This аction is brought to recover the sum of $6,172.50, being the purchase price of a quantity of straw hats and hemp braids sold to the defendant by the plaintiff. The answer does not deny the allegations of the cоmplaint, but sets up two counterclaims for damages for the alleged breach by the plaintiff of several contracts for the sale of straw hats to the defendant. There being no contest in resрect to ■plaintiff’s claim, the trial was devoted entirely to the consideration of the defendant’s counterclaims. At the close of the trial a verdict was directed in favor of the defendant fоr the sum of $15,269.83, which is the difference between the damages claimed by the defendant and the sum conceded to be due plaintiff. Altogether six separate contracts are set forth in defendant’s answer. Three of these contracts were made on August 4, 1915, and are set forth in the second counterclaim. The other three are the contracts of August 9 and 30, 1915, and December 10, 1915, and are set forth in thе first counterclaim.
In the August fourth contracts the plaintiff agreed to deliver to the defendant 1,700 dozen Leghorn hats of a stated quality at $5.75 per dozen, to be delivered in equal shipments in November and December, 1915, and January, 1916. Of these hats only thirty dozen were actually delivered and the defendant has been allowed damages under its second counterclaim for the sum of $6,262.50, being $3.75 on each of the 1,670 dozen hats which plaintiff failed to deliver.
The two contracts of August 9 and 30, 1915, for 1,000 dozen and 4,000 dozen Leghorn hats, respectively, set forth as aforesaid in defendant’s first counterclaim, provide for the delivery to the defendant by the plaintiff of said 5,000 dozen hats of a stated quality at the agreed price of four dollars per dozen. After setting forth these two contracts, the answer alleges that after thеse contracts were made the plaintiff told defendant that it could not deliver the hats described therein, but could deliver a hat of another quality, known as Monghidoro, at three dollars and seventy-fivе cents per dozen, and that in November, 1915, it was agreed that the plaintiff should deliver to the defendant 5,000 dozen of these hats, “ on condition that the defendant
In addition to the damages allowed, as above stated, on the second counterclaim, the trial court has found that the defendant is entitled to the sum of $15,737.83 as damages under its first counterclaim. As the contracts of August ninth and thirtieth were conceded to have been superseded by the December agreement, the defendant’s claim for damages must be based entirely on the breach of the last-mentioned contract. The aforesaid sum of $15,737.83 allowed by the court was made up of two items, as follows: $11,885, being special damages claimed to be due the defendant for loss of prospective profits on 3,458% dozen of the Leghorn hats, which defendant says he has contracted to sell, and $3,852.83, general damages arising from plaintiff’s failure to deliver 1,541% dozen of said hats.
The six contracts in question are all in writing and each contain the following stipulatiоn: “ This contract is contingent upon strikes, floods, riots, war, rebellion and all other contingencies unavoidable or beyond our control.”
The hats in question are of a kind and quality usually manufactured in Italy аnd were to be furnished plaintiff by the Italian firm of Tullio Santini & Figli, who were engaged in the hat business at Florence. The plaintiff alleged in its reply, and contended on the trial, that it was impossible to furnish these hats owing to conditions which obtained in Italy at the time the deliveries were to be made, and which conditions were the direct result of the war with Austria in which Italy was then engaged. This is plaintiff’s principal defense to both of the defendant’s counterclaims.
As above stated, the trial court has awarded large damages to the defendant on its two counterclaims. In so doing the court adopted the defendant’s theory in respect to the proofs offered and has based these damages under the first counterclaim wholly on evidence respecting the brеach of the contracts of August ninth and thirtieth, which contracts were superseded by that of December tenth.
The evidence offered in respect to damages under this counterclaim is entirely confined to the value of the hats described in the August contracts. The witnesses were interrogated in respect to the market value of Exhibits 2 and 3, which were concededly the sample hats to be furnished under the contracts of August ninth and thirtieth. The hats to be furnished under the December contract were of an inferior grade, and there is no evidence in the case which would warrant the court in assessing the damages for failure to deliver hats under the last-mentioned contract.
The court also erred in directing a verdict for special damages for loss of prospective profits.
As above stated, the defendаnt claims that it agreed to sell 3,458% dozen of the hats in question to customers; and that the plaintiff was informed of that fact when the contract of December tenth was made. It appears, howevеr, from the testimony that all of the hats claimed to have been so sold by defendant were hats of the quality described in the contracts of August ninth and thirtieth. The defendant claims that its representative told plaintiff at the time the November agreement was made that it had made contracts for the sale of hats of the quality described in the August contracts, and that defendant could use the hats to be furnished undеr the new contract to supply such customers. Such statement, however, is no proof that defendant had interviewed its customers on this subject and that they had agreed to fake 3,458% dozen of these hats which are conceded to be to an inferior quality. There was, therefore, no adequate foundation for the award of special damages.
The plaintiff further contends that there is no lеgal evidence of any damage whatever. While the evidence is very unsatisfactory, it may be that the condition of the market at the time was such that proof of market value was extremely diffiсult. While the defendant should be required to prove its case by showing the various elements of its damages claimed to have been suffered by it by the best evidence obtainable, we hesitate to say that the defendant introduced no legal
The judgment and order appealed frоm should be reversed and a new trial ordered, with costs to the appellant to abide the event.
Clarke, P. J., Lattghlin, Dowling and Page, JJ., concurred.
Judgment and order reversed and new trial ordered, with costs to appellant to abide event.
