Court Opinion

ID: 8761477
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-11-26 12:08:14.235727+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:01:35.740367
License: Public Domain

SANBORN, Circuit Judge
(concurring). In this case each of the parties claims that the other first broke the contract, and the testimony upon this subject ' was voluminous and conflicting. If the plaintiff committed the first breach of the contract, and if that breach had not been waived by the defendants, this fact was a perfect defense to the action. There were two indispensable conditions to its maintenance: (1) That the plaintiff had not committed the first breach which had not been waived by the defendants; and (2) that the defendants had themselves violated the contract. Counsel for the defendants requested the court to instruct the jury that the plaintiff could not recover unless it had previously complied with the conditions imposed upon it, and no question of waiver was presented in the case. The court refused to grant this instruction, and submitted the case to the jury upon the single question whether or not the defendants had broken the agreement. Because the question whether or not the plaintiff had first breached the contract was not fairly presented to the jury for their determination, I am in favor of reversing the judgment.
But I am unable to concur in the reason stated by the majority for the reversal because the court below in my opinion correctly stated the general rule for the measure of damages applicable to this case, because no request was made for the submission of any subordinate or more specific rule and because no exception was taken sufficient to challenge the rule submitted. The charge of the court on this subject was that the measure of damages was the difference between the contract price of the rejected lumber and the price which the vendor could have obtained for it by the exercise of reasonable diligence. This is the fundamental rule for the measure of damages in such a case because compensation is the basis of all such rules, and this is the only rule which in all cases of this nature will make the vendor whole. This rule is not in conflict, but is the basis of the rule that if there is a market and an established market value for the rejected quantity and quality of lumber at the place of delivery, the difference *415between that value and the contract price, is the tiue measure of the damages, for in such a case the vendor by the exercise of reasonable diligence can obtain that value. Barrow v. Arnaud, 8 Q. B. 604, 609. It is not inconsistent with, but is the foundation of, the rule that if there is no market value at the time and place of delivery, or if lie cannot sell the rejected quantity and quality of property at that place at the market value, the difference between the contract price and the price, at which he can sell it in the nearest available market with a proper allowance for cost of transportation and incidental expenses is the true measure of his damages, because under such circumstances, he mav in this way most conveniently make himself whole. Grand Tower Co. v. Phillips, 23 Wall. 471, 480, 23 L. Ed. 71; Yellow Poplar Lumber Co. v. Chapman, 20 C. C. A. 503, 515, 74 Fed. 444, 456; Lawrence v. Porter, 11 C. C. A. 27, 29, 63 Fed. 62, 64, 26 L. R. A. 167; Hewson-Herzog Supply Co. v. Minnesota Brick Co., 55 Minn. 535, 536, 57 N. W. 129. These are subordinate and auxiliary rules which spring from the fundamental general rule given by the court. They apply only when they are in accord with and aid in the enforcement of the general rule. When their application would result in a recovery of more or less than the difference between the contract price and the amount for which the vendor might sell the property by the exercise of reasonable diligence, they have no function. They apply to specific classes of cases, while the general rule is constant and governs all cases of the nature of that in hand. There was, therefore, no error in submitting" to the jury for their guidance this general rule, by which the damage in this case and in all others of its nature must be measured. If the subordinate and auxiliary rules recited in the opinion of the majority were also applicable to the “hypothetical conditions” they mention, the failure of the court to embody them in its charge, was not error because no request for this submission was preferred. Where a court correctly states to the jury the general rule of law in its charge, its failure to present to them auxiliary and more specific rules upon the same subject is not error in the absence of anv request for, or suggestion of, such action. Frizzell v. Omaha St. Ry. Co., 59 C. C. A. 382, 386, 124 Fed. 176, 180, and cases there cited; Chicago G. W. Ry. Co. v. Healy, 30 C. C. A. 11, 16, 86 Fed. 245, 250; Texas & Pac. R. Co. v. Cody, 14 C. C. A. 310, 311, 312, 67 Fed. 71, 73; Eastern Oregon Laud Co. v. Cole, 35 C. C. A. 100, 104, 92 Fed. 949, 953.
There was no such request or suggestion in this case. The only exception to the charge on the measure of damages was in these words:
“I also wish to save exceptions as to the matter of damages, in which your honor, commenting upon the evidence of Mr. Sumner, stated in substance that a person was complying with the law if he got the best price he could, or words to that effect.”
The contention of the exceptor here that a vendor who secures the best: price he can obtain for contract property which his vendee has refused to receive violates or fails to comply with the law is clearly untenable, and this is the only proposition to which the exception *416points. It contained no request, suggestion or intimation that he desired the court below to instruct the jury to apply the specific rules mentioned in the majority opinion to the hypothetical conditions there described. Moreover the comments of the court upon the evidence of Mr. Sumner were correct and are sustained by the authorities. The plaintiff was a manufacturer of lumber in the state of Arkansas. The defendants were jobbers or middlemen in New York City who bought lumber in large quantities of manufacturers and sold it throughout the United States to contractors, builders, and consumers. Plaintiff’s witnesses, millmen residing in Arkansas, had testified that they tried at Helena and in all the large cities, where they would be most likely to make sales, all over the central portion of the United States, to sell this lumber and that they could not obtain more than $2 per thousand less than the contract price for it; Mr. Sumner and another witness testified for the defendants that they could get and that for two sales of portions of the contract amount of two grades of lumber they did obtain orders, one at Tiffin, Ohio, and another at Battle Creek, Mich., at prices $2 per thousand in excess of the contract price and that he reason why the plaintiff and Mr. Uptograff were unable to sell at Si.Ji prices was that consumers would pay the jobber’s prices to only about five large concerns, and that they would not buy of others unless the latter sold the lumber at a sacrifice. In this state of the evidence the court instructed the jury that the manufacturer, the plaintiff, was entitled to recover the difference between the amount which it could realize from the lumber by the exercise of reasonable. diligence and the contract price, and that it was not its fault if it was unable to obtain the price which the defendants, the jobbers, might have secured. The entire charge of the court on this question of damages was in these words :
“If you find for the plaintiff, the next thing to be considered by you is as to the damages the plaintiff is entitled to recover. As I said to you before, no speculative damages can be allowed on a contract of this kind. The only measure of damages which- is to govern you is this: What price would the plaintiff, after there was a breach of the contract on the part of the defendants, obtain by the exercise .of reasonable diligence for the lumber which the defendants under their contract ought to have taken and did not take. If it could, by the exercise of reasonable diligence, have obtained the full price that the defendants agreed to pay plaintiff, then, there is no damage, and the plaintiff is not entitled to recover any damages whatever. But on the other hand, if you find from the evidence that by reason of the stringency of the market, and that by reason of the fact that lumber had gone down the plaintiff was unable to find a purchaser for this lumber except at a lower figure than that agreed upon in the contract, then plaintiff is entitled to recover the difference between the price under the contract and the price it actually received. Of course, they cannot just go to work and sacrifice the lumber, but they -must exercise reasonable diligence to get the best price they possibly could.
“Now, on the part of the plaintiff they have testified that they made every effort possible to sell the lumber; that Mr. Mosby made two or three trips; and also evidence’was introduced to show that it was hard to sell lumber last year, and it seems to be now with cottonwood lumber; that there was no big demand for it, and that in order to sell it at all it had to be sold at a lower price than when the market was good and there was a good demand.
“In this connection, I want to say to you, gentlemen of the jury, that it has *417been testified to by Mr. Sumner, that these people were not as well known as other firms, and for that reason could not get as good a price. That maybe true. But if they could not get as good a price, it was not plaintiff's fault. They were willing to deliver, they say, according to tile contract, and, if Mr. Sumner could get a better figure, it was bis duty to do so. All that the law requires the seller to do, when there is a breach of the contract, is to exercise reasonable diligence, such as any business man similarly situated would exercise, to got the best price he can, and if he obtained- that, if he does that, and there is still a loss, then the loss must fall upon the party who brea died the contract. So in this case, it is for you to determine, if you find this issue in favor of flic plaintiff (that is, that the defendants breached this contract), how much less did the plaintiff have to take for the lumber in order to sell it, having exercised due diligence to obtain the best price, than it would have received under the contract price.”
The comments upon the evidence of Mr. Sumner were not error because the price which the defendants or other jobbers could, or did obtain for lumber of this character in the larger cities of the country, with proper allowances for freight and expenses, was not the true criterion by which to measure the plaintiff’s damages, although that price might have been the market value of the lumber, because the plaintiff, a manufacturer in Arkansas, could not obtain that price and therefore the difference between that price and the contract price would not make it whole. The criterion for the measurement of the plaintiff's damages is the price which it, the manufacturer, not that which the defendants, the jobbers, could obtain for the property by the exercise of reasonable diligence.
In Hewson & Herzog Supply Co. v. Minnesota Brick Co., 55 Minn. 530, 536, 57 N. W. 129, the plaintiff, a jobber, purchased of a manufacturer of brick at Wheeler, Wis., its entire output to be delivered at Wheeler at a price which, with the charges for freight to St. Paul and Minneapolis added, made the contract cost in those cities $16 per thousand. The defendant failed to deliver. St. Paul and Minneapolis constituted the nearest market to Wheeler, and the plaintiff could have purchased the contract quantity and quality of brick there for $38 per thousand, which was the established market value of brick in those cities. This market value, however, was the price at which jobbers of brick sold them to contractors and builders. The plaintiff could have purchased the brick of a manufacturer in St. Louis and could have transported them to St. Paul and Minneapolis and have paid the freight upon them and they would then have cost it but $33 per thousand. The court held that the measure of damages was not the difference between the market value or the market price of brick in St. Paul and Minneapolis and the contract price, with proper allowance for freight, but that it was the difference between the amount for which the plaintiff could have procured the brick at St. Paul and Minneapolis by purchasing them at St. Louis of the manufacturer and transporting them to those cities, and the contract price. In other words, the Supreme Court of Minnesota held that the measure was the difference between the contract price and the price at which the plaintiff could have procured the brick by the use of reasonable diligence.
*418In Lawrence v. Porter, 11 C. C. A. 27, 29, 63 Fed. 62, 64, 26 L. R. A. 167, the vendor had agreed to deliver lumber on a credit of 90 days. He refused to perform his contract, but offered to deliver the identical lumber for cash at a price 50 cents per thousand feet less than the contract price.- The vendees could not obtain lumber of like quantity and quality of others without paying the market value, which was in excess of the contract price, and they sued for the difference. The court refused to permit them to recover the difference between the market value and the contract price and held that their damages were “measured by the difference between what they had agreed to pay and the sum for which they could have supplied themselves with lumber of the same character at the place of delivery, or if not obtainable there, then at the nearest available market, plus any additional 'freight resulting" from the breach.”
In Grand Tower Co. v. Phillips, 23 Wall. 471, 479, 23 L. Ed. 71, the tower company, a mining corporation, agreed to sell'and deliver to Phillips and St. John at their coal dump, in Illinois, about 60 miles above Cairo, 150,000 tons of coal, and it failed to do so. The vendees sued for damages. There was no market for the purchase of. such a quantity of coal at the place of delivery. The plaintiff proved the market value of such coal at Cairo and at points below it on the Mississippi river and the court instructed the jury that the true measure of damages was the cash value-of the kind of coal mentioned at these points after deducting the contract price of the coal and the costs and expenses of transporting it thither. The Supreme Court reversed this ruling and said:
“The true rule would seem to be, to allow the plaintiffs to show the price they would have had to pay for coal in. the quantities which they were entitled to receive it under the contract at the nearest available market where it could have been obtained. The difference between such price and the price stipulated for by their contract, with the addition of the increased expense of transportation and hauling [if any] would be the true measure of damages.”
By the same mark the plaintiff in the case at bar was entitled to show the price at which it was able to sell the contracted lumber, which was rejected, at the nearest available market where it could sell that quantity and quality of lumber, and the difference between that price and the contract price, with the addition of any increased expense of transportation and of traffic, if any, was the true measure of damages. And this was the charge of the court. The rejected lumber was of a special quality. The quantity rejected was large. There is very persuasive evidence that there were few, if any, places where this quantity and quality could be sold, and that-the manufacturer was unable to realize as much for it as the jobbers. The evidence of market value at the place of delivery is uncertain and confusing. In this state of the case the authorities cited above seem to be peculiarly pertinent, and in the light of the principles and rules to which reference has been made it seems to me that the judgment below should not be reversed on account of the charge of the court on the measure of damages.