Remington Arms Union Metallic Cartridge Co. v. Gaynor Manufacturing Co.

120 A. 572, 98 Conn. 721, 1923 Conn. LEXIS 43
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedApril 4, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 120 A. 572 (Remington Arms Union Metallic Cartridge Co. v. Gaynor Manufacturing Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Remington Arms Union Metallic Cartridge Co. v. Gaynor Manufacturing Co., 120 A. 572, 98 Conn. 721, 1923 Conn. LEXIS 43 (Colo. 1923).

Opinion

Beach, J.

Defendant in support of its motion to correct the finding has caused all the evidence to be printed, and in its assignments of error asks that paragraphs twenty, twenty-one, twenty-four, twenty-five, twenty-seven and twenty-eight be expunged; that some other paragraphs be amended by additions which would not materially affect their legal significance, and that twenty-seven paragraphs of its draft-finding, marked not proven, be added to the finding. None of these assignments of error are pursued on the brief except as to paragraph twenty-four. Paragraphs sixteen, seventeen and nineteen are attacked in the brief, but no foundation for doing so is laid in the assignments of error.

*728 All of these four paragraphs deal with the defendant’s failure to make deliveries as required by the contract, and paragraphs sixteen, seventeen and nineteen lead up to and support paragraph twenty-four, which finds that at the time the plaintiff canceled the contract, defendant was unable to perform the contract on its part, and would have been unable to perform within a reasonable time thereafter. This latter finding is objected to as a finding made without evidence; but the slightest examination of the record shows that there was abundant evidence to support it, such as the continued failure of the defendant to approximate the contract rate of delivery; the admitted fact that fourteen months of strenuous effort, assisted at times by the plaintiff, produced a total net delivery of less than six per cent of the bullets contracted for; the fact that nearly one half of the bullets tendered for delivery were defective; that the dies and hammers were continually breaking down; and, finally, the statements already quoted from the defendant’s letter of protest against the final cancellation of the order.

As against this mass of evidence justifying, if not compelling, the inference that the defendant’s new and theretofore untried method of manufacture was inherently impracticable, or at least that the defendant was incapable of perfecting it within a reasonable time after August 8th, 1916, we are referred to a single statement of one of the defendant’s witnesses, “We had our difficulties practically ironed out about the time the cancellation came in”;—a statement which, if well founded in fact, should have been made at the time of the cancellation, and which is quite inconsistent with the statements that were then made. On this state of the record and brief, the printing of the entire evidence was wholly ■unjustified. The requests for correction of the finding are denied.

*729 The other reasons of appeal raise two distinct sets of issues, those relating to the action of the court in overruling the demurrer to the first and third counts of the complaint, and those relating to the judgment for the plaintiff on the first, second and third counts of the complaint and on the defendant’s counterclaim.

The grounds of demurrer as pleaded, appear to be two in number: first, that it does not appear from the complaint and contract that the plaintiff had any right to cancel the unfilled portion of the order on account of the defendant’s failure to make deliveries in accordance with the contract; and second, that by the terms of the contract the only remedy the plaintiff had for such a default by the defendant, was to take over the completion of the contract on the terms specified therein.

The second ground stated raises the question whether the provision giving the plaintiff, in case of defendant’s default, the right to complete the contract at the de-. fendant’s expense, is a remedy concurrent with or exclusive of the remedy in damages given by law. The question is one of the intent of the parties to be gathered from the contract. The agreement for a special remedy does not necessarily exclude the remedy in damages. In Shupe v. Collender, 56 Conn. 489, 15 Atl. 405, we held that where an article was sold with a warranty, and with a provision that on a breach of the warranty the purchaser might return the article sold, the latter might elect to retain it and to recover damages for the breach. See also 13 Corpus Juris, 696, and the elaborate note to Detwiler v. Downes, 119 Minn. 44 (137 N. W. 422), in 50 L. R. A. (N. S.) 753.

In the present case there is nothing in the contract to indicate an intention to exclude the remedy in damages and confine the plaintiff, in case of a breach by the defendant, to the remedy by completion of the con *730 tract at the defendant’s risk. On the contrary, the words used indicate that the special remedy was optional and cumulative.

We need not pursue this branch of the discussion, for it is apparent that the second ground of demurrer does not touch the causes of action alleged in the first and third counts, because the plaintiff is not attempting to pursue its remedy in damages. The action is not grounded on the defendant’s inability to make deliveries as required. True, that is alleged as the reason why the contract was terminated, but the reason is not important except so far as it was important for the plaintiff to allege that the contract was effectually, because lawfully, terminated. That having been sufficiently alleged, the plaintiff’s cause of action, as stated in the complaint, is for money had and received and materials furnished for a special purpose which cannot now be carried out. What the plaintiff’s remedy might be if another and different cause of action were alleged is immaterial.

It was apparently to meet this difficulty that the first ground of demurrer was stated in much broader terms: that the plaintiff had no right or authority to cancel the unfilled portion of the order in case of defendant’s fault. Meaning that the plaintiff, in such case, must go forward and complete the contract at the defendant’s risk whether it wanted to do so or not. That position is plainly untenable. Upon any construction of the contract, the plaintiff must at least have the right to put a stop to the further performance of the contract for good cause, upon the terms of waiving any remedy for the breach which the contract gives it. So far as this record discloses, that is what has been done. Similar provisions are commonly found in building contracts, but it has never been supposed that the owner might not, for good cause, eject the contractor and *731 leave the building unfinished, if he chose to take that course. The demurrer was rightly overruled.

Turning now to the assignments of érror touching the judgment, most of them relate to the defendant’s claim of law that the plaintiff having, for fourteen months, accepted deliveries at irregular intervals and at a rate less than the contract called for, had no right to peremptorily put an end to further performance by the defendant, on the ground of delayed deliveries, without first giving the defendant reasonable notice of its intention to demand a strict performance in the future. That is a sound proposition of law. In Grippo v. Davis, 92 Conn. 693, 104 Atl.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

RBC Nice Bearings, Inc. v. SKF USA, Inc.
Supreme Court of Connecticut, 2015
Cie v. West Haven Buckle Co., No. 323965 (Aug. 23, 1995)
1995 Conn. Super. Ct. 9423 (Connecticut Superior Court, 1995)
Silliman Co. v. S. Ippolito & Sons, Inc.
467 A.2d 1249 (Connecticut Appellate Court, 1983)
S.H.V.C., Inc. v. Roy
428 A.2d 806 (Connecticut Superior Court, 1981)
S. H. v. C., Inc. v. Roy
428 A.2d 806 (Connecticut Superior Court, 1981)
Vines v. Orchard Hills, Inc.
435 A.2d 1022 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1980)
Bradford Novelty Co. v. Technomatic, Inc.
112 A.2d 214 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1955)
Stewart v. Moss
192 P.2d 362 (Washington Supreme Court, 1948)
C. E. Slauson Co. v. Liberio Arena
130 A. 68 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1925)
Boston Lumber Co. v. Pendleton Brothers, Inc.
129 A. 782 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1925)
Dexter Yarn Co. v. American Fabrics Co.
129 A. 527 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1925)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
120 A. 572, 98 Conn. 721, 1923 Conn. LEXIS 43, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/remington-arms-union-metallic-cartridge-co-v-gaynor-manufacturing-co-conn-1923.