Court Opinion

ID: 3241451
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 16:14:48.850127+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T12:47:44.296331
License: Public Domain

The suit is on the common counts and for a breach of contract of sale "of 11 cars of corn in the ear at $1.50 per bushel." The defendant challenged the sufficiency of the count for breach of contract as being void for uncertainty, in that the contract averred fails to state the number of bushels of corn contained in the car, the weight of a car of corn, or the minimum capacity as a car of corn.
The contract averred is not void for uncertainty, and is not open to the objections pointed out in Elmore, Quillian  Co. v. Parrish Bros., 170 Ala. 499, 54 So. 203; Sloss-Shef. S.  I. Co. v. Payne, 192 Ala. 69, 68 So. 359; Sloss-Shef. S.  I. Co. v. Payne, 186 Ala. 341, 64 So. 617. This court has sustained similar contracts as that on which this suit is rested. Thompson v. Strong, 74 So. 341 (3 cars of cotton seed); Ward v. Cotton Seed Products Co., 193 Ala. 101,69 So. 514 (2 carloads of cotton seed); Baker v. Lehman, Weil 
Co., 186 Ala. 493, 65 So. 321 (100 bales of cotton to average in weight not less than 490 pounds nor more than 510 pounds per bale); Sou. Ry. Co. v. Harris, 202 Ala. 263,80 So. 101 (for the conversion of 25 bales of cotton); Shore Lumber Co. v. Am. Lbr.  Exp. Co., 23 Ga. App. 135, 97 S.E. 667
(a definite number of *Page 194 
"large" carloads of lumber as specified and at a price indicated). Our court has approved the following quotations from 35 Cyc. pp. 210, 639, defining the meaning of a carload:
Page 210: "Where the goods are sold by the 'carload' the term may be construed by the custom of trade, but in the absence of any agreement or particular custom it will ordinarily be held to mean the capacity of a car used for transporting the particular kind of goods sold. So too a sale of a 'cargo' of goods means ordinarily the entire load of the vessel, and is limited only by the capacity of the vessel."
Page 639: "Quantity on which Damages will beComputed. — If no fixed quantity of goods is contracted for, but the purchase is of a 'carload,' damages should be computed on the amount usually contained in an ordinary car."
The counts were not subject to demurrer directed thereto.
Moreover, there was no contest on the trial, where the plea was the general issue as to plaintiff's right of recovery; as to this he was entitled to the affirmative charge, which was given by the court.
It has been held that if the party obtaining the judgment was entitled to the affirmative charge, which was given, this would cure certain errors of pleading indicated in the following cases: Lawrenceburg Roller Mills Co. v. Jones  Co., 85 So. 719;2
Merriweather v. Sayre M.  M. Co., 182 Ala. 665, 62 So. 70; Sou. Ry. Co. v. Harris, 202 Ala. 263, 80 So. 101, 103; Hambright v B. R. L.  P. Co., 201 Ala. 176, 77 So. 702; Conn v. Sellers, 198 Ala. 606, 73 So. 961, 962; Hill v. McBride, 125 Ala. 542, 543, 28 So. 85; Andrews Mfg. Co. v. Porter, 112 Ala. 381, 385, 20 So. 475; Waldman v. M. B.  M. Ins. Co., 91 Ala. 170, 175, 8 So. 666, 24 Am. St. Rep. 883.
We will observe of the evidence that it is undisputed that plaintiff extended the time for performance of the contract (as to the delivery of the three cars of corn in question) until there was repudiation of the contract on the part of defendant and the purchase by plaintiff of three cars of corn at its market price in Birmingham. Under the authorities, the market price is fixed and governed as of the time to which the delivery on contract was so postponed (Lowy v. Rosengrant,196 Ala. 337, 71 So. 439; Craig v. Pierson L. Co., 179 Ala. 535,60 So. 838, 35 Cyc. 637); and at the place of delivery (Bell v. Reynolds, 78 Ala. 511, 56 Am. Rep. 52; Creig v. Pierson, supra; Crandall-Pettee Co. v. Jebeles  Colias, 195 Ala. 152,157, 69 So. 964; Cent. of Ga. Ry. Co. v. Isbell, 198 Ala. 469,473, 73 So. 648; Curjel  Co. v. Hallett Mfg. Co.,198 Ala. 609, 73 So. 938). The measure of damages for nondelivery is based on the difference between the agreed price and the market price at the time and place of delivery with interest. Vann v. Lunsford, 91 Ala. 576, 8 So. 719; Clements v. Beatty, 87 Ala. 238, 6 So. 151, and foregoing later authorities.
The evidence tended to show that on February 4, 1918, defendant wrote plaintiff, recognizing the contract as executory; that on the day following plaintiff wired defendant he would buy for defendant's account the 3 carloads of corn at the place of delivery, and immediately defendant wired that he had performed the contract in the previous shipments; that is, he claimed to "have already shipped 10 over cars." To this plaintiff replied that he was buying for account of defendant 3 cars of corn, and would send draft on Covington Manufacturing Company for the difference in price between what he would have to pay in the market at the point of delivery and the contract price of the corn. To this defendant replied:
"I had equally as much right to give you so many tons of corn as you had to expect me to ship you so many tons, inasmuch as 20,000 lbs. or ten tons make a minimum car as per railroad schedule. In fact, if you had considered I sold you eleven cars of corn, I would then have given you eleven cars — considerably above the min." —
and again two days later:
"We consider that we have filled our contract in the absence of the terms not being specified as to the number of tons each car should hold, and we shall stand on shipments already made you on any suit you might file against us."
Such was the controversy under the evidence.
The testimony tended further to show without conflict that on the date indicated plaintiff purchased 3 cars of corn in the market at the point of delivery, and billed defendant for the amount paid in excess of the contract price. Thus the uncontradicted evidence showed a breach of the contract by defendant in failing to ship the 3 cars of corn. Under the circumstances of the breach, plaintiff had the right to purchase the corn for defendant's account at the market price at the point of delivery and hold defendant liable for the difference. Thompson v. Strong, 74 So. 34;3 Ward v. Cotton Seed Products Co., 193 Ala. 101, 69 So. 514.
When the defense is analyzed, it is merely a contention that liability be limited to the minimum capacity of a car, 20,000 pounds. This testimony was confined to the statement of two witnesses, who, in substance, said there was no usual amount of corn contained in the ordinary carload; that the minimum. carload of corn a railroad would accept for transportation was 20,000 pounds. Plaintiff's evidence tended to show that ordinarily a car of corn varied from 20,000 to 60,000 pounds.
The foregoing rule by our court for *Page 195 
the measure of damages for nondelivery of personal property, pursuant to contract of sale, is in line with the statement of the general rule by Mr. Sutherland in his work on Damages, vol. 2 (4th Ed.) § 651, p. 2279, that —
"If the sale is of a carload of goods, no particular car being specified, the damages are to be assessed on the basis of the quantity which an ordinary car will contain." Seefeld v. Thacker, 93 Wis. 518, 520, 67 N.W. 1142; Floyd v. Mann,146 Mich. 356, 369, 109 N.W. 679; Menz Lbr. Co. v. McNeeley,58 Wash. 223, 108 P. 621, 28 L.R.A. (N.S.) 1007.
Under the evidence and the oral charge of the court, plaintiff was not confined to a recovery based on the minimum capacity of a car of corn; the question was properly submitted to the jury to determine the amount of the damages, from the evidence, for nondelivery of the 3 cars of corn (in the ear) in the quantity which an ordinary car of corn in the ear contains.
In the oral charge the court submitted to the jury the amount of damages sustained by plaintiff for the breach of the contract, and limited the issue to the amount of corn for which recovery could be had for nondelivery of the three cars purchased saying:
"What amount of corn should those cars have contained — the usual amount — it is not the average; * * * but what was the usual amount of corn that he [plaintiff] had a right to expect to come to him in those 3 cars not delivered, and what is the usual amount, you must find from all of the evidence in this case. * * * Will you put it at 20,000 pounds, 30,000 pounds, or 40,000 pounds — what will you put the 3 cars at? You must get that, not from what you think; but from all of the evidence in this case. * * * So that it is not a question of how much he lost, this plaintiff lost, how much he paid out. * * * He is entitled to recover the difference between what he paid for the corn he did not get and the reasonable market price of the corn when he did buy it — went into the open market and bought it. The difference between the two figures."
Given charge 2, taken in connection with the oral charge and the undisputed evidence that on the date of repudiation of the contract by defendant plaintiff went upon the market at the point of delivery and purchased 3 carloads of corn at its market price after notice and on defendant's account, shows there was no reversible error in its giving.
The measure of damages was properly submitted, and the finding was supported by the evidence. The motion for a new trial was properly refused.
The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.
ANDERSON, C. J., and McCLELLAN and SOMERVILLE, JJ., concur.
1 199 Ala. 23.
2 Ante, p. 59.
3 199 Ala. 23.