Court Opinion

ID: 6522186
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-19 19:04:39.628481+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:55:10.475759
License: Public Domain

WALKER, P. J.
The complaint as amended contained two counts claiming damages for the alleged failure of the defendant to deliver certain logs received by it as a common carrier to be delivered at Mobile for a reward, and one count claiming damages for its alleged failure to deliver said logs within a reasonable time. Issue was joined on a special plea, which averred that the plaintiff was indebted to the defendant for specified freight and demurrage charges on the logs, and offered to set off said sums against the demand of the plaintiff. The plaintiff introduced evidence tending to prove that at the time of the shipment of the logs their market value was $11 per thousand feet, and that their market value in Mobile was $12.50 per. thousand feet. The defendant excepted to rulings of the court the effect of which was to exclude evidence offered by it of the amount of freight on the logs from the place from which they were shipped to Mobile.
The court was in error in these rulings. The damages recoverable by the plaintiff for the defendant’s failure to deliver the logs at Mobile are measured by their value at that place, less the cost of carrying them to it.- — Capehart, et al. v. Granite Mills, 97 Ala. 353, 12 South. 44; Buist v. Guice, 96 Ala. 255, 11 South. 280; Code 1907, § 5514.
“The plaintiff is limited to a just compensation for his actual loss — is entitled to an indemnity, and nothing more; and, consequently, is never to be placed in a better situation than that in which he would have been had the contract been fulfilled.” — Rose’s Exr'. v. Bozeman, 41 Ala. 678.
*578If the logs had been delivered to the plaintiff at Mobile, the freight paid for carrying them to that place would have been an element of their value there. If he is permitted to recover their market value there without any deduction for that item of expense, he recovers as damages an amount greater than the actual loss he sustained by the defendant’s failure to deliver. The effect would be to allow him to include in his recovery the amount of an outlay which he has not made.
Reversed and remanded.