Lipschutz v. Weatherly.

53 S.E. 132, 140 N.C. 365, 1906 N.C. LEXIS 2
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedFebruary 27, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 53 S.E. 132 (Lipschutz v. Weatherly.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lipschutz v. Weatherly., 53 S.E. 132, 140 N.C. 365, 1906 N.C. LEXIS 2 (N.C. 1906).

Opinion

Connor, J.,

after stating the facts: Defendants’ first exception, pointing to the submission of the second issue, is presented upon their exception to His Honor’s charge and will be considered in that connection/ The second exception to the admisison of defendant Weatherly’s statement that he *368 sent the telegram in reply to plaintiff’s of June 9, 1904, cannot be sustained. The defendants, having introduced plaintiff’s telegram calling for an answer, it was clearly competent to elicit from him whether or not he answered the telegram. There is no rule of law requiring the agreement to rescind or cancel such a contract as existed between the parties to be evidenced by any writing. Certainly the defendant, having shown a notice on the part of plaintiff that he had elected to rescind could have been asked the general question whether defendants assented to the rescission. If any question had arisen in regard to the terms of the language of the telegram, it would have been necessary to produce it or to account for its absence. The testimony simply showed, by the admission of defendant Weatherly, that he sent a telegram in the language suggested by plaintiff. The exception cannot be sustained. The real controversy between the parties is presented by defendants’ contention. 1st. That conceding the .facts to be as shown by the correspondence, there was no valid rescission of the original or substitution by new contract, for that the agreement to rescind is not supported by any valuable consideration. 2nd. That if there was a rescission by mutual consent, their right to recover damages sustained prior to the breach was not waived or surrendered. It is well settled that a contract may be discharged by an express agreement that it shall no longer bind either party. This is usually and correctly 'termed a rescission. It is equally well settled that such an agreement to operate as a discharge must be supported by a valuable consideration, which may be either a payment in money, something of value, or by a release of mutual obligations arising out of the contract. In Brown v. Lumber Co., 117 N. C., 287, it is said: “When the contract is wholly executory, a mere agreement between the parties, that it shall no longer bind them is valid, for the discharge of each by the-other, from his liabilities under the contract is a sufficient consideration of the promise of the other to forego his rights. *369 * * * If a contract has been executed on one side, an agreement that it shall no longer be binding, without more, is void for want of a consideration. Clark on Contracts, 418. Of the' several methods by which a contract may be discharged, one is by substitution of a new contract, the terms of which differ from the original. In such eases the release of the obligations of the old and the substitution of new obligations constitute valuable considerations.” “It is also now well settled that ordinarily a written contract, before breach, may be varied by a subsequent oral agreement, made on a sufficient consideration, as to the terms of it which are to be observed in the future. Such a subsequent oral agreement may enlarge the time of performance, or may vary other terms of the contract, or may waive and discharge it altogether.” Hastings v. Lovejoy, 140 Mass., 261. In McCreery v. Levy, 119 N. Y., 1, Andrews, J. says: “The agreement annulling the prior contract is supported by an adequate consideration. The new obligation which G assumed under the contract of October 25, 1882, was alone a sufficient consideration. There was a consideration also in the mutual agreement of the parties to the prior contract which was still executory, although in the course of performance, to discharge each other from reciprocal obligations thereunder and to substitute a new and different agreement in place thereof.” The principle is well illustrated in Dreifus Block Co. v. Salvage Co., 194 Penn., 415. Assuming that the determination of the plaintiff to rescind the contract, as communicated by him to defendants on May 28, was a breach of its terms, the defendants may have stood by their rights under the contract and sued for such damages as they sustained. Instead of doing so, they desired to continue purchasing cigars from plaintiff, who refused to sell on any other terms than an assent to the rescission. The defendants elected to assent to plaintiff’s terms, deeming it conducive to their interests to do so. The status of the parties at this time is well illustrated by what is said by Mr. Justice *370 Dean in Dreifus Co. v. Salvage Co., supra. In speaking of tbe breach of a contract by defendant to deliver steel at a fixed price, be said: “Assume * * * that there was a distinct declaration that the company would not perform its contract; still if anything can be clear, it is, that above all things,, plaintiff did not want a law suit for damages; at that stage, their damages were wholly uncertain, depending on the fluctuating price of steel; they did know they wanted the steel; what damage they might want by reason of defendants’ breach, or what they might sustain, they did not know. In this dilemma they sought for and obtained a new contract expressly cancelling the old * * * They agreed to accept a fixed quantity and quality of merchandise at fixed times and prices, instead of the uncertain event of a law suit.” In Goebel v. Linn, 47 Mich., 489, plaintiff had made a contract to furnish defendant, who was a brewer, ice, during the season at a fixed price. During the life of the contract he notified defendant that he would not furnish any more ice unless defendant paid a very much larger price. Defendant, after protesting, assented to the change in price and purchased the ice at the price for which the action was brought. He set up, as a defense, that the note for the price of the ice, was without consideration, etc. Cooley, J., said that the defendant had a right to refuse to buy ice at the advanced price and sue for damages for the breach of the contract. “But defendants did not elect to takq that course. They chose, for reasons which they must have deemed sufficient at the time, to submit to the company’s demand and pay the increased price rather than rely upon their strict rights under the existing contract.” We are of the opinion that the defendants elected to consent to the cancellation or rescission of the original contract, in consideration of the substituted contract by which plaintiffs agreed to sell them cigars upon the terms set out in the letters of May 28, and June 6, 1904, and the telegram of June 9, and that this consent was based upon a valuable considera *371 tion. The defendants say that conceding this to be true, their right to recover damages which had accrued prior to such rescission was not affected thereby. Certainly after a contract is discharged, either by rescission or substitution of a new contract, no action can be maintained on the original contract. For any benefits accruing to either party by performance of the contract, unless expressly released, an action as upon a quantum meruit, if it be labor performed, or quantum valebat, if property received, may be maintained. It is, not upon the contract, but upon an implied assumpsit.

In Dreifus Co. v. Salvage Co., supra,

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Bluebook (online)
53 S.E. 132, 140 N.C. 365, 1906 N.C. LEXIS 2, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lipschutz-v-weatherly-nc-1906.