Pakas v. . Hollingshead

77 N.E. 40, 184 N.Y. 211, 22 Bedell 211, 1906 N.Y. LEXIS 1355
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 6, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by55 cases

This text of 77 N.E. 40 (Pakas v. . Hollingshead) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pakas v. . Hollingshead, 77 N.E. 40, 184 N.Y. 211, 22 Bedell 211, 1906 N.Y. LEXIS 1355 (N.Y. 1906).

Opinions

O’Brien, J.

On the 30th of August, 1898, the defendants, by an executory contract in writing, agreed to sell and deliver to the plaintiff fifty thousand pairs of bicycle pedals, the goods *213 to be delivered and paid for in installments, as specified in the contract. It has been found by the trial court that the defendants delivered two thousand six' hundred and eight pairs of pedals under the contract, and refused to make further deliveries. When the fact is established that the seller of goods to be delivered and paid for in installments, as in this case, refuses to deliver the goods, that amounts to a repudiation of the contract and a breach of it, for which the buyer may recover damages. So we start in this case with a breach of a contract on the part of the defendants by their refusal to be bound by its obligations.

It is found that on the loth of March, 1899, the plaintiff commenced an action against the defendants in the City Court of Hew York for breach of this contract, in that they failed to deliver to the plaintiff the pedals which, by the terms of the agreement, the defendants were bound to deliver up to the first of March, 1899, to wit, nineteen thousand pair, of which the defendants had delivered only, the two thousand six hundred and eight pairs, and had failed to deliver sixteen thousand eight hundred and ninety-two pairs, which were to be delivered up to the first of March, 1899. This action was put at issue, and after a trial the plaintiff recovered judgment against the defendants for the full amount claimed in the complaint in the action as damages for the breach of the contract, which judgment has been paid by the defendants in full.

Subsequently and in February, 1900, the plaintiff commenced the present action to recover damages for a failure to deliver the balance of the goods, and both parties have pleaded the former suit and judgment. The plaintiff claims that it is conclusive evidence in his favor with respect to the existence, validity, terms and breach of the contract, while the defendants interpose it as a bar to the present action. This situation presents the question of law involved in the case. Judgment was given at the trial court in favor of the defendants and this judgment was affirmed on appeal. The question of law arising upon these facts is whether the former judgment concludes the plaintiff and is a bar to a *214 second action to recover damages on the same contract. There can be no doubt that the contract was entire. It could not be performed on the part of the defendants without delivery of the property stipulated in the contract and the whole of it. As was said by Judge Bradley in Brock v. Knower (37 Hun, 609), the fact that the .property was deliverable and the purchase money payable at different times in the future did not necessarily deprive the contract of the character of entirety or make it other than a single one in respect to all the goods embraced in its terms. The learned counsel for the plaintiff contends that the former judgment did not constitute a bar to the present action, but that the plaintiff had the right to elect to waive or disregard the breach, keep the contract in force and maintain successive actions for damages from time to time as the installments of goods were to be delivered, however numerous these actions might be. It is said that this contention is supported in reason and justice, and has the sanction of authority at least in other jurisdictions.

We do not think that' the contention can be maintained. There is not, as it seems to us, any judicial authority in this state that gives it any substantial support. On the contrary, we think that the cases, so far as we have been able to examine them, are all the other way, and are to the effect that inasmuch as there was a total breach of the contract by the defendants’ refusal to deliver, the plaintiff cannot split up his demand and maintain successive actions, but must either recover all his damages in the first suit or wait until the contract matured or the time for the delivery of all the goods had arrived. In other words, there can be but one action for damages for a total breach of an entire contract to deliver goods, and the fact that they were to be delivered in installments from time to time does not change the general rule.

This question arose in this state at an early day. In Miller v. Covert (1 Wend. 487) it was held that where a party brings an action for a,part only of an entire and indivisible demand and obtains judgment in such action he cannot subsequently *215 avail himself of the residue by way of offset in an action against him by the opposite party.

It was held in the case of Bendernagle v. Cocks (19 Wend. 207) that where a party had several demands or existing causes of action growing out of the same contract or resting in matter of accou/nt which may be joined and sued for in the same action they must be joined; and if the demands or causes of action be split up and a suit brought for part only and subsequently a second suit for the residue is brought, the first action may be pleaded in abatement or in bar of the second action. That, it seems to us, is what has been decided in this case. The case referred to was elaborately discussed by Judge Cowen, and the English authorities on the subject cited and distinguished.

Colburn v. Woodworth (31 Barb. 381) was an action by an employee to recover wages under a contract to work for the plaintiff for three years from August 1st, 1857, payable quarterly, and damages for a breach of the contract by the defendant in discharging the plaintiff from his employment on the 26th day of December, 1857, without cause. The defendant pleaded and proved that in January, 1858, after the plaintiff was discharged, he commenced an action against the defendant, and in his cqmplaint claimed one quarter’s wages and damages for the wrongful discharge. The cause was referred and the referee, reported in favor of the plaintiff for one quarter’s wages, and the plaintiff had judgment on the report. Subsequently, the plaintiff brought another action for wages and damages, but the trial court held that the former judgment was a bar and granted a nonsuit. Judge Johnson, in delivering the opinion of the court, said: “There-can be no doubt that the cause of action here alleged is in its nature indivisible. All the damages which the plaintiff'could, under any circumstances, recover, were such as flow directly and necessarily from the breach, which is the sole cause of action. The contract is not in the nature of a continuing covenant, like a covenant running with land. It is idle to suppose that when such a contract has been once put an end to by one *216 party entirely, though without sufficient cause, and th& other party has brought his action for the damage occasioned by such breach and had the judgment of the court upon his claim, the contract still remains in force so as to entitle such other party to the compensation provided for in case of its performance.

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Bluebook (online)
77 N.E. 40, 184 N.Y. 211, 22 Bedell 211, 1906 N.Y. LEXIS 1355, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pakas-v-hollingshead-ny-1906.