Court Opinion

ID: 8774068
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-11-26 12:54:50.971616+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:02:25.222422
License: Public Domain

KNAPPEN, District Judge
(after stating the facts as above). Upon the striking out of the allegations in question, the plaintiff's petition necessarily fell to the ground, as there remained in it no allegation of an injury even in fact resulting from defendants’ default. The general demurrer and the motion to strike out apparently rest upon the same grounds, and so may be considered together.
ft is defendants’ contention that the case presented involves only the question whether the plaintiff’s petition states a case permitting recovery for loss of profits anticipated upon the resale. This contention will be again referred to.
Before discussing the specific propositions on which the action of the court is sought to be justified, it may be well to refer briefly to the general principles covering the recovery of damages by the vendee on account of the vendor’s failure to make delivery. In such case, as in cases generally for breach of contract, the distinction between general and special damages is that the former are such damages as the law implies or presumes from the breach complained of, while the latter are such as have proximately resulted, but do not always immediately result, from the breach, and will not therefore be implied by law. Lawrence v. Porter, 63 Fed. 62, 11 C. C. A. 27, 26 L. R. A. 167: Lillard v. Kentucky Dist. & Warehouse Co., 134 Fed. 168, 177, 67 C. C. A. 74. In accordance with this distinction, the usual rule is that the measure of damages for failure to deliver goods under an ex-ecutory contract of sale is the difference between the contract price of the goods and their market value at the place of delivery at the time the contract was broken, and that, if the goods cannot be procured at the place of delivery, then resort must be had to the nearest available market. Lawrence v. Porter, supra; Grand Tower Co. v. Phillips, 23 Wall. 471, 23 L. Ed. 71. But profits which the vendee under an ex-ecutory contract of sale of goods has actually lost by reason of the vendor’s failure to deliver may be recovered as damages for such breach, provided, first, such loss of profits was the natural and prob*516able consequence of the breach, and within the reasonable contemplation of the parties in the making of the contract as the damages likely to result from such breach; and provided, second, the proof of such damages is not uncertain, speculative, or indefinite.. Damages by way of loss of profits are not recoverable, even if within the contemplation of the parties, if so remote, uncertain, or speculative that they cannot be ascertained to a reasonable certainty. 2 Joyce on Damages, §§ 1285, 1672; Fell v. Newberry, 106 Mich. 542, 64 N. W. 474; Hitchcock v. Anthony (6th Cir.) 83 Fed. 779, 782, 28 C. C. A. 80, and following; Central Trust Co. v. Clark (8th Cir.) 92 Fed. 293, 34 C. C. A. 354. In accordance with the general rule of pleading that damages which the law implies as the natural and necessary result of a breach need not' be alleged, but that a mere statement of the breach and a general allegation of damage is sufficient, a recovery of the difference between the contract price and the market value may be had without particularizing the same in pleading. Peters v. Cooper, 95 Mich. 191, 54 N. W. 694; Lawrence v. Porter, supra; Asher v. Stacy, 65 S. W. 603. But, on the other hand, if the plaintiff claims to -have sustained other damages than those which will naturally be supposed to flow from an ordinary breach of such contract, he must in his pleading particularize such loss, so that the defendant may prepare himself with evidence to meet such claim. Lawrence v. Porter, 63 Fed. 64, 11 C. C. A. 27, 26 L. R. A. 167. But, upon a failure of the vendor to deliver the goods 'as required by the contract, the law throws upon the vendee the duty of using reasonable diligence to mitigate the loss occasioned by such breach by providing other goods to take the place of those with respect to which the vendor was in default. The vendee thus cannot throw upon the vendor any special loss incident to the failure of the vendee to mitigate the injury as far as reasonably possible. Warren v. Stoddart, 105 U. S. 224, 26 L. Ed. 1117; Marsh v. McPherson, 105 U. S. 709, 26 L. Ed. 1139; Lawrence v. Porter, supra; Hirsh v. Georgia Iron & Coke Co., 169 Fed. 578, 581, 95 C. C. A. 76. But the burden of proving that the damages sustained by the vendee could have been prevented or mitigated by the latter’s action rests upon the vendor, as the party guilty of the breach of the contract. Mathesius v. Brooklyn Heights R. Co., 96 Fed. (C. C.) 792, 795, and cases there cited; Lillard v. Kentucky Dist. & Warehouse Co. (6th Cir.) 134 Fed. 168, 178, 67 C. C. A. 74, and cases cited; Kentucky Distilleries & Warehouse Co. v. Lillard, 160 Fed. 34, 40, 41, 87 C. C. A. 190.
Turning, then, to the specific criticisms made upon the plaintiff’s petition, the first of which is that the prospective profits on resale of the ties are not alleged to have been in contemplation of the parties to the contract at the time it was made, or that the parties contracted with reference thereto. The reason of the t rule which requires, in order to a recovery of loss of profits by the vendee, that the vendor should have knowledge that the goods were purchased for resale, is that in the absence of such knowledge a loss of profits could not be reasonably foreseen or anticipated as a result of the breach of contract, as such damages are not the ordinary result of a breach. The lan*517guage of the petition in this regard is that the plaintiff entered into the contract in question with the defendants “with a view of reselling -the cross-ties mentioned therein for a profit, which resale thereof and anticipated or expected profits thereon, was reasonably within the knowledge and contemplation of the parties to said contract at the time of the execution of the same.” It is well settled that, in order to satisfy the requirement of notice to the vendor that the vendee is buying for the purpose of reselling, it is only necessary to prove that such purpose of resale and the recovery of profits thereon was “within the contemplation of the parties to the contract at the time of its execution.” Language no more specific than that just stated is found in any of the authorities cited by defendants. See Blue Grass Cordage Co. v. Luthy, 98 Ky. 583, 586, 33 S. W. 835, wdiere it is stated that expected profits may be recovered where “it was fairly within the contemplation of both parties that the goods were purchased with a view to a resale for profits”; Bates Mach. Co. v. Norton Iron Works, 113 Ky. 372, 68 S. W. 423, where an instruction was approved that profits could be recovered if the defendants “knew at the time of purchase by plaintiffs that they purchased same with a view to a resale, and that the profits anticipated thereon were in the contemplation of both parties.” See, also, to the same effect, Moffitt-West Drug Co. v. Byrd, 92 Fed. 290, 34 C. C. A. 351; Central Trust Co. v. Clark, 92 Fed. 293, 34 C. C. A. 354; Denhard v. Hurst, 111 Ky. 546, 64 S. W. 393; Harrow Spring Co. v. Harrow Co., 90 Mich. 147, 51 N. W. 197, 30 Am. St. Rep. 421. The only criticism made upon the allegation of the petition in question as failing to sufficiently allege notice to the defendant of the intended resale is that it is manifestly “a conclusion of the pleader,” and not a statement of fact. This proposition is apparently based upon the use of the word “reasonably.” The allegation is not subject to the criticism referred to. The fact that the expected resale at a profit was not mentioned in the contract affects only the subject of evidence. In our opinion the petition definitely advised defendants of plaintiff’s claim that the defendants knew, when the contract in question was made, that the plaintiff expected and intended to sell at a profit the ties contracted for, that such resale and expected profit were contemplated by the parties thereto at the time the contract was made, and that the loss of such profit was thus the natural and proximate result of defendants’ breach.
In support of the objection that the petition does not show that the plaintiff’s profit would have amounted to anything, after paying the expenses of transporting the ties from the place where defendants were to deliver them to plaintiff to the place where the latter was to deliver them under its contract of resale, the argument is presented that for all the petition shows plaintiff’s contract of resale may have expired on the day after the making of the contract sued on; that there is no allegation that plaintiff failed to supply its customer with ties by reason of defendants’ default; that the freight and expense of delivery might have eaten up the 10 cents per tie gross profit referred to; that for all that is shown by the petition plaintiff may have been able to buy sufficient ties to carry out its contract of resale at a price much less than ten cents per tie, in which case the loss would have *518been only what was required to purchase such other ties. This argument is not persuasive. The petition plainly alleges that plaintiff could have sold “the minimum of 25,000 ties provided for in its said contract with the defendants in addition to all of the ties that your petitioner was able to and. did buy up until in February, 1908,” and that “had the said defendants complied with their said contract by the furnishing of the minimum of 25,000 ties provided for in said contract your petitioner would have derived a profit on the resale thereof to its said customer of $2,500.” The infirmity in the argument in support of this criticism results from overlooking the fact that the burden of proof with respect to the question of mitigating- damages by repurchase is on the defendants, rather than on the plaintiff, and in treating the petition not merely as a statement of plaintiff’s cause of action, but as a statement of the proofs in support thereof. The petition is not in our opinion subject to the objection just considered.
The third and fourth grounds of demurrer raise the defense' that it does not appear by the petition that plaintiff could not have bought in the market' sufficient ties to meet its contract of resale, or that in purchasing the same it was compelled to pay more than the price it agreed to pay defendants. As to this defense, also, the burden of proof is on the defendants. It is strenuously urged, however, that railroad ties are '“found anywhere and everywhere, in any quantity that is desired,” and that the court must take judicial cognizance of plaintiff’s alleg-ed ability to repurchase in the market all the ties plaintiff might need to carry out its contract with its customer. It should be sufficient to say that the court cannot take judicial cognizance of the existence of such fact. Moreover, the petition to our mind§ sufficiently alleges the contrary, We see nothing in the objection that the damages claimed by the plaintiff are shown by the petition to be uncertain and speculative. The petition alleges a sufficient market already contracted for, and at a fixed price, alleged to be $2,500 in excess of the price under the contract in suit.
It results from the views we have stated that in our opinion the learned judge who heard the case erred in granting the motion to strike out and in. sustaining the demurrer to the petition. The case has been argued throughout upon defendants’ behalf upon the theory that the petition does not claim general damages, viz., the difference between the contract price and the market value. The petition alleges that:
“The 25,000 ties agreed to be sold and delivered to it by said defendants were reasonably worth in the market 10 cents more per tie than the amount named in said contract during all the period covered by said contract.”
This fails of stating the correct measure of general damages only in that it omits the statement of market value as at the place of delivery provided by the contract. If plaintiff desires to claim general damages, such amendment of the petition' as will permit such x-ecovery should be had.
The oi'der gi-anting the motion to strike out and sustaining the demurrer will be reversed.