Emerson v. Slater

63 U.S. 28, 16 L. Ed. 360, 22 How. 28, 1859 U.S. LEXIS 694
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 12, 1860
StatusPublished
Cited by130 cases

This text of 63 U.S. 28 (Emerson v. Slater) 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
Emerson v. Slater, 63 U.S. 28, 16 L. Ed. 360, 22 How. 28, 1859 U.S. LEXIS 694 (1860).

Opinion

Mr. Justiee CLIFFORD

delivered the opinion of the court.

This case comes before the court upon a writ of error to the Circuit Court of the United States for the district of Massachusetts. It was an action of assumpsit, brought by the plaintiff in error against the present defendant, upon a written agreement, bearing date on the fourteenth day of November, 1854.

By the terms of the instrument, the plaintiff covenanted and agreed with the defendant, in consideration of the agreements of the latter therein contained, and of one dollar to him paid, that he, the plaintiff, would complete all the bridge work to be done by him for the Boston and New York Central Railroad Company, ready for laying down the rails for one track, by the first day of December next after the date of the contract. In consideration whereof, the defendant agreed that he would pay the plaintiff, within two days from the date of the agreement, the sum of forty-four hundred dollars in cash; and also give to the plaintiff, on the completion of the bridges, and when the rails for one track were laid from Dedham to the foot of Summer street, in Boston, his, the defendant’s, five notes, for two thousand dollars each, dated when given, as provided, and made payable to the plaintiff or order, in six months from their date. Another stipulation of the agreement was, that the notes, when paid, were to'be applied- towards the indebtedness of the railroad company to the plaintiff, and that the agreement was in no way to affect any contract of the plaintiff with the railroad, or any action then pending between them.

When the declaration was filed, it contained three special counts, drawn upon the written agreement, together with the. common counts, as in actions of indebitatus assumpsit..

*36 Performance on the part of the plaintiff, and neglect and refusal on the.part of the defendant to give the five notes specified in the agreement, after seasonable demand, constitute the cause of action set forth in the several special counts. They differ in nothing material to be noticed in this investigiition, except that, in the first count, performance on the part of the plaintiff is alleged, according to the contract, on the first day of December, 1854, while in the second' and third counts it is alleged at a period twenty days later.

An additional special count was afterwards filed by consent, which, in one respect, varies essentially from the other counts. After setting out the substance of the contract, it alleges that the defendant waived performance at the day Stipulated iij the agreement, and extended the time to the twentieth day of the same December, and that the plaintiff performed and completed the work within the extended time. Demand of the .notes prior to the commencement of the suit, substantially as alleged, was admitted at the trial, as were also the execution of the agreement and the payment by the defendant of the forty-four hundred dollars.

As appears by the transcript, the cause has been twice tried upon the same pleadings. At the first trial; the verdict was for the plaintiff; but the defendant excepted to the rulings and instructions of the Circuit- Court, and, after judgment, removed the cause.into this court by writ of error.

Among the questions presented on the writ of error, the principal one was whether, by the true' construction of the written agreement, time was of the essence of the contract. That question was directly presented by the fourth exception; and this court held, that the refusal of the circuit judge to instruct the jury, as prayed by the defendant, that the plaintiff could not recover on the special counts without showing that the work was completed by the day stipulated in the contract, was error.! Accordingly, the judgment was reversed, and the cause remanded, with directions to issue a new venire.

In the opinion delivered on the occasion, this court said, in effect, that in cases where time is of the essence of the contract, there can be no recovery on the written agreement, with *37 out showing performance within the time limited; but added, that a subsequent performance and acceptance by the defendant will authorize a recovery in a quantum meruit. Slater v. Emerson, 19 How., 239.

Failing to show performance at the day named in the agreement, the plaintiff, at the last trial, offered to prove by parol to the effect that, after the date of the agreement, and before as well as after the day specified for the completion of the work, the defendant, by his conduct, acts, and declarations, waived and dispensed with performance at the day named in t.he written agreement, and agreed to substitute therefor performance on the twentieth day of the same December, and to deem performance on the day last named as equivalent to performance on the day specified in the written agreement, and that the work was fully performed within the extended time.

Objection was made by the defendant to this testimony, upon the ground, that the written agreement declared on was a special promise for the debt, default, or misdoings of another; and that the alleged waiver, substitution, and extension, not being in writing, were within the statute of frauds; and the court sustained the objection, and excluded -the testimony. To which ruling of the court.the plaintiff excepted.

He then proposed to proceed upon the common counts, and -offered evidence accordingly. After reading the agreement set up in the special counts, lie introduced three deeds, each dated November 17,1854, purporting to convey certain parcels of real estate therein described. They were each given by the railroad company to the defendant, to indemnify him for the liability he assumed in the before-mentioned written agreement with the plaintiff. Estimating the value of the real estate so conveyed by the considerations expressed, in the srespective deeds, ft amounted in the aggregate to the sum of thirteen thousand five hundred dollars.

He also introduced a memorandum agreement between the defendant' and the railroad company, whereby the former leased to the latter ten hundred and fifty tons of railroad iron, to be laid down by the company and used on their railroad. By the terms of the last-named agreement, the railroad irori *38 was estimated at the value of sixty-eight thousand four hundred dollars; and the company agreed to pay the defendant, for the use of the iron, five thousand dollars per month, the first payment to be made on the first day of March then next, and so upon the first day of each'succeeding month, until the whole sum was paid, with interest on the same from a given day — the defendant agreeing, if there was no default'of the payments, when the whole was paid, to sell and deliver the iron to the company for the estimated value, including the interest.

. To secure these payments, together with the interest, the railroad company, by the same instrument, assigned and set over to the defendant the proceeds of the railroad, to an amount 'equal to the estimated value of the iron, with the interest, and authorized and required the superintendent of the road to retain in his" own hands, out of the proceeds, a sum sufficient to pay the amount to the defendant, in the mannei and at the times specified in the agreement.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
63 U.S. 28, 16 L. Ed. 360, 22 How. 28, 1859 U.S. LEXIS 694, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/emerson-v-slater-scotus-1860.