Dermott v. Jones

64 U.S. 220, 16 L. Ed. 442, 23 How. 220, 1859 U.S. LEXIS 764
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedFebruary 20, 1860
StatusPublished
Cited by44 cases

This text of 64 U.S. 220 (Dermott v. Jones) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dermott v. Jones, 64 U.S. 220, 16 L. Ed. 442, 23 How. 220, 1859 U.S. LEXIS 764 (1860).

Opinion

Mr. Justice WAYNE

delivered the opinion of the court.

This record shows that the-plaintiff and the defendant entered into a building contract, under • seal, with specifications annexed, on the 22d'April, 1851. It was agreed between them, that Jones, the plaintiff, should do in a good, substantial, and workmanlike manner, the houses, buildings, and work of every sort and kind' described in a schedule annexed to the contract, of which ic was apart; that he should procure and supply all the materials, implements, and fixtures, requisite for executing the work in all its parts and details; and that the stores fronting on Market Space, .and the warehouse on Seventh street, should be finished and ready for use and occupation, and be delivered over to the defendant, on the first day of October after the date of the contract, and all .the rest of the work on the first day of December afterward. The defendant agreed, upon her part, to pay the plaintiff for the performance of the work, and for the materials furnished, twenty-four thousand dollars by instalments:. five thousand dollars on the first day of July, 1851; five thousand dollars on the first day of Oetobér following; it being expressed in their contract, that the stores and warehouse were then to be delivered to t,<,e defendant ready for use and occupation; -and that the residue of the twenty-four thousand dollars was to be paid to the plaintiff on the first day of January, 1860, with interest upon four thousand of it from the first day of May, 1851, and with interest on ten thousand dollars from the first day of December, 1851. We do not deem it necessary to -notice the other covenants of the contract, as they have no bearing upon the ease as we shall treat it.

*227 The suit as originally brought is an action of debt for the recovery from the defendant of the second instalment of five thousand dollars, and for the value of certain extra work done and materials furnished by the plaintiff for the defendant’s use. The original declaration contains four counts: first, charges the defendant in the sum of five thousand dollars for work and labor done, and materials furnished and used by her in the erection and finishing certain stores and buildings in the city of "Washington; second, for a like sum paid by the plaintiff' for the defendant; third, for a like sum had and received; and fourth, for a like sum paid, laid out, and expended by the plaintiff for defendant at her request. The defendant pleaded to the declaration four pleas: first, that she was not indebted as alleged; second, a special plea setting out in detail a contract under seal, with the plaiutiff, for the erection of such buildings as are mentioned in it, and for the completion of them — protesting that the plaintiff had not complied with the terms of the same, and declaring that the sum of five thousand dollars claimed by the plaintiff was the second instalment, which, by the contract, was to be due and payable to the plaintiff on the first day of October, 1851, and denying that the buildings were done by that day, or that any claim for the five thousand dollars had accrued before the bringing of the suit, by reason of any contract or agreement different from the special contract, or for any consideration other than the five thousand dollars claimed in the declaration. In the third plea, the identity of the sum sued for with the second instalment is reaffirmed, payable on the 1st of October, 1851, upon condition that the buildings and stores should be completed and ready for use by that day — averring performance on her part of the conditions and covenants of the contract, and non-performance on the part of the plaintiff, especially his failure to complete and have ready for use the warehouse and stores by the time specified. The fourth plea refers to the special contract, avers performance on her part, non-performance on the part of the plaintiff, and especially, that he had not finished and completed the buildings and stores by the day specified in the contract, or at any time, either before or *228 after that day. At this point of the pleading the plaintiff applied to be permitted to' amend his declaration, and added to it four counts. The first sets out in detail the special contract referred to in the defendant’s second, third, and fourth pleas; avers performance generally, on his part, and non-performance on the part of the defendant. The second count is the same as the first, down-to the averment of performance hy plaintiff inclusive, and then it avers that the defendant departed from the stipulations of the contract, and required the plaintiff to do additional work, and to furnish additional materials, whereby the defendant delayed the plaintiff, and prevented him from completing the buildings by the time agreed, which tho plaintiff’would otherwise have done. It is then averred that; notwithstanding the. additional labor, the plaintiff had completed the work, in a reasonable time after the first day of October, 1851, to wit: on'the 1th December following, and that the defendant then accepted the same,- whereby the second instalment of $5,000 became payable. The third count is substantially a repetition of the original declaration, and the fourth claims $10,000 for work and labor done, and for a like sum laid out by the plaintiff for the defendant, from all of which his right of action-had accrued before it was instituted.

The defendant filed three pleas to the first count of the amended declaration: 1st, that she was not indebted as was alleged; 2d, that the plaintiff had not performed the special agreement; and 3d, that he had not performed the condition precedent of the contract, to complete the building, which he had agreed to do by the first day of October, 1851. . To the rest of the count the defendant demurred. Ás the verdict of the jury and the judgment réndered for-the plaintiff are upon the first amended count, contrary to instructions asked of the court by the defendant, we shall not notice the subsequent pleadings and proceedings in the ease, and will confine ourselves to what we consider to have been the legal rights ofithe parties under the original declaration and the first amended count. The evidence shows that the three stores and the warehouse were not finished,.'hy the 1st of October, 1851. It is also proved' that *229 the special contract had been departed from in the course of its execution; that the defendant insisted that alterations and additions should be made in the buildings after they were begun, contrary to the specifications of the special contract, and that the plaintiff had yielded to her requirements. It may have delayed the completion of the stores and warehouse, as it inci’eased the work to be done; 'but it having been assented to by the plaintiff without any stipulation that the time for performance of the whole was to be delayed, it must be presumed to have been undertaken by the plaintiff to.be done, as to time, according to the original contract.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
64 U.S. 220, 16 L. Ed. 442, 23 How. 220, 1859 U.S. LEXIS 764, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dermott-v-jones-scotus-1860.