Boody v. Rutland & B. R.

3 F. Cas. 857, 3 Blatchf. 25
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Vermont
DecidedMay 15, 1853
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 3 F. Cas. 857 (Boody v. Rutland & B. R.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Boody v. Rutland & B. R., 3 F. Cas. 857, 3 Blatchf. 25 (circtdvt 1853).

Opinion

PRENTISS, District Judge.

This is an action of account to recover the balance of book accounts between the parties, a form of action given by statute in this state for such purpose, and long in use here. After judgment to account was confessed by the defendants, and duly entered up, the action, by agreement of the parties, and order of court founded thereon, was submitted to the determination of referees. The referees have made and returned into court a report, awarding to the plaintiffs the sum of $13,-690.19, as being due to them from the defendants to balance the accounts between them, and stating specially the facts and grounds upon which the award was made. Both parties have filed exceptions to the report, objecting to certain allowances made by the referees, and insisting that the report should be modified and corrected in those particulars and judgment be rendered upon it accordingly.

The dealings between the parties, forming the subject of the action, originated in the undertaking of .the plaintiffs to build for the defendants, and in their actually building for them, all the railroad bridges in the Rut-land and Bellows Palls division of their road. The original contract, consisting simply of a written proposition, made by the plaintiffs in a letter, in August, 1847, and accepted by the defendants in the same month, is very short and somewhat meagre, embracing but few details or particulars. After stating the general plan or model of the bridges, it merely regulates the rate and mode of compensation, without specifying the time or place of payment; that is, it only gives the prices of constructing the bridges per foot, varying according to their different spans, ti> be paid one-fourth in cash, and three-fourths in the stock of the road at par value..

For the unpaid balance due and payable under the contract in cash, according to the stipulated prices, including the work conceded to be extra, which was, of course, payable in money, it is not denied by the defendants that the plaintiffs are entitled to recover. The only questions presented by their exceptions are: Have the plaintiffs a right, on the facts stated in the report, to recover the value of the stock agreed to be paid? And, if so, should the rule of estimate be its value in February, 1S50, as allowed by the referees, which was sixty per cent, of its par value, or its value at the time of commencing the action, which was only fifty per cent. ?

The written contract, as we have already seen, is entirely silent as to the time or place of payment; and, looking to that alone, the plaintiffs could not call for payment, either of the cash or stock, until a complete performance of the contract on their part, or, at any rate, before, or oftener than, a bridge was fully completed. Nor could they then sue and recover for the stock, without proof of a special request and of a refusal to deliver it It is an undeniable rule of law, that where a promise is made to do a collateral thing on request, the request is parcel of the contract, and no right of action arises until a request be made. So, if no time be fixed in the contract, or by other agreement of the parties, either express or implied, for the doing of the thing, a request is essential to the cause of action. Here, no direct,' formal request having been made by the plaintiffs for the stock, the question is, whether, on the facts found and stated by the referees, a time was fixed for the payment of the stock, so as to make a special request or demand unnecessary, or whether the facts otherwise supersede or dispense with the necessity for such demand or request

If the fact of the defendants’ having, since the commencement of the suit, mortgaged their road, to secure the payment of debts due from them to ihird persons, and thereby put it out of their power to give to the plaintiffs unincumbered stock, could be considered as disabling the defendants from performing their contract, it would no doubt render a request for the stock unnecessary, and a recovery could be had for it here, since the law allows a recovery, in this form of action, for items of account accruing or becoming due after the commencement of the action, as well as for those which had accrued or become due before. But we think that the act of mortgaging the road would not work or amount to a disability to perform the contract. The debts were really as much a charge upon the road, or incum-brance upon the stock, before as after the mortgage. The mortgage, it is trae, might have the effect to depreciate the stock in the market, and render it less valuable to the holder; but every purchaser of or contractor for stock knows that he must take and hold it subject to all charges incident to the completion and use of the road, and the accomplishment of other legitimate objects of the [859]*859corporation. We cannot, therefore, say that, by the act of mortgaging the road for the purpose mentioned, the duty of the defendants to pay stock was converted into an obligation or liability to pay money in lieu of the stock. The right of the plaintiffs to recover for the stock, if. any such right exists. must rest, then, upon other facts reported in the case.

The time of payment, there being no stipulation in the written contract on the subject, may, unquestionably, be inferred from other evidence — such as the usage of the company in paying their contractors, the acts of the parties, or the course adopted and pursued by them under the contract. Such evidence does not contradict any of the terms of the contract, but is mere suppletory matter, showing the understanding and intention of the parties, or rather the practical construction put by them upon the contract. Now, it is expressly stated in the report, that it was the custom of the defendants to makfe monthly payments t*. their contractors, for work done on their road, upon estimates made by the engineer at the end of each month; and that this practice was adopted with the plaintiffs. It thus appearing to have been the usage of the company to pay monthly on the estimates, and that usage having been adopted in reference to the plaintiffs, the referees might well consider it as the rule of payment under the contract, established by mutual consent and binding upon the parties.

The report says nothing as to the place of payment. If the place, as well as the time of payment, had been fixed, it would be sufficient for the defendants to show that they were ready at the time and place to make payment. But, if no place was fixed, it would be the duty of the defendants, at or within the time, to tender or offer the stock to the plaintiffs. If the payments were not made monthly in full, by reason of the estimates not being made in full, as appears to have been the case, the fault would seem to be on the part of the defendants, the estimates being made by an officer in-their employment and acting under their control. It was owing to the estimates not being made in full, as is stated to have often happened in practice, that there was so large an unpaid balance due to the plaintiffs in cash and stock, on the completion of their contract in December, 1849. After that, I suppose, no estimates were necessary. The plaintiffs soon called for money on account of the contract, but the defendants declined paying any until there had been an examination of the accounts.

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Bluebook (online)
3 F. Cas. 857, 3 Blatchf. 25, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boody-v-rutland-b-r-circtdvt-1853.