Court Opinion

ID: 6521634
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-19 19:04:03.076966+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:55:09.814521
License: Public Domain

WALKER, P. J.
For a statement of the nature of this case and of rulings made on some of the questions involved in it reference is made to the opinion rendered on the former appeal from a judgment granting the defendant a new trial. — Borden & Co. v. Vinegar Bend Lumber Co., 2 Ala. App. 354, 56 South. 775.
One of the claims of damage asserted in the complaint was based upon the alleged payment by the plaintiff of a stated sum as demurrage accruing as a result of a failure to deliver cargo to the vessel to which the contract for the breach of which the snit was brought bound the defendant to deliver lumber free on board; the theory being that this outlay was a result of the defendant’s failure to deliver lumber according to the *342terms of its contract. A witness for the plaintiff, having testified to the payment of sucb demurrage, was asked to state “what was the cause of the demurrage — ■ that vessel going on demurrage.” The action of the court in sustaining the defendant’s objection to that question is assigned as error. The question might well have been regarded by the court as calling, not necessarily for a statement of the facts as to the detention of the vessel upon which the claim to demurrage had been based, but for the conclusion or opinion of the witness as to who or what was responsible for such de-murrage charge being incurred. If the witness had been permitted to answer the question, and had stated that the demurrage was caused by the defendant’s failure to comply Avith its contract to deliver lumber, the answer Avould not have been unresponsive. It is for the jury, not for a Avitness, to draw such a deduction or conclusion as to a matter in issue. — Plainless Dentists v. Dement, 6 Ala. App. 505, 60 South. 421. It is not error to sustain an objection to a question which is so framed that it may elicit either competent or incompetent evidence. — McCutchen v. Loggins, 109 Ala. 457, 19 South. 810.
But, assuming that the question should be regarded as calling for the facts upon which the claim to demur-rage was based, the sustaining of the objection to it was not prejudicial to the plaintiffs, as subsequently the witness Avas permitted to give his version of the facts in reference to the detention of ths vessel.
The defendant’s claim of set-off was based upon the act of the plaintiff in deducting and retaining from the price due from it on a former sale of lumber by the defendant the sum of $1,000 paid as demurrage to the vessel upon which that lumber was shipped; the defendant claiming that it was not chargeable with such *343demurrage, and that the retention by the plaintiffs of the amount thereof was unauthorized and unwarranted. That former contract was evidenced by the defendant’s acceptance of a written order of the plaintiffs for a bill of lumber, which order, after setting out the quantities and dimensions of the lumber desired, specified the quality, the price, the date of delivery, and the payments; the specification in reference to the price being, $13 75/100 f. o. b. vessel, Mobile, at M. & O. docks.” The appellants complain of rulings of the trial court by which they were denied the opportunity of proving the custom or usage as to the matter of procuring a berth for the vessel when the contract provides for delivery of the cargo f. o. b. the vessel. There was no room for evidence of a custom or usage in reference to that matter, as it had been covered by a specific agreement between the parties, which needed no explanation, and was not subject to alteration or modification by such evidence. — Wilson v. Smith, 111 Ala. 170, 20 South. 134; Powell v. Thompson, 80 Ala. 51; 12 Cyc. 1091. Before the arrival of the vessel there was some correspondence between the parties on this subject, the result of which was that the plaintiff undertook to -procure a berth for the vessel. This settled the question as to which of the parties was to arrange for the docking or berthing of the vessel, whether what was done is regarded as a practical construction of the contract by the parties to it or as an agreed modification of it. — Comer v. Bankhead, 70 Ala. 136; Elliott v. Howison, 146 Ala. 568, 40 South. 1018. There is no -merit in the suggestion made in the argument of the counsel for the appellants that the latter were not bound by the agreement on this subject made by their Mobile agents. It is plain from the correspondence between the parties that these *344agents Avere held out by the plaintiffs as having authority to represent them in such a matter.
Certainly, in the absence of any disclosure to the court of the particular subject in reference to which proof of the existence of a custom or usage was sought to be elicited, it was not chargeable with error in sustaining the objection to the question to the witness T. C. Borden as to his familiarity “Avith the customs Avhere the prties have a contract for shipment of lumber similar to the one betAveen your firm and the Vinegar Bend Lumber Company in respect to the payment of demur-rage, Avhere demurrage accrues against the vessel.” This question was so broad in its scope that a responsive answer to it might have included a statement as to a custom in reference to the payment of a demurrage claim accruing from a failure to provide a berth for the vessel — a matter which, as already has been shown, was covered by the agreement of the parties, and in reference to which evidence of usage or custom, varying the contract obligations of the parties, by imposing upon one of them a burden agreed to be assumed by the other, Avas not admissible. It is not error to sustain an objection to a question which may be answered as well by illegal as by legal testimony. — Beall Bros. v. Johnstone & Hammond, 140 Ala. 339, 37 South. 297.
To meet the claim of the plaintiffs that they were entitled to recover as damages for the breach of the contract mentioned in the complaint the difference between the contract price of the lumber and the higher price they paid other parties for a similar bill of lumber, the defendants offered evidence of their tender of the lumber called for by the contract in accordance with its terms; except that they required that each car load of it be paid for as it was delivered at the vessel’s side, Avhile under the contract the plaintiffs were not bound *345to pay for tbe cargo of lumber until all of it was delivered f. o. b. tbe vessel. If tbe plaintiffs bad accepted tbe lumber on tbe terms of tbis offer, tbe only effect upon them of tbe breach of tbe contract would have been that it put them to tbe necessity of paying for tbe lumber sooner than by the contract, they were obligated • to pay for it; the loss thus entailed upon them being readily measured by tbe interest on the amount of tbe price of tbe lumber for tbe period during which they.were wrongfully deprived of tbe use of tbe money. It was with reference to tbis situation disclosed by tbe evidence that the following statement was made in the opinion rendered on tbe former appeal in tbis case: “On tbe proposition of mitigating tbe loss it is only necessary to say that we see no reason as a matter of law why the rule requiring tbe damaged party to minimize bis damages as far as be can reasonably do so should exclude an obligation to buy from tbe party breaching tbe contract if purchase can be made from him that will minimize tbe loss without abandoning tbe contract or waiving any right of action for damages for a breach growing out of it. It seems to us that tbe rule to tbis effect is correct, ■ as declared in Lawrence v. Porter, 63 Fed. 62, 11 C. C. A. 28, 26 L. R. A. 167.” We are now urged to recede from the position then announced, but what has been said in criticism of that ruling has not convinced us of its incorrectness. To ingraft upon tbe general rule referred to in tbe above quotation an exception that would permit a party injured by a breach of contract to recover for such part of bis loss as be might have avoided by tbe exercise of ordinary care to protect himself from the consequences of the breach (13 Cyc. 72) merely because tbe avoidance of such part of tbe loss would have involved a dealing with tbe party in default would amount to- a rever*346sal of the policy evidenced by the rule itself, in that it would enable the injured party to adopt a course possibly dictated by a desire to injure another rather than to save himself. A breach of a contract entitles the injured party to be compensated for such loss thereby entailed upon him as he cannot avoid by the exercise of reasonable care, but is not to be made use of by him as an opportunity to gratify a feeling of resentment by inflicting unnecessary hardship upon the party in default. The law sustains his claim to compensatory damages, but does not give him the election to make them punitive. The conclusion follows that the court was not in error in refusing to give written charge 4 requested by the plaintiffs.
The plaintiffs contended that there had been an accord and satisfaction of the above-mentioned demand of the defendant which was sought to be availed of by the latter as a set-off. In the opinion rendered on the former appeal the court pointedly refrained from discussing the evidence bearing upon this question which had been presented in the previous trial, the review of the ruling made on the defendant’s motion for a new trial not calling for an examination of the evidence further than was required to reach a conclusion as to whether or not it plainly and palpably supported the verdict which had been set aside. But the court stated certain rules to be applied in dealing with the proposition of accord and satisfaction as it might be presented in another trial of the case. The conclusion we have reached in regard to the evidence adduced on the trial now under review is such that it is not deemed necessary to say moré in reference to the views then expressed than that it may be that one of the propositions then stated may have gone too far. We do not now affirm that, when no receipt, release, or discharge in *347writing is given (Code, § 3973), a tender and payment by a debtor of an amount admitted by bim to be due, there having been no dispute whatever as to that amount being due, can result in the satisfaction of a' claim by the creditor that a larger amount is due, though the latter accepts the smaller amount tendered as a satisfaction of his entire demand. — Hodges v. Tennessee Implement Co., 123 Ala. 572, 26 South. 490; Code, § 3973. However that may be, it is plain enough that the- claim of the plaintiffs (the appellants here) that there was an accord and satisfaction of the demand sought by the defendants to be used as a set-off is unsupported if there was an absence of any evidence tending to prove that the plaintiffs tendered and paid as a compromise something more than they admitted was due, or that the tender and payment of the $3,937.06 were made subject to the condition that the acceptance of that sum by the defendant should be a settlement of its entire demand. No aspect of the evidence discloses a case of a compromise by a payment and acceptance of something more than was admitted to be due, there being nothing whatever to indicate that the plaintiffs ever raised a question as to their owing at least the amount which they paid.
This brings us to the inquiry as to whether there was any evidence having a tendency to prove that the defendant accepted the $3,937.06 in settlement of its entire claim. The circumstances of the payment and acceptance of that sum may be briefly stated as follows: When a settlement for the cargo of lumber delivered under the contract last above referred to was due, the plaintiffs’ Mobile agents wrote a letter to the defendant on which was enclosed a draft on a bank in Florida for the sum of $3,937.06, which was the balance shown by a statement or credit memorandum, also inclosed, in which the plaintiffs were charged with the amount of *348lumber received by them at tbe prices stated. in the contract and were given credit for certain disbursements made by them, including- the f1,000, paid by them as demurrage. If there was any condition attached to the acceptance of the draft or of the amount of it, it was expressed in the following statement contained in that letter: “The demurrage due the vessel (19% days at |60 per day) amounted to $1,170, but we have settled with the master for-$1,000, and attach hereto his receipt for the same. This is the best we could do, and hope this will be satisfactory to you, and regret very much this' vessel went on demurrage at all, In future we hope that this will not occur again, for the reason that it would be disastrous to' either one. of us. We attach hereto draft for $3,937.06, amount due you as per credit memo, inclosed, for which kindly acknowledge receipt, and oblige.” The defendant declined to accept the draft at all, and its representative went in person to the office of the plaintiffs’ Mobile agents, returned the draft, and received and had cashed in lieu of it a check on a Mobile bank for the same amount. In reference to the conversation which took place on that occasion the testimony offered by the plaintiffs did not tend to show that anything was said from which it could be inferred that the defendant agreed or consented to accept the amount called for by the check as a settlement of its entire claim, or that the payment of that amount by the plaintiffs was made subject to the condition that the defendant’s acceptance of it'should have that effect, while the testimony offered by the defendant was to the effect that its representative then stated explicitly that the amount of the check was accepted as a part payment, and not in full payment of the defendant’s claim. The hiosfc in-'favor of the plaintiffs’ contention that can be said of this evidence" is-that it shows that'their offer *349was accompanied by the assertion of a claim that they were entitled to have the amount paid hy them as de-murrage allowed as a credit on the purchase price of the cargo of lumber and by the expression of the hope .that the defendant would acquiesce in this claim. It does not show that they made it a condition of their tender of the sum mentioned by them, as the “amount due you, as per credit memo, inclosed” that the acceptance of it should discharge the defendant’s entire demand. Nor does it show that the minds of the two parties met in an agreement or understanding that an acceptance by the defendant of the amount offered was to have the effect of an abandonment by it of any right to claim that anything more was due to it for the cargo of lumber. In these respects the evidence in the case at bar is very different from that presented in the case of Hand Lumber Co. v. Hall, 147 Ala. 561, 41 South. 78. The following statement of the law applicable to such a state of facts as is disclosed by the evidence is abundantly supported by authority, as is shown by the citations accompanying the quoted text and by later rulings: “Where a person accepts a tender, but not in full of all demands, this acceptance .will not conclude him from claiming more. The nature of the offer or tender made by the debtor is an important consideration in determining whether there has been an acceptance and satisfaction. To constitute an accord and satisfaction, it is necessary that the money should be offered in full satisfaction of the demand, and be accompanied by such acts and declarations as amount to a condition that the money, if accepted, is accepted in satisfaction; and it must be such that the party to whom it is offered is bound to understand therefrom that, if he takes it, he takes it subject to such conditions.” — 1 Cyc. 332; Harrison v. Henderson, 67 Kan. 194, 72 Pac. 875, 62 L. R. *350A. 760, 100 Am. St. Rep. 386, and authorities cited in opinion in that case. The application of the rules stated in the above quotation to the evidence above summarized. leads to the conclusion that no aspect of that evidence supported the contention that there had been an accord and satisfaction of the demand pleaded by the defendant as a set-off. It follows that the court was not in error in refusing to give written charges 11, 12, 14, and 19 requested by the plaintiffs, or in giving charges B and C requested by the defendant.
It is a sufficient justification of the court’s refusal to give charge 15 requested by the plaintiffs that there was an absence of evidence having a tendency to prove that the detention or delay of the vessel for all of the period of 19]/2 days for which demurrage was paid was attributable to the failure of the defendant to furnish the cargo for the vessel with reasonable dispatch and in accordance with the contract. The charge was abstract, in that the evidence in the case was such that only a part of such delay or detention of the vessel could be attributed to any default of the defendant.
While the contract designated as “116 stump” provided for the price of the lumber “f. o. b. vessel Mobile at M. & O. docks,” before the arrival of the vessel the plaintiffs furnished to the defendant, presumably for the latter’s guidance in making delivery of lumber under the contract, a copy of the charter party for the vessel to which the lumber was to be delivered. The following was one of the provisions of this charter party: “The cargo or cargoes to be received and delivered alongside within reach of the vessel’s tackles.” From this circumstance it might have been inferred that such a delivery of the cargo by the defendant as would comply with the quoted provision of the charter party would be accepted by the plaintiffs as a compli-*351anee with the requirement of the contract in that regard. In view of this situation, charge 18 requested by the plaintiffs was calculated to mislead the jury to the conclusion that, notwithstanding the instructions that might have been implied from the circumstance of the plaintiffs furnishing a copy of the charter party to the defendant, the latter would have been in default in respect to the place of delivery if it had delivered the lumber alongside the vessel within reach of its tackles, instead of on board the vessel. This misleading tendency of the charge justified the court in refusing to give it.
What has been said disposes of the rulings complained of in the argument of the counsel for the appellants.
Affirmed.