Hayes v. Gross

9 A.D. 12, 40 N.Y.S. 1098
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJuly 1, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 9 A.D. 12 (Hayes v. Gross) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hayes v. Gross, 9 A.D. 12, 40 N.Y.S. 1098 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1896).

Opinion

Landon, J.:

When a builder agrees to erect and. complete an entire house, if the house is destroyed by fire before completion, the' builder can erect another, and if lie does not do so he is guilty of a breach of his contract. (Tompkins v. Dudley, 25 N. Y. 272.) But if a painter agrees to paint a certain house and the house is destroyed before, the painting is finished, it is impossible for him to complete his contract. If a néw house should be erected it would not be the house he had agreed to paint. Why should not the painter be paid for his- part performance?' It was no fault of his that full performance was impossible. ( Whelan v. Ansonia Clock Co., 97 N. Y. 293.) But why should the owner pay ? Because every stroke of the painter’s brush converted something of the painter’s labor and material into the property of the owner, and thus the fire destroyed' the owner’s property -and not the painter’s. If the painter had been painting a boat .'which he. had agreed to make and deliver to the vendee, and [14]*14fire had destroyed it before delivery, the whole loss would have been his and not the vendee’s, since title would not pass until delivery. (Andrews v. Durant, 11 N. Y. 35.)

In Wolfe v. Howes (20 N. Y. 197) a mechanic agreed to do for an entire year, all the pot room work necessary to be done in the defendant’s, glass works for forty dollars per month, ten dollars to be paid monthly, the balance at the end of the year. He performed as he agreed from IVIay until December when he was disabled by sickness of which he subsequently died. His representative was held entitled to recover the sum unpaid for the time he actually served. Why not? It was impossible-for him to complete his contract, and the defendant had the benefit of what he did do.

If a trader agrees to sell and deliver to B. 607 bales of cotton, marked X, stored in his warehouse and does deliver 460 of them, and the remaining 147 bales are destroyed by fire before delivery,' of course he cannot deliver them, and the law excuses him. (Dexter v. Norton, 47 N. Y. 62.) But, the vendor being without fault, if, the vendee, refuses to return the 460 bales which' he has received and to which he has no title, he ought to pay for them unless the same fire also destroyed them. (Kein v. Tupper, 52 N. Y. 550.) Of course the loss of the undelivered bales falls upon the vendor.

In the case before us the defendant owned the building, and the plaintiff was under a contract with him to do certain specified carpenter and joiner work therein and to furnish the materials therefor, for a. price fixed for the whole, to be paid, however,- in installments as the work advanced. The plaintiff had performed a large part of the work as agreed, and had been paid several installments when the building was destroyed by fire without fault by either party. If the views above expressed are correct, then the plaintiff is excused from further performance, because it became impossible, without fault of his own, and he is entitled to recover for all the labor and material which he added to the house, because his further performance is impossible, and, therefore, cannot be interposed as an obstacle to his recovery, and also because what he thus added became the defendant’s property, and thus the fire destroyed the defendant’s and not the plaintiff’s property.

The learned referee placed his decision in favor of the plaintiff upon Millo v. Binsse (1 Keyes, 476), a case in its particulars almost [15]*15identical with the one before us. The learned referee reluctantly yielded to the authority of that case, because of the similarity of its facts to this case, at the same time confessing that he could not harmonize it with the numerous cases which hold that when performance of a contract depends upon the continued existence of its subject-matter or of some other essential, the law implies that the contract is based upon such continued existence, aud such existence ceasing, the obligation of the contract ceases, leaving each party without recourse to the other on account of any breach of the contract. (Dexter v. Norton, supra; Goldman v. Rosenberg, 116 N. Y. 78; Lorillard v. Olyde, 142 id. 456 ; Stewart v. Stone, 127 id. 560 ; Taylor v. Caldwell, 3 B. & S. 826; 113 Eng. Com. Law Rep. 824.)

These cases simply denied the right of recovery of damages for breach of the contract.

In Dexter v. Norton the plaintiff sought to recover the damages he sustained because the defendant did not deliver to him the 147 bales of cotton which the fire destroyed.

In Goldman v. Rosenberg the plaintiff, sought to compel' the defendant to complete his purchase of a lot which had a valuable building upon it, that was destroyed by fire before the day fixed for the performance of the contract, or to charge the defendant with damage for his non-performance, the action being-for an accounting between the partners.

In Stewart v. Stone the patron of defendant’s cheese factory, at which the patron had delivered milk, to be made into cheese at a stipulated price, sued the defendant to recover for the cheese which was destroyed by the burning of the factory, without fault of the defendant.

In Lorillard v. Clyde both parties were interested in a corporation which the plaintiff was induced to enter, upon the defendant’s guaranteeing that it would pay a certain annual dividend for seven years. The corporation was dissolved at the suit of the Attorney-General at the end of five years. The plaintiff sought nevertheless to recover the dividend upon his shares of stock for the two years following its dissolution.

In Taylor v. Caldwell the defendant agreed to let the plaintiff his music hall for four nights. Before the first night arrived the [16]*16.hall was destroyed by tire without fault of defendant. The plaintiff . sought to recover damages for non-performance.

In all these cases the plaintiff failed to recover, becaiise. in each case the law implied the condition of the continued existence- of the subject-matter of the contract or of an essential respecting it, That is to say, the defendant was not at fault for its breach.

In none of them was it decided that an innocent contractor who- has added his -labor and materials to the owner’s property cannot recover for them when the owner has lost his property by tire, and the contractor is by the. fire,' without fault on his part, both prevented and excused from adding the balance of labor and material which his contract called for. The non-continuance of the subject-matter excuses him from further performance ; but we see no reason why his employer should not bear his own loss and pay for the property which he acquired. When part performance has been made, and there is a legal excuse for further performance, then there is no legal defense to the demand for payment for part performance, unless it is in such a case as is suggested by Johnson, Ch, J., in Wolfe v. Howes (20 N. Y. 197), namely, that it was material that the defendants had received actual benefit from the. services of the plaintiff’s testator, and that quite, a different question would be presented-where the services actually rendered should prove valueless; as, e. g.,

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Bluebook (online)
9 A.D. 12, 40 N.Y.S. 1098, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hayes-v-gross-nyappdiv-1896.