Raymond v. Fisher

6 Mo. 29
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedAugust 15, 1839
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 6 Mo. 29 (Raymond v. Fisher) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Raymond v. Fisher, 6 Mo. 29 (Mo. 1839).

Opinion

Opinion of the court, delivered by

Napton, Judge:

“This was an action of eonvenant brought by Raymond against the defendants, Fisher and Hanson, in the Boon circuit court. The covenant declared on was executed by the parties on the 33d of September, 1838, by which Raymond contracted to deliver, by the first day of November-following, at Rocheport, two flat boats, of specified description, and the defendants agreed to pay therefor, on delivery, three hundred and sixty dollars, anda penalty of three hundred dollars, in the shape of liquidated damages, was agreed to be paid by the failing party.

The declaration alleges that, after the date of the covenant so made, on the 10th of October following, a parol agreement was made between the parties, that the time for the delivery of the boats should be extended until the 15th day of November following; that in pursuance of said agreement, plaintiff completed and delivered one of the boats made in pusurance of the plan in the covenant, and that defendants accepted the same and that on the 14th day of November, before the time agreed on by parol expired, said defendants hindered the plaintiff from completing and delivering the other boat, by declaring they would not receive the, other boat, &c. The breaches assigned are for the penalty and the price of the boat*

[30]*30~'° declaration, defendants demurred generally, and circuit court sustained the demurrer.

The only question is, whether an action of covenant can cuni;:inod on a covenant modified by a subsequent parol argreemcnt. It must be admitted, that the question is not. ■without it i difficulties, whether reviewed as one of mere, picecdent, or as involving the very rights of the parties. ‘Ihocorit; of Now-Yorfc, especially,have so connected their opiiiic:i:i relation to the rights of the parties to contracts, some of v. Inch this court in the case of Helm and Wilson, (4 Me. R. 45) have solemnly disclaimed, with their adjudications os to the remedies for the establishment of those rights, that it may not be very easy to extract any general and fired ¿ule of practice from the cases determined by that comí.

i aj'j.jcl.end, however, that notwithstanding a conflict of coci.k.n;; may bo discovered, it may be safely affirmed that ¡ho question arising on this demaner is merely a ques-on a ic the form of action. The law must be regarded as scii’e:!,, that a scaled contract may be modified as to the timo of performance by a subsequent parol agreement. Colg vs Sharp, 4 Mo. Rep. 41, 481, 2d Cond. Rep. 581.

rUiis court has also decided, Ihat where there is special ccn'u’.-ct, and the plaintiff seeks to recover the value of his work do >0 in accordance with such contract, he must dé-cimo on 1kesq ecial contract, and if his entire completion of the v. oik in accordance with the terms of the contract has been prevented by the acts of the other party, he may allege such prevention as an excuse for non-peí formarme. Clendennin v Paulsel, 3 Mo. Rep. 320. Cramp v Mead, ib 233: Helm v Wilson, 4 Mo. Rep. 45. In the two first case?, there were covenants between the parties, and the court declared that the plaintiff must recover on the covenant; but I do not understand the court to intimate that if the covenants have been varied by parol agreement, they can still declare in covenant, though it may be well inferred that they must declare specially. Th® question, as I take it, is therefore still open so far the decisions of this court are eon-[31]*31cerned, whether a sealed contract -can be declared on in covenant, with an averment that by a subsequent parol agreement the time of performance was enlarged.

It is incoutrovertably settled, that where a covenant has been muddied by a subsequent parol’ contract for enlarging the time of performance, and the plaintiff declares on the covenant, without any averment of such subsequent agreement by parol to dispense with the time, he cannot recover. Sittler v Holland 3. T. R. 599. Phillips v Butler 8. John R. 392 Freeman v Adams 9 J. 115. Stetvillo v Miles 2 Marsh. 425, Harrison v Taylor 3 Marsh, 154. The leading case on this subject is the case in Dunford and East, of Sittler against Holland. The plaintiff had ‘covenanted to build two house j for L5i)9 by a certain day, and in an action of covenant for the money, averred that the houses were built in tiro time;— to which defendant pleaded, that the houses were not built in the time. Plain'tiif proved on the trial, that the parties had, by a parol agreement subsequent to the date of the articles, enlarged the time, and that the whole work was finished before the expiration of the enlarged timo. Lord Kenyon said- — “This point is so clear, that I am not inclined to grant a rule to shew cause. The declaration cl large j that the parties had slip u!a tod by deed to perform a specific thing on a certain day; then if the plain till’, who sues on contract, bo not bound to prove it as laid, the defendant has no notice of tiiat which he is called on to answer.”

Tills brings us to the question, whether, if the plaintiff avers in his declaration the existence of the parol agreement as an excuse for the non performance of his'eovenant within the time, he can then be allowed to recover. Jf Lord Kenyon put the decision in Sittler against Holland on the true ground, that of surprise, then it would seem very clear, that where the proper averments were introduced, that objection would be obviated and the action sustainable. But I apprehend, that this was some of the grounds only — for he proceeds — “I remember an action being brought many years ago by Mr. Garrick, or one of the managers cf the [32]*32theatre, against Barry for not performing his contract. It appeared on the trial, that the manager had given the de-Cendant a parol license to be absent, but the articles, on which the action was founded, required such a license tobe in writing, the court held that it could not be dispensed with, and that the parol agreement was no answer to the plaintiffs action; though perhaps the defendant had another remedy in a court of equity.”

From this it would seem to have been the opinion of the Chief Justice, that a parol agreement could not be set up even by the defendant to vary the terms of a sealed instrument — a length to which the more modern cases have never gone.

The case of Langworthes and Clark against Smith (2 Wend 587) is decisive of this question, so far as the opinion of the New York courts can settle it. The action, in that case, was covenant, and the declaration alledged a contract under seal, by which the plaintiff covenanted to erect a certain bulk head in the East River, to be completed by a certain day, and further averred, as an excuse for non performance by the day specified in the covenant, an enlargement of the time by parol agreement. Savage C. J. said, “There can be no doubt that a parol enlargement of the time set in a sealed instrument for the performance of covenants is good; but there can be as little doubt, at this day, that where there is such enlargement of a condition precedent, the plaintiff loses his remedy upon the covenant itself, and must seek it upon the agreement enlarging the time of performance.” The English casks, upon which the decision was rested, are the case of Sittler against Holland, above referred to, and the case of Brown v Goodman cited in 3 Term R. 592. The first case, as we have seen, does not entirely sustain the position of C. J. Sjvage. Brown and Goodman was an action on an arbitration bond, in which the time was limited for the arbitrator to make his award.

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Related

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58 Mo. App. 37 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1894)

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Bluebook (online)
6 Mo. 29, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/raymond-v-fisher-mo-1839.