Court Opinion

ID: 8261389
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-10-16 15:54:39.025202+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:42:33.881163
License: Public Domain

Bond, J.
The parties by their representatives executed the following contract:
“Philadelphia, August 31, 1888.
“For and in consideration of the Athletic club agreeing to play an exhibition game with the St. Louis club at Gloucester, New Jersey, on Sunday, September 2, 1888, and pay the said St. Louis club fifty per cent of seventy-five per cent of the gate receipts for said game, the St. Louis club hereby agrees to give the *655said Athletic club the option of playing an exhibition or championship game on the grounds of the St. Louis club, with said St. Louis club on September 24, 1888, or not, as the said Athletic club may elect, and the St. Louis club agrees to pay the said Athletic club fifty per cent of the gate receipts for said game.
“Christ Von Der Ahe,
“St. Louis B. B. Club.
“W. H. Whittaker,
“Athletic B. B. Club.”
The petition alleges performance by plaintiff of this contract as to the first mentioned game, and tender of performance of the contract for the second game, and a refusal by defendant to permit the same to be played, whereof damages were prayed.
The answer averred a misnomer of defendant and denied the allegations of the petition. The cause was submitted to the court without a jury and a verdict and judgment given for plaintiff for $500 and interest, from which defendant appealed.
The evidence shows that defendant 'telegraphed to plaintiff that the game could not be. played on the twenty-fourth of September 1888, as provided for in the contract; that plaintiff answered it was willing and ready to play the game and brought its team to St. Louis on the morning of that day for this purpose; that thereupon defendant offered to permit plaintiff to play during the forenoon, which offer was refused by plaintiff, on the ground that the customary time for such exhibitions was the afternoon, and that no proper advertisement had been made of a game to be given in the forenoon; that defendant refused plaintiff’s team access to its grounds on the afternoon of said day, and employed the whole of said afternoon in a game between its own club and a baseball club from Baltimore. The evidence further tended to show that the *656afternoon was the customary time for such exhibitions; that the cost to plaintiff, exclusive of railroad fare and hotel bills, of bringing its team of baseball players to St. Louis on the morning of the twenty-fourth of September, 1888, was between $500 and $600.
For the breach of the contract in suit plaintiff was entitled to recover the expenses and outlay incurred in preparing for its performance, or the profits it would have realized by performance of the whole contract, less such expenses. U. S. v. Behan, 110 U. S. 338. As there was no attempt to prove a loss of the profits stipulated for in the contract, plaintiff was clearly entitled to the preparatory expenses incurred in carrying out its part of the contract. Hughes v. Robinson, 60 Mo. App. 194. The instruction given by the court shows that such expenses were the only elements of damage considered in the finding for plaintiff. This was the correct rule, in the absence of any evidence of loss of stipulated profits, and as the evidence supports the finding of the court as to the amount, it can not be disturbed as excessive. The principal point urged in defendant’s brief is that the witnesses in stating the amount of damage suffered by plaintiff referred to officers’ salaries for one day. There is nothing in the evidence showing what portion of the damage claimed was referable to this head, nor does the evidence show that such salaries were fixed at a stated sum and were unaffected by defendant’s breach of its- contract, nor that plaintiff’s ability to pay such salaries was not lessened by its failure to realize fruits of a performance by defendant of its contract. In this state of the record we can not say the finding of the trial- court went beyond legitimate compensation for the proximate damage sustained by the breach of the contract in suit. Defendant does not print the instructions given or refused by the court in his brief, nor assail their cor*657rectness in argument, and we might be justified in concluding that no complaint was made in this respect, but as the record shows a formal assignment of error as to instructions given and refused, we have examined the action of the court in this regard, and find that it affords no ground for reversal of this judgment. It will therefore be affirmed.
All concur.