The contract between appellant and appellee provided as follows: “ Goods to be taken between this date and January 1, 1885. Goods to be delivered at store or depot in Chicago, free of charge, but when shipped in car-load lots drayage to be charged.”
The contract was dated Movember 15, 1883. We construe the contract to mean that appellant had the option to take the pickles agreed to be delivered, from time to time, or all at one time, but that he was bound to take them before January 1, 1885. Appellee was bound to deliver them at the store, depot or on the cars, as appellant should elect, but he was not required to deliver until appellant had ordered the goods and designated the place of delivery. Mor was appellee required to tender the pickles or to offer to deliver them to appellant before the expiration of the contract in order to entitle him to maintain an action for the breach of the contract. The order in which the acts of the parties were to be done was fixed by the contract, and when such is the case, the one who is required to act first must act; must do what is required by the contract before the other can reasonably be expected or legally required to perform or to offer to perform. “If the delivery by the vendor is to take place upon the doing of certain acts by the purchaser, the vendor is not in default for nondelivery until notice of the purchaser of his performance of *434the acts on which the delivery is to take place.” Benj. on Sales, Sec. 679.
In a suit on the contract or for damages in failing to perform it, where delivery is to be at the option of, or on notice by, or at a place to be designated by the defendant, it is sufficient for the plaintiff to prove an ability and readiness to deliver or perform on his part upon notice or demand by the defendant. From the evidence in this record we learn that the acts of the parties under this contract, so far as they went in the performance of it, were in consonance with what we have found to be the legal meaning of it. It was the course of business for appellant to order from appellee the pickles as he wanted them and to designate the quantities of each kind, and the size of the packages, and the place where to be delivered, and for appellee to deliver in the quantities, particular packages and at the place designated, and from this course of business there does not appear to have been a departure, so far as the pickles were taken by appellant under the contract. It then appears that the parties, by their acts, construed the contract as the law construes it. Appellant was bound to notify appellee where to deliver the whole of the pickles before the contract expired and appellee is only bound to show that he filled all orders made upon him, and that he was ready and willing to fill the contract on his part, on receiving the order of appellant. Posey v. Scales, 55 Ind. 282; West v. Emmons, 5 Johns. 179.
In this view it is unnecessary to determine as to whether appellee, at different times before the expiration of the contract, requested appellant to take the pickles and offered to deliver them to him. Appellee was not required by the terms of the contract to make such request or offer, though there is in the record much evidence tending to show that appellee did make such requests and offers, and a finding to that effect by the court below would, we think, be fully warranted.
It is strenuously contended by appellant that the proof does not show an ability and readiness on the part of appellee to deliver the balance of the pickles during the last days of the contract. We have carefully examined the evidence on this point, and we have reached the conclusion that it fully sustains *435the finding of the court below in that regard. It was not necessary for appellee to show that he had actually in his possession on the last day of the contract sufficient pickles of the different grades to fill the contract. It was enough if, by purchase from other dealers, he had control of enough pickles to fill the contract. As to the amount of the damages assessed by the court, it appears that there is some conflict as to what was the market price for pickles after the first of January. Some of the witnesses make the market price higher than the price which the court must have taken as a basis in assessing the damages, but others of the witnesses placed the market price much lower. There is evidence which fully sustains the measure of damages adopted by the court, and we see no reason for disturbing the finding.
Appellant contends that as the record' stands, it shows that appellee was paid §1,000 more than the pickles he delivered would come to. Appellee in his testimony swears to the number of barrels of pickles delivered by him under the contract and swears that he was paid for those delivered, in full. The testimony as written in the record shows that in stating the amount of money he received he stated it at $1,862.69. This would be about $1,000 more than the pickles delivered would come to at contract price. Appellant, on being asked, stated that he could not dispute the account of appellee as to the number of barrels delivered, and there wasno pretense or suggestion by appellant or his counsel in the court below that he had in fact paid appellee more than the pickles delivered came to, and it is not contended here by his counsel that, as a matter of fact, a thousand dollars in excess was paid. The dispute was over the amount of damages for not taking the remainder of the pickles, and it is" very unlikely that if there had been an over-payment to the extent of a thousand dollars, it should have escaped the attention of all parties and the court. We think under such circumstances we are warranted in the conclusion that appellee made a mistake in uttering the amount paid to him,or that he was misreported. In speaking the words “ eight hundred” he was taken as saying “ eighteen hundred.” A case will not be reversed on a point which, from the whole *436record, we believe to be based at best on a mere slip of the tongue.
There is no error, and the judgment of the Superior Court must therefore be affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.