27 S.W. 23 | Tex. App. | 1893
The parties made a contract by which the appellants agreed to sell and deliver to the appellee, at Brenham, at a day subsequent, 100 barrels of sugar of a specified quality and at a stipulated price.
No right was reserved by either party to countermand or recede from the agreement. Appellee, on same day, undertook to countermand his order for the sugar by so notifying the agent of appellants through whom the contract was made, and on the next day he wired a countermand to appellants at New Orleans. Both the agent and appellants declined to rescind or to recognize appellee's right to countermand; and at the time fixed for delivery appellants tendered to appellee, at Brenham, sugar such as the contract provided for, and upon appellee's refusal to receive it, sold it and sued for damages, claiming the difference between the contract price and the sum realized at the sale.
At the trial the court charged the jury, that the measure of damages was the difference between the contract price and the market value of the sugar at the time of the countermand; and as there had been no change in market value before the countermand, the jury found for the defendant. This charge was erroneous. The defendant had not the right to countermand the order and thereby break the contract. The agreement was clear and unambiguous, and when the minds of the parties met, both were bound by their agreement. The plaintiffs could not be deprived of the benefits to be derived from the contract by the act of the defendant. *417 The contract was executory, no specific property being appropriated to it, and therefore no title ever passed; and upon a breach by the defendant, plaintiffs' remedy was simply an action for damages. The measure of their recovery was compensation for their loss resulting from the refusal of the defendant to perform. Such loss was plainly the difference between the market value of the sugar at Brenham at the time of delivery and the price fixed by the contract. Plaintiffs, by the contract, were allowed until the appointed time to perform their agreement, and were entitled to such benefit as could be derived from a decline in the market. They had the right to purchase sugar with which to comply with the agreement at any time before delivery.
The measure of damages in cases of this character has often been stated and recognized to be the difference between the market value at time and place of delivery and the contract price. Ullman, Lewis Co. v. Babcock,
There are some exceptional cases to which this measure can not be justly applied without losing sight of the fundamental principle of compensation, or of the important rule requiring good faith and prudent dealings on the part of the plaintiff after he has received knowledge of the breach; and such are the cases of Tufts v. Lawrence,
There is no reason why the ordinary rule should not apply to this case, as it affords exact compensation to plaintiffs and holds defendant to the results of his contract.
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.
Reversed and remanded.