Court Opinion

ID: 9774609
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-08-29 18:26:51.045709+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:51:21.816494
License: Public Domain

POPE, Justice.
Tortuguero Logging Operation, Ltd., sued George W. Lyles and John T. Barrow for breach of a contract to extract timber from certain Costa Rican lands. Reagan Houston, III, Independent Executor, was substituted as a party for Lyles, now deceased. Plaintiff obtained a judgment on a jury verdict for $14,874.97, and interest thereon, from November 15, 1948, in the sum of $10,098.08. Defendants have appealed and here urge that the trial court applied the wrong measure of damage, and also that the court improperly granted interest before judgment upon an unliquidat-ed claim. Plaintiff, Tortuguero, appealed and urges that the trial court erred in holding that plaintiff had waived or settled a portion of its monetary claim.
The action grew out of some lumber operations in a remote jungle of Costa Rica. The Costa Rican government was the owner of standing timber near the Atlantic coast, but it granted certain concessions for the extraction of the timber. Upon extrae*317tion, the licensee was under a duty to pay the Costa Rican government. For a failure to extract timber, the government could cancel the license. The Carribbean Lumber Company, as licensee, assigned its concessions to Ricardo Ross, and he in turn transferred them to plaintiff, Tortuguero. By the assignment, Tortuguero was under no contractual duty to extract timber, but upon extraction was under a duty to pay its assignor $5 per thousand board feet.
On October 22, 1947, Tortuguero and defendants, Lyles and Barrow, entered into a written contract. By this contract Tortu-guero made an exclusive assignment of the right to exploit Cedro Macho wood from the concessions, and Lyles and Barrow obligated themselves to extract the timber. The time, place, and method of measuring and grading Cedro Macho timber were stated in the contract. Lyles and Barrow also agreed to search for a market for timber other than Cedro Macho, but plaintiff, Tort-uguero, asserted no claims for breach of that part of the contract. This case only concerns defendants’ failure to extract Cedro Macho timber. Lyles and Barrow agreed to pay plaintiff, Tortuguero, as follows :
“Fourth: Barrow and Lyles will pay as the only and total payment for the wood produced and accepted for export the sum of eleven dollars, United States legal currency or its equivalent in colones for each one thousand board feet and consequently once the wood is cut shall be considered the property of said Messrs. Lyles and Barrow, they being obligated, of course, to make the measurement as specified and the corresponding payment.”
Plaintiff, Tortuguero, grounded its case upon the claim that defendants failed to exercise diligence in extracting the timber. The record shows that defendants refused to agree upon a minimum quantity of timber they would extract, but did agree in their contract “to keep at least two of their winches working in the extraction of wood in the concessions to which this contract refers.” The jury found, and the record well supports the finding, that defendants failed to extract the timber with diligence. In fact, the contract ran from October 22, 1947 to October 22, 1948, and for the period from March 20, 1948 to the end of the term, defendants failed to operate a single winch or to extract a single board foot of timber. During this time they had five winches in use elsewhere in the area.
The jury found that defendants failed to extract the timber with diligence, that with diligence they should have extracted 4,250,-000 feet of Cedro Macho between October 22, 1947 and October 22, 1948; that plaintiff, Tortuguero, in accepting $1,450 from defendants on March 20, 1948, accepted it in full settlement of all amounts up to that time; that, thereafter, from March 20, 1948 to October 22, 1948, by the exercise of diligence, defendants should have extracted 2,479,162 board feet, and that there was Cedro Macho of the kind, character and quality specified in the contract, which could have been extracted at reasonable expense by the use of the winches owned by defendants.
Damages were arrived at by treating all claims up to March 20, 1948, as waived or settled, and by holding defendants liable for their failure to extract 2,-479,162 board feet from that date to October 22, 1948. The court then allowed plaintiff its loss of profits on that number of board feet. For each 1,000 board feet which they should have extracted defendants, Lyles and Barrow, owed $11. But for each 1,000 board feet extracted plaintiff, Tortuguero, would owe its assignor $5, under its contract with the assignor. The net amount which Tortuguero would have earned would have been $6 for each 1,000 feet of Cedro Macho extracted, and the court arrived at its judgment by granting plaintiff judgment for its loss of profits computed at $6 per 1,000 board feet which defendants should have extracted after March 20, 1948. Both plaintiff and defend*318ants attack the measure of damages. In our opinion, loss of profits was the correct measure. Southwest Battery Corporation v. Owen, 131 Tex. 423, 115 S.W.2d 1097; Hughes v. Buchanan, Tex.Civ.App., 271 S.W. 158; Grand Prairie Gravel Co. v. Joe B. Wills Co., Tex.Civ.App., 188 S.W. 680, 686; W. H. Norris Lumber Co. v. Harris, Tex.Civ.App., 177 S.W. 515; 25 C.J.S. Damages § 43. The measure used by the trial court awarded to the plaintiff the amount it would have made if the contract had been performed. Plaintiff was not entitled to the gross amount provided in the contract. Porter & McMillan v. Burkett, Murphy & Burns, 65 Tex. 383; 13 Tex.Jur., Damages, § 103. Defendants objected to this measure of damages on the basis of the testimony of a Costa Rican lawyer who testified on cross-examination about the laws of that country. The question asked the legal expert was, “ * * * if one agreed to buy a certain number of board feet of lumber, and if one breached such a contract, wouldn’t the measure of damages be the difference between the contract price, less these deductions on account of defects of the timber * * * (and) less the reasonable value of the timber that he didn’t take?” Plaintiff objected on the grounds that the questions did not fit the facts of the case. The witness answered that the value of the remaining timber should be deducted, but explained that the rule would not apply if “the right to the timber” was lost. Defendants claimed that though the plaintiff, Tortuguero, lost money, it still had the timber. The expert’s testimony, as the trial court construed it, and as we construe it, was that Tortuguero in this case was unlike an owner of the timber who still had his timber. Tortuguero was at no time •the owner of timber. It had a license subject to cancellation for the things which the jury found the defendants had failed to do. If Tortuguero should have mitigated its losses by entering into a new and different contract with other parties to preserve the value of its license, the burden was on defendants, not the plaintiff, to prove that fact and what the value was. Meadolake Foods, Inc., v. Estes, 148 Tex. 13, 219 S.W.2d 441; Belcher v. Missouri, K. & T. R. Co., 92 Tex. 593, 50 S.W. 559, 561; Rios v. Lowenfield, Tex.Civ.App., 289 S.W.2d 332, 334; Jefferson & N. W. R. Co. v. Dreeson, 43 Tex.Civ.App. 282, 96 S.W. 63.
Defendants also urge that the court erred in awarding a judgment for pre-judgment interest in the sum of $10,-098.08. The objections, as preserved by the motion for new trial, are that the plaintiff failed to plead its right to interest, and also that there was no proof of the Costa Rican law with respect to interest. With respect to the latter objection, in the absence of pleading and proof, the law of another country is presumed to be the same as that of Texas. Pauska v. Daus, 31 Tex. 67; 1 McCormick and Ray, Texas Law of Evidence, § 99. On the interest matter, the trial court used that presumption. The trial court has also applied the rule announced by several cases approved by the Supreme Court, with respect to pre-judgment interest on recoveries for loss of profits. Interest upon unliquidated damages in an action for quantum meruit for services rendered has been approved. Settegast v. Timmins, Tex.Civ.App., 6 S.W.2d 425, 429. Interest upon pre-judgment loss of profits was approved in Ewing v. Wm. L. Foley, Inc., 115 Tex. 222, 280 S.W. 499, 44 A.L.R. 627. Interest for unliquidated damages arising out of a breach of contract was also allowed in Watkins v. Junker, 90 Tex. 584, 40 S.W. 11. These cases are reviewed and expressly approved by the Supreme Court in Texas Company v. State, 154 Tex. 494, 281 S.W.2d 83. In our opinion, plaintiff’s pleadings prayed for pre-judgment interest.
Plaintiff, Tortuguero, complains because the court gave force to a receipt and letter by which it acknowledged full compliance with the contract up to March 20, 1948. From the evidence and findings, defendants failed to exercise diligence in extracting Cedro Macho, and from October 22, 1947 to March 20, 1948 it should have extracted *3191,620,838 board feet more than were actually extracted. The facts are that defendants cut a small amount of timber during the period up to March 20, 1948, and paid plaintiff $1,450 after demands were made upon them by plaintiff. Upon receipt of the funds, plaintiff mailed a receipt and letter to defendants. Among other things, the receipt stated: “Acknowledgment of this payment recognizes full compliance of the existing contract to date.” The covering letter had this statement from plaintiff: “ * * * we consider the present payment satisfactory to us, but with the understanding that in the future, payment will be made every month end, accordingly to our contract of October 22nd last.” Plaintiff argues that the letter evidenced a conditional settlement which was later breached. We regard the statement as a full settlement of past disputes, with a clear declaration that plaintiff would insist upon future strict compliance with the contract.
Plaintiff’s more serious attack upon the partial settlement is that there was no consideration for the release, because the $1,-450 was in payment to plaintiff of an admitted amount of timber which was cut, and .which was not in dispute. Prior to the time the receipt was mailed, plaintiff was also complaining that defendants had breached the contract by a failure to perform with diligence. Plaintiff argues that defendants in paying the $1,450 were merely complying with the contract, and that compliance with a contract is no consideration for a partial release. In our opinion, there was consideration. Plaintiff accepted the $1,450 on terms which were new to the existing contract. The letter which plaintiff wrote transmitting the receipt to defendants added a new element to the contract. The letter required that defendants in the future should make their payments promptly; but added that in case the logs were not measured by the end of the month, the defendants should then pay “an estimated amount.” The original contract imposed a duty upon defendants to “measure and pay,” but not to “estimate and pay.” There was consideration, however slight. Texarkana Nat. Bank v. Hubbard, Tex.Civ.App., 114 S.W.2d 389; Great American Indemnity Co. v. Blakey, Tex.Civ.App., 107 S.W.2d 1002; 12 Tex.Jur.2d, Compromise and Settlement, § 6.
The parties have numerous other points which we have considered and found to be without merit. The judgment is affirmed.