Walker & Company v. Harrison

81 N.W.2d 352, 347 Mich. 630, 1957 Mich. LEXIS 469
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 28, 1957
DocketDocket 14, Calendar 46,646
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 81 N.W.2d 352 (Walker & Company v. Harrison) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Walker & Company v. Harrison, 81 N.W.2d 352, 347 Mich. 630, 1957 Mich. LEXIS 469 (Mich. 1957).

Opinion

Smith, J.

This is a suit on a written contract. The defendants are in the dry-cleaning business. Walker & Company, plaintiff, sells, rents, and services advertising signs and billboards. These parties entered into an agreement pertaining to a sign. The agreement is in writing and is termed a “rental agreement.” It specifies, in part, that:

“The lessor agrees to construct and install, at its own cost, one 18' 9" high x 8' 8" wide pylon type d.f. neon sign with electric clock and flashing lamps. * * * The lessor agrees to and does hereby lease or rent unto the said lessee the said sign for the term, use and rental and under the conditions, hereinafter *632 set out, and the lessee agrees to pay .said rental. * # # .
“(a) The term of this lease shall be 36 months. * * # .
“(b) The rental to be paid by lessee shall be $148.50 per month for each and every calendar month during the term of this lease; * * *
“(d) Maintenance. Lessor at its expense agrees to maintain and service the sign together with such equipment as supplied and installed by the lessor to operate in conjunction with said sign under the terms of this leasethis service is to include cleaning and repainting of sign in original color scheme as often as' deemed necessary by lessor to keep sign in first-class advertising condition and make all necessary -repairs to sign and equipment installed by lessor.” .

’At the “expiration of this agreement,” it was also provided, “title to this sign reverts to lessee.”' This' clause is in addition to the printed form of agreement and was apparently added as a result of defendants’ concern over title, they having expressed a desire “to buy for cash” and the salesman, abone time, having “quoted a cash price.”

The sign was completed and installed in the latter part of July, 1953. The first billing of the monthly payment of $148.50 was made August 1, 1953, with payment thereof by defendants on September 3,1953. ’ This first payment was also the last. Shortly after the sign was" installed, someone hit it with'a tomato. Rust, also, was'visible on the chrome, complained defendants, and in its corners were “little spider cobwebs.” In addition, there were “some children’s sayings written down in here.” Defendant -Herbert Harrison called Walker for the maintenance he believed himself entitled to under sub-paragraph (d) above. It was not forthcoming. He called again and again. “I was getting, you might say,..sorer and .sorer. * . *■ * .Occasionally, when *633 I started calling up,-1 would walk around where the tomato was and get mad again. Then I would call up on the phone again.” Finally, on October 8, 1953, plaintiff not having responded to his repeated calls, he telegraphed Walker that:

“You Have Continually Voided Our Rental Contract by Not Maintaining Signs as Agreed as We No Longer Have a Contract With You Do Not Expect any Further Remuneration.”

Walker’s reply was in the form of a letter. After first pointing out that “your telegram does not make any specific allegations as to what the failure of maintenance comprises,” and stating that “We certainly would appreciate your furnishing us with such information,” the letter makes reference to a prior collateral controversy between the parties, “wondering if this' refusal on our part prompted your attempt'to void our rental contract,” and concludes as follows:

“We would like to call your attention to paragraph G in our rental contract, which covers procedures in the event of a breach of agreement. In the event that you carry out your threat to make no future monthly payments in accordance with the agreement, it is our intention to enforce the conditions outlined uiider paragraph G * through the *634 proper legal channels. We call to your attention that your' monthly rental payments are due in advance at our office not later than the 10th day of each current month. You are now approximately 30 days in arrears on- your September payment. Unless we receive both the September and October payments by October 25th, this entire matter will be placed in the hands of our attorney for collection' in accordance with paragraph Gr which stipulates that the entire amount is forthwith due and payable.”

No additional payments were made and Walker sued in assumpsit for the entire balance due under the' contract, $5,197.50, invoking paragraph (g) of the agreement. Defendants filed answer’and claim of recoupment, asserting that plaintiff’s failure to perform certain maintenance services constituted a prior material breach of the agreement, thus justifying their repudiation of the contract and grounding- their claim for damages. The case was tried to the court without a jury and resulted in a judgment for the plaintiff. The case is before us on a general appeal.

Defendants urge upon us again and again, in various forms, the proposition that Walker’s failure to service the sign, in response to repeated requests, constituted a material breach of the contract and justified repudiation by them. Their legal proposi *635 tion is undoubtedly correct. Repudiation is one of the weapons available to an injured party in event the other contractor has committed a.material breach. But the injured party’s determination that there has been a material breach, justifying his own repudiation, is fraught with peril, for should such determination, as viewed by a later court in the calm of its contemplation, be unwarranted, the repudiator himself will have been guilty of material breach and himself have become the aggressor, not an innocent victim.

What is our criterion for determining whether or not a breach of contract is so fatal to the undertaking of the parties that it is to be classéd as “material” ? There is no single touchstone. Many factors are involved. They are well stated in 1 Restatement, Contracts, § 275, in the following terms:

' “In determining the materiality of a failure fully to perform a promise the following circumstances are influential:
“(a) The extent to which the injured party will obtain the substantial benefit which he could have reasonably anticipated;
“(b) The extent to which the injured party may be adequately compensated in damages for lack of complete performance;
“(c) The extent to which the party failing to perform has already partly performed or made preparations for performance’; ’
“(d) The greater or less hardship on the party failing to perform in terminating the contract;
“(e) The willful, negligent or innocent behavior of the party failing to.perform;
:“ (f) The greater or less uncertainty that the party failing to perform will perform the remainder of the contract.” .....,■

We 'will--not set forth, in detail the testimony offered concerning the need for servicing.. Granting *636

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Bluebook (online)
81 N.W.2d 352, 347 Mich. 630, 1957 Mich. LEXIS 469, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walker-company-v-harrison-mich-1957.