
    Bannister vs Weatherford.
    Error to the Marion Circuit.
    Case.
    
      Case 72.
    Avariance in the proof from the day alledged in the declaration waltohavebeen delivered, m a deliver it, ¡safathough the del haTe^been^amended during the trial.
    
      Practice., Variance. Contracts.
    
    
      June 17.
    
   Chief Justice Marshall

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The variance between the contract as stated in the declaration, and as established by the plaintiff’s proof fixing the days between which the hogs were to be delivered by the defendant, might have been removed by amendment of the declaiation during the trial, and without producing a postponement. But as there was no amendment nor offer to amend, and as according to the settled rules upon the subject, this variance in the terms of the contract on which the suit was founded, must be deemed-material, the defendant’s motion for instructions as case 0f a non-suit, should have been sustained, Bat as upon a reversal, even upon this ground alone, the case would go back for a new trial, and this ground of variance might be removed by amendment, it is necessary to notice another error whieh occured at a subsequent .stage of the trial.

The fact that one who had contracted to deliver cumbrous property to one person on a particular day, had contracted to deliver the same property to another person, did not authorize the person who first purchased to sue for breach of his contract, or dispense with performance on his part of every act either precedent or concurreut, which devolved upon him by his •agreement.

Harrison for plaintiff; Shuck for defendant.

The evidence conduced to prove, that after making the .contract with the plaintiff, and long before the time’for delivery, the defendant contracted to sell and deliver the same hogs to another person, but that the hogs remained in his possession on his farm until some time after the last day named for the delivery to the plaintiff, and were never delivered either to the first or second purchaser, but were in fact delivered to some other.

The Court instructed the jury, that if after selling to the plaintiff, and before the lime for delivery to him, the defendant again sold them to another, then no demand by the plaintiff was necessary.

If the second executory contract had deprived the defendant of the right or power of complying with the first, it would have dispensed with the necessity of a demand of such compliance. But as it did not so operate, the mere fact of making it, did not, in our opinion, constitute in itself, either a breach of the first contract or such unequivocal evidence of a determination not to perform it, as would authorize the plaintiff to sue for its breach without doing or tendering, on his part, such precedent or concurrent acts as by its terms were incumbent on him. The instruction above noticed is inconsistent with these views.

Wherefore, the judgment is reversed and the cause is remanded for a new trial.  