintiff in which it agreed to pay this draft and send the balance of 75 cents a ton to the plaintiff. It appears that it did this upon the first shipment, but decided not to do so on the second, which it received on August 28th, 1919. The money was due and payable then, but the defendant has retained and enjoyed its use ever since that day. “It is difficult on principle to see why he [the plaintiff] should not recover, as compensation for that detention, damages measured by the legal rate of interest upon the sum so detained for that time.” Healy v. Fallon, 69 Conn. 228, 235, 37 Atl. 495; Loomis v. Gillett, 75 Conn. 298, 53 Atl. 581. “For the buyer’s default in paying for the goods, the seller may recover interest upon the unpaid price during the period of default, which begins, in sales for cash, at the time of the sale, or at least on delivery.” Elliott, Conn. Law of Sales, 691. Our statute provides that interest may be allowed and recovered in civil actions as damages for the detention of money after it becomes payable. General Statutes, § 4797. It would seem, therefore, that the court should have reckoned the interest from August 28th, 1919, instead of November 1st, 1919. But the court below has found that the parties agreed that interest might be computed from November 1st, 1919, and this defendant has not been aggrieved by this computation, and has now no sufficient reason to ask that the judgment be disturbed in this respect.

Tinning to the appeal of the Naugatuck Valley Ice Company, it is evident that, for the reasons just stated, this defendant cannot complain of that part of the judgment which includes the purchase-price of the barge-load of ice which it received and accepted on September 7th, 1919. Payment was due on that day. Thé court allowed interest on the sum due for this ice from November 1st instead of the earlier date of *697 September 7th, 1919. This defendant manifestly was not aggrieved by this error.

The principal point raised and pressed by this defendant in its appeal, relates to the damages allowed for this defendant’s refusal to accept the remainder of the ice. The appellant contends that this point depends on the date which shall be taken as the date of the breach of its contract, if it made any breach, and upon proof of the market value of ice at the date of that breach' or within a reasonable time thereafter. It argues that the date of the breach was August 28th, 1919, when it notified the plaintiff that it did not want any more ice, and that on that day, or within a reasonable time thereafter, it became the duty of the plaintiff to find a market and to resell the unaccepted ice at the best price obtainable; and that, if he failed to do this, he could not recover the damages allowed in the judgment unless he had proved that there was no available market after September 7th, 1919, when he received this defendant’s notice that it would not accept any more ice, and before November 1st, 1919, when the plaintiff ceased to have any ice to deliver to this defendant, in which the plaintiff might have sold the undelivered ice at a price equal to or greater than the contract price. This argument rests on the assumption that this defendant’s notice of its refusal to accept the remainder of the ice by itself effected a breach of the contract on the day it was received. That assumption is not supported by the law applicable to the facts of this case. Here was an executory contract, to be performed at any time before November 1st, 1919. On September 3d, 1919, this defendant absolutely, distinctly and unequivocally refused to perform its promise, and gave unmistakable evidence of its renunciation. But this did not make a breach of this contract. It remained a subsisting contract unless *698 and until the other party, the plaintiff, gave equally unmistakable evidence of his acquiescence in or acceptance of the defendant’s repudiation. This court said in Home Pattern Co. v. Meriz Co., 86 Conn. 494, 501, 86 Atl. 19: “The repudiation of the contract without the acquiescence of the plaintiff did not put an end to the contract. The plaintiff could still treat it as subsisting and, notwithstanding the notice of repudiation, assume that the defendant would perform its part of the contract when the time for such performance should arrive. Had it chosen to consent to the renunciation, it might have done so and brought an action at once for breach of the contract, but there can be no anticipatory breach of a contract by one party without the acquiescence of the other. A breach by one party alone can only occur after the time for performance has arrived. Frost v. Knight, L. R. 7 Exch. 111, 112; Johnstone v. Milling, L. R. 16 Q. B. D. 460, 467; Wells v. Hartford Manilla Co., 76 Conn. 27, 35, 36, 55 Atl. 599; Kadish v. Young, 108 Ill. 170, 183; Bernstein v. Meech, 130 N. Y. 354, 358, 29 N. E. 255.” The record before us does not show that the plaintiff had accepted or acquiesced in this defendant’s repudiation of this contract. Therefore it was never broken. By its terms it remained in uninterrupted existence until November 1st, 1919. At any. time until that day this defendant, notwithstanding its letters to the plaintiff, had the right to take the entire quantity of ice specified in its contract. By its refusal to exercise that right within the time limited, it broke its contract on the last day fixed. The trial court correctly held that the breach was made on November 1st, 1919. And the record does not disclose that this defendant made any claim of law during the trial, or has made any assignment of error on appeal, which challenges that decision. There could be no market for this ice avail *699 able to the plaintiff, because by reason of his contract with this defendant, so long as it remained in force, the plaintiff had no ice which he could sell. Until November 1st, 1919, he was stripped of all power to deliver this ice to any one but this defendant. On November 1st, 1919, he lost all right, title and interest in this ice.

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Bluebook (online)
120 A. 599, 98 Conn. 689, 34 A.L.R. 108, 1923 Conn. LEXIS 40, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/belisle-v-berkshire-ice-co-conn-1923.