Johnson v. Fehsefeldt

Decision Date11 December 1908
Docket Number15,784 - (56)
Citation118 N.W. 797,106 Minn. 202
PartiesHAROLD JOHNSON and Another v. JOHN FEHSEFELDT
CourtMinnesota Supreme Court

Action in the district court for Grant county to recover possession of certain grain threshed by plaintiffs, on which they had filed a threshers' lien, or for $250, the value thereof and $100 damages. The case was tried before Flaherty, J., who directed a verdict in favor of plaintiffs that they were entitled to the possession of certain flax or the sum of $138.49. Defendant moved for a new trial which was granted unless plaintiffs would consent that the value of the grain be reduced to $65.28 and that the lien of plaintiffs on the flax be for the sum of $65.28. Plaintiffs consented to the reduction, but defendant appealed. Reversed and new trial granted.

SYLLABUS

Entire Contract -- Recovery by Party Who Abandons It.

Where a contract is entire, and one party, not in default, is willing to complete its performance, the other party, who abandons the contract or refuses to perform it, cannot recover on the contract or on a quantum meruit the value of the labor he has expended in its partial performance.

Contract not Severable.

The mere fact that a price has been affixed to each bushel of a crop contracted to be threshed is not sufficient to make it severable.

Recovery on Quantum Meruit.

In this case it is held that whether an agreement to thresh grain for a specified price was to thresh an entire crop or an indefinite number of bushels was a question of fact, and that, if the contract should prove to be an entire one, the thresherman, who abandoned the contract before all the grain had been threshed because it was being performed at a loss, cannot recover on the contract on a quantum meruit the agreed price of the number of bushels actually threshed.

N. J. Bothne and James B. Ormond, for appellant.

F. W. Murphy and F. C. Anderson, for respondents.

OPINION

JAGGARD, J.

Plaintiffs and respondents, owners of a threshing outfit, entered into a verbal agreement with defendant and appellant to thresh defendant's grain, for which defendant agreed to pay the sum of ten cents a bushel for wheat, six cents a bushel for oats, and fifteen cents for flax. Plaintiffs contend that this case involved an agreement to thresh grain at so much per bushel; defendant, that it was to thresh all of his crop of grain. Upon the record, we are of the opinion that the question was one of fact. Pursuant to the agreement the plaintiffs threshed a portion of the crop. Before the entire crop had been threshed, plaintiffs hauled their threshing machine away from defendant's premises and refused to thresh more for the reason that they were losing money. There was testimony tending to show that there were some three hundred acres of grain left in shock, which plaintiffs neglected and refused to thresh. Defendant then completed the threshing of his grain through other parties. Subsequently plaintiffs filed thresher's liens. The court directed a verdict in effect for the plaintiffs for the work and threshing they had done at the agreed price per bushel. A motion for a new trial was denied, provided the plaintiffs stipulated for a reduction of the verdict. The stipulation was filed. The court thereupon denied the motion for a new trial, from which appellant appealed.

For present purposes, and for them only, it must and will be assumed, upon a construction most favorable to the defeated party, that plaintiffs agreed to thresh all of defendant's crop. The essential question is whether the contract was entire and indivisible, in the sense that plaintiffs could not recover upon a quantum meruit or upon the contract to the extent to which it had been performed. On principle we are of opinion that plaintiffs could not recover. When they found that they were operating at a loss they had the option to complete the contract, recover the contract price, and submit to the loss, or to abandon the contract, lose the work they had done, and be subject to whatever damages might be recoverable for the breach of the contract. The fact that plaintiffs had rendered services, the value of which defendant retained, did not entitle plaintiffs to recover on quantum meruit because of the contract and of the inability of de...

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