Neis v. Yocum

16 F. 168, 1883 U.S. App. LEXIS 2127
CourtUnited States Circuit Court
DecidedMay 15, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 16 F. 168 (Neis v. Yocum) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Neis v. Yocum, 16 F. 168, 1883 U.S. App. LEXIS 2127 (uscirct 1883).

Opinion

Deady, J.

The plaintiffs, citizens of California, bring this action against the defendant, a citizen of Oregon, to recover the sum of $22,750 damages for the alleged non-performance of a contract for the sale and delivery of 65,000 pounds of hops on demand, at Eugene. The complaint alleges that on October 17, 1882, the defendant sold to the plaintiff 65,000 pounds of hops for 60 cents per pound,1 and then and there agreed with the plaintiffs to deliver them said hops at the town of Eugene, Oregon, on demand therefor; “that plaintiffs have always been ready and willing to receive said hops, and have offered to receive and pay therefor, and have demanded thfe same from said defendant, but the said defendant, although often requested so to do, lias hitherto refused and still refuses to deliver the same to the said plaintiffs,” to their damage as aforesaid. The defendant demurs to the complaint, for that it does not appear at what time or place the alleged demand for the hops was made, or when the plaintiffs offered to receive and pay for the same, or that the plaintiffs were ever ready or willing to receive or pay for the same.

The undertakings of the parties to this contract are mutual and dependent, to be performed concurrently. The defendant was not [170]*170bound to deliver tbe bops until the plaintiffs bad both demanded and paid for them, nor were tbe plaintiffs bound to pay for them until they were delivered. But if either party would enforce this contract against the other he must do more than show the default of such other; he must show a performance or an offer to perform on his part, or, according to the. circumstances of the case, that he was ready and willing to perform at the time and place appointed. Dunham v. Mann, 8 N. Y. 508; Coonley v. Anderson, 1 Hill, 519; Lester v. Jewett, 11 N. Y. 453; Goldsborough v. Orr, 8 Wheat. 224; Phila., etc., Ry. Co. v. Howard, 13 How. 338.

Although the undertakings of the parties to a contract are mutual and dependent, — to he performed concurrently, — a performance or offer to perform; or readiness and willingness to perform, at the time and place appointed, are conditions precedent to the right of either party to maintain an action for the default of the other. Until these conditions are complied with the default is mutual, and neither partv can complain of the other.

In this case the contract obliges the plaintiffs to make a demand for the hops, and as no time is specified within which it was to have been made, the law will imply that it should have been made within a reasonable time, the circumstances of the transaction being considered. For instance, it could hardly be supposed that the parties were dealing with reference to any other hops than the crop of that year, and it must have been in the contemplation of both of them that the plaintiffs would demand and receive the hops within the usual period of marketing the crop annually produced in the vicinity of the point where the delivery was to be made. It is not understood that Eugene is a hop depot, or a place where hops are stored for sale and export all the year round, but rather a point where the hops grown in the immediate vicinity are received and shipped on the railway to Portland and elsewhere.' And for this very reason it may be that although the demand and delivery are in contemplation of law acts to be concurrently performed, yet in fact the understood circumstances of the case may warrant the conclusion that the defendant was entitled to more or less time after demand was made to collect and deliver the hops at Eugene. Coonley v. Anderson, 1 Hill, 522. But a demand without an offer to pay was sufficient to devolve upon the defendant the duty of delivering the hops at the time specified therein, and at the place agreed on; and therefore, in my judgment, as soon as the demand was duly made, this case came within the category of those in which it is held that when one party [171]*171agrees to deliver an article at a certain time and place, and another agrees then and there to receive and pay for it, that in an action by the. latter against the former for the non-performance of the contract, it is sufficient to allege and show that he was ready and willing, at the time and place appointed, to receive and pay for the article, without going further, and alleging that he offered to pay for it also. In such case the buyer’s duty is to be present at the time and place appointed, ready and willing there to perform the contract on his part — to receive and pay for the article purchased; and, if the seller does nothing, his right of action is thereupon complete. He is not bound to go out into the highways or elsewhere to find the seller, who may have no place of abode or business anywhere in the vicinity, for the purpose of making a tender of payment. Coonley v. Anderson, 1 Hill, 523. But if the seller, in pursuance of a demand or otherwise, according > to his contract, has the article ready for delivery at the time and place appointed, the buyer must show an offer there to receive and pay for it, before he can maintain an action for the non-delivery.

Tried by this statement of the law, the facts stated in the complaint are more than sufficient to enable the plaintiff to maintain this action. There is an averment of readiness and willingness to receive, of an offer to receive and pay, and of a demand. These facts, in connection with the contract stated, constitute a cause- of action. The complaint is sufficient to support a verdict and judgment for the plaintiffs. And although the demand may not be stated with sufficient particularity, and the complaint in this respect would be liable at common law to a special demurrer for not stating when it was made, and the time appointed by it for the delivery of the hops, still, if the parties go to trial upon it, the allegation of a demand is sufficient to admit the proof of any fact necessary to a legal demand, and in case of a verdict for the plaintiffs and a motion in arrest of judgment, it would be presumed that such proof had been made. Clark v. Dales, 20 Barb. 65; Renner v. Bank of Columbia, 9 Wheat. 595; De Sobry v. Nicholson, 3 Wall. 424.

Special demurrers are not allowed by the Code of Civil Procedure. In section 66 thereof the grounds of demurrer to a complaint are specified, but none of them include the mere manner of stating a fact or the defective statement of material matter. By subdivision 6 of this section the defendant may demur to the complaint on the ground that the facts do not constitute a cause of action, and thus [172]*172objection is not waived by a failure to demur, but may be made on a motion in arrest of judgment.

Doubtless there are .cases in which the time wherein an act was done or pceurred is material, and the statement of the fact without the time would not constitute a cause of action nor an element of one. But in a case like this, when the agreement is that the article shall be delivered on a demand, not required to be made within any specified time, the allegation that a demand was made, without mentioning any time, is a sufficient statement of the fact to support a verdict, and therefore a general demurrer will not lie to the complaint on that account.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
16 F. 168, 1883 U.S. App. LEXIS 2127, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/neis-v-yocum-uscirct-1883.