Phillips & Colby Construction Co. v. Seymour

91 U.S. 646, 23 L. Ed. 341, 1875 U.S. LEXIS 1420
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJanuary 11, 1876
Docket44
StatusPublished
Cited by137 cases

This text of 91 U.S. 646 (Phillips & Colby Construction Co. v. Seymour) 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
Phillips & Colby Construction Co. v. Seymour, 91 U.S. 646, 23 L. Ed. 341, 1875 U.S. LEXIS 1420 (1876).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Miller

delivered the opinion of. tbe court.

Tbe plaintiff in error, who was defendant in tbe Circuit Court, is a corporation organized' under tbe laws of Wisconsin. It bad undertaken to biuld tbe whole or a large part of tbe Wisconsin Central Railroad, and had made contracts with tbe defendants in error, whom we shall hereafter call plaintiffs, as they were in tbe Circuit Court, for the construction of a part of this road. These contracts were drawn with tbe minuteness of detail usual in such cases, and provided, among other things, that payments should be made by defendant, as tbe work progressed, on estimates made monthly by tbe engineer of tbe railroad company, On tbe fifteenth day of each month, for all tbe work done the previous month, except fifteen per cent retained by defendant as security .for performance - on tbe part of plaintiffs until tbe work was completed.

Tbe plaintiffs brought their action of covenant on these contracts, alleging that they bad commenced the work in tbe month of July, 1872, shortly after tbe contracts were signed, *648 and prosecuted it vigorously until some time in December; that defendant had failed to pay the large sums due by the estimates for work, done in October and November; and, seeing no prospect of payments, plaintiffs were compelled to abandon the work, and bring this suit. -They assert a claim for all .the work done as estimated, and for various items of damage, suffered by them in consequence of this, failure of defendant to comply with its covenant to pay as agreed.

A demurrer to' this declaration having been overruled, defendant filed.fifteen pleas in bar; also an amended pléa; and, on these, numerous issues of fact were finally joined.

A verdict and judgment were rendered in favor .of plaintiffs for $119,061.46; to reverse which this writ of error is brought.

In this court, plaintiff in error, by one counsel, files forty-five assignments of error, and by another seven more; making fifty-two in all.

The object of the rale requiring an assignment of errors is to enable the court and opposing counsel to see on what points the plaintiffs counsel intend to ask a reversal of the judgment, and to limit the discussion to those points. This practice of unlimited assignments is a perversion of the rule, ‘defeating all its purposes, bewildering the .counsel of the other side, and leaving the court to gather from a brief, often as prolix as the assignments of error,, which of the lattér are really relied on. We can only try to respond to such points made by counsel as seem to be material to the judgment which we must render.

Before we proceed to this examination, however, it may be as .well to say, that, in addition to-a general verdict in favor of plaintiffs for $107,353.44, the jury made three special findings on matters suggested by the court. These are, —

1. That, at the time of the alleged breach of covenant by defendant, it had waived or excused the failure of plaintiffs up to that time to complete certain parts of their work within the times stipulated in the contract;. and that plaintiffs were, at the time of said breach, engaged in the performance of. said work, with the consent of defendant.

2. That defendant, at the time-plaintiffs stopped the? work, had.given plaintiffs to understand that defendant was finan *649 daily unable to pay tbe estimates for work then done,, and would probably be -unable for a time to pay future monthly instalments.

3. That defendant had agreed to pay plaintiffs the .extra cost of doing the earth-work by train on certain sections, and that the amount of this extra cost was $11,708.

These findings must be presumed to be in accordance with the facts, and must stand as foundations .for the judgment of' the court, unless it can be. shown that they are affected by some erroneous ruling of the court in regard to. the admission of .evidence or instructions to the jury.

We now proceed to notice such objections to the rulings of the .Circuit Court as we deem of sufficient, importance to require it.

1. It is said that the declaration is fatally defective because it does not aver that the plaintiffs were ready, willing, and able to perform the covenants on their part to be performed by the contract. It is true that this might have been alleged in more formal and apt terms than it is. But they do aver, that,' from the time they entered upon the work in' July until the fifteenth day of Decnaeber, — the day of the alleged breach oh the part of defendant;— they prosecuted the same with all the energy and skill 'they possessed, having men in large numbers, —to wit, more than 1,000., — with suitable teams and other' equipments, along the whole line of the road of 160 miles; and that defendant had expressed entire satisfaction with the manner'in which plaintiffs were doing the work.

We are inclined to think, that, coupled with the allegation that deféndant was in default for non-payment for work actually done, this was sufficient. It is not like a case where a plaintiff has done nothing, but is required to put a defendant in default by offering to perform, or showing a readiness to perform-. Plaintiffs here had already performed, and the defendant failed to do its corresponding duty under the contract; and, defendant having defaulted on a payment due, plaintiffs are not required to go on at the hazard of further loss.

2. By the terms'of the contract, plaintiffs bound themselves to complete the first-section, of forty miles, by the first day of September; the third section, of twenty miles, by the fifteenth *650 day of the same month; the fourth section, of twenty miles, by the fifteenth day of November; and so on; and it is conceded that no one of these sections was completed within the time prescribed. It was also agreed, that if plaintiffs failed in this respect, or failed in the opinion of the engineer-in-chief of the railroad company to prosecute the work with sufficient vigor to completion according to the terms of the contract, the defendant might declare it abandoned, and the amount retained out of the monthly estimates forfeited. This was fifteen per cent of each monthly estimate, which, by the agreement, was retained by defendant as security for the due progress of the work.

The main proposition; underlying the whole argument of the defence on the general merits, .is, that these covenants to complete certain sections within a definite time, and the covenant to pay, are mutual and dependent covenants; and that time is so far of the essence of this covenant of plaintiffs, that they can recover nothing, because they completed nothing within the. specified time.

Where a specified thing is to be done by one party as the consideration of the thing to be done by the other, it is undeniably the general rule that the covenants are mutual, and are dependent, if they are to be performed at the same time ; and if, by the terms or nature of the contract, one is first to be performed as the condition of the obligation of the other, that which is first to be performed must be done, or tendered, before that party can sustain a suit against the other.

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Bluebook (online)
91 U.S. 646, 23 L. Ed. 341, 1875 U.S. LEXIS 1420, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/phillips-colby-construction-co-v-seymour-scotus-1876.