Court Opinion

ID: 7981126
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 01:05:22.90882+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:35:02.640988
License: Public Domain

Hallam, J.
On September 18, 1919, the H. E. Wilcox Motor Company sold to defendant a motor truck for $3,399. Of this, $1,099 was paid down, the balance to be paid in instalments of $191.66 a month. Title was to remain in the company until paid for. Defendant agreed to keep the car insured at his own expense, and it was so insured. In December, 1920, the truck was damaged by fire. An adjuster for the insurance company called on defendant. He also called on the Wilcox Company. The adjuster thought the Wilcox factory was the best place to “fix it up,” and he directed defendant to ship it- up to the Wilcox Company. Soon thereafter a representative of the Wilcox Company called on defendant. Defendant sent by him the following letter to the company:
“Your man, Mr. Yerxa, called on me this A. M. in regard to the truck. You may send it back in first class shape. He said it would not be over $100 to me.”
The company replied as follows:
“According to your instructions we agree to send this truck out to you in first class condition, and that the total price of the work, including that which was made necessary by the fire, as well as the other repairs, will not exceed $100.00 more than the sum which the insurance company informed us they had agreed to pay.”
The Wilcox Company repaired the truck and made a charge of $1,354. The insurance company paid all the cost of the repairs. After the repairs were made, the truck was again delivered to defendant. Defendant defaulted in his payment and plaintiff brought this action to replevy the truck. -Defendant answered, alleging that plaintiff failed to repair the truck as agreed and claiming damages in an amount in excess of the balance due on the truck. The trial court submitted the case to a jury and the jury found defendant en*183titled to recover tbe sum of $193.43. Tbe unpaid instalments amounted to $706.72. Tbe verdict, therefore, amounted to a finding that defendant’s damage was $960.15.
Plaintiff contends that tbe evidence shows no contract between tbe Wilcox Company and defendant as to tbe repair of the truck, but only an agreement between tbe Wilcox Company and tbe insurance company. What defendant’s rights might be under a contract between tbe Wilcox Company and tbe insurance company, we need not determine, for it seems plain that tbe letters above quoted, taken in connection with other admitted negotiations, establish a contract between tbe Wilcox Company and defendant to put tbe truck in “first class condition.” Tbe negotiation was tbe not unusual one arising in tbe course of insurance adjustments. Tbe insurance company was willing to pay tbe cost of restoring tbe car as far as repairs could do it. Tbe Wilcox Company was willing to undertake tbe job of so restoring it, and defendant, as equitable owner, was willing to accept this repair as an adjustment of bis loss, and so, tbe parties all participating, it was agreed that tbe Wilcox Company would do tbe work as above specified. All were parties to tbe contract. If tbe fire loss was to be settled by repair of tbe truck, then clearly defendant, vdio bad' carried tbe insurance and paid tbe premium, bad a contract right to have tbe repairs made as agreed, and a right also to have tbe money paid by tbe insurance company applied to tbe payment of tbe repairs. Tbe contract with the Wilcox Company was bis contract, and if broken by failure of tbe Wilcox Company to make tbe repairs it bad agreed to make, be was damaged, and be can assert his claim against tbe Wilcox Company for tbe damage sustained.
Plaintiff contends that the meaning of tbe expression “first class condition” is so indefinite that tbe court should have submitted to tbe jury tbe question of what tbe contract was. We think this language so clear that there was no issue as to its construction.
Tbe court charged tbe jury that if tbe Wilcox Company failed to repair tbe truck as agreed, tbe measure of defendant’s damage was “tbe difference in value of that truck as it would have been after it was * * * put in first class shape after tbe fire, and tbe *184value in the condition it was in after it was repaired.” Plaintiff complains of this and contends that the measure of damages was the reasonable cost of properly making the repairs.
Compensation is the aim of the law in all cases. In case of tortious injury to property, the general rule of damages is the diminution in the value resulting from the injury. Laughren v. Barnard, 115 Minn. 276, 182 N. W. 301; 17 C. J. 877. Where the cost of restoring the property to its former condition is less than the difference in value, such cost is the proper measure of damage, for, in such case, this compensates the party injured. But this is a qualification of the rule and may be invoked only where the particular facts justify it, and, if the defendant is of the opinion that the evidence justifies a submission of this rule of damages to the jury, a request to that effect should be made. Failure to submit this phase of the case to the jury is not ordinarily error, in the absence of a request so to do. Osborn v. Mississippi & R. R. Boom Co. 95 Minn. 149, 103 N. W. 879.
It seems to us that the same principles are applicable to this case. Where property is given to another to repair, and the work is defectively done but is of some value, and the owner must of necessity retain the benefit of it, the measure of damages is the difference between the value of the property in its defective condition and its value if repaired in compliance with the contract. Barretts v. Wharton, 101 N. Y. 631, 4 N. E. 344; May v. Georger, 21 Misc. 622, 41 N. Y. Supp. 1057; 3 Sutherlaud, Damages, § 699; 2 Sedgwick, Damages, § 647A; 17 C. J. 853; Sykes v. City of St. Cloud, 60 Minn. 442, 62 N. W. 613. See also Longfellow v. McGregor, 61 Minn. 494, 63 N. W. 1032; 7 A. L. R. 277. But if the property may still be placed in the condition contemplated by the contract the damage cannot exceed the cost of remedying the defect. Wheaton v. Lund, 61 Minn. 94, 63 N. W. 251; King v. Nichols & Shepard Co. 53 Minn. 453, 55 N. W. 604, is not out of accord. But as held in Osborn v. Mississippi & R. R. Boom Co. 95 Minn. 149, 103 N. W. 879, if the plaintiff was of the opinion that the facts in evidence warranted the submission of the question, whether the cost of putting the truck in first class condition would be less than the difference in *185value, lie should have requested the court to charge accordingly. Not having done so plaintiff cannot complain.
Order affirmed.