122 Minn. 335 | Minn. | 1913
Action to recover damages for the breach of an executory contract for the purchase by defendant from plaintiff of certain lagging and mining timber. The trial resulted in a verdict for plaintiff in the sum of $673. Defendant moved for judgment in its favor notwithstanding the verdict, or, if that was denied, for judgment in its favor except as to a certain sum, or if that was denied, for a new trial. Each of these motions was denied, and defendant appealed from the order.
The contract, for the alleged breach of which plaintiff sought damages in this action, consisted on defendant’s part of a written order or request from defendant dated November 20, 1911, that plaintiff furnish defendant with 1,000 cords of 6 foot “lagging” delivered before March 15, 1912, at Shenango mine or on board cars at a siding for shipment to other mines of defendant, at the price of $3.90 per cord, and also an agreement to take from plaintiff not over 20,000 lineal feet of “mining timber” at 3 cents per lineal foot, logs to be 7 inches or more at small end, and 12 feet long, and to be delivered at Shenango mine. •
Defendant operates an underground minp called the Shenango mine, and also two other mines. Plaintiff owned stumpage rights on three 40-acre tracts a mile or' two distant from the Shenango mine. “Lagging” is short, rough timber used to put over the drifts in underground mines to support the overburden and protect the men working below. “Mining timber” is timber used as uprights to support the lagging.
Plaintiff had delivered 7 6 cords of lagging to the Shenango mine and had 200 cords more cut and piled on his land, when defendant, on December 22, 1912, canceled the contract, claiming that the lagging delivered was of a very inferior quality. One of the issues on the trial, and probably the main issue, was whether defendant was or was not justified in canceling the contract. It is conceded here that this was a question for the jury, and that the evidence was such that the verdict is final on this issue.
The questions before us on this appeal I’elate to the measure of
It appeared conclusively from the evidence that the land on which plaintiff had the stumpage rights contained just about enough timber to take care of the contract, and that plaintiff had no other land from which he could cut and sell lagging or mining timber. After defendant canceled the contract, plaintiff, whose stumpage rights expired that winter, continued the cutting of his timber, and cut substantially all timber on the land into lagging and mining timber, and thereafter and during that winter sold it all except 300 cords to other mines in the vicinity. lie sold 350 cords of the lagging to the Clair Iron Co., at $4.00 per cord, 250 cords to the Oliver Mining Co., at $4.50 per cord, and 25 cords to a baker at $4.00 per cord. The 300 cords not sold during the winter of 1911-1912 was piled by plaintiff, and sold in the spring and early summer to the Oliver Company at $4.50 per cord. He sold the 20,000 feet of mining timber to the iron company at 3 cents per lineal foot. Thus, counting the 15 cords delivered to defendant, plaintiff disposed of all of the lagging and mining timber called for by the contract, and all that he had on the land. He testified that the cost of hauling was 50
It is apparent from the above facts that, owing to his successful efforts to dispose of to others the lagging and mining timber defendant contracted to take, plaintiff’s actual loss was much less than 'the amount of the verdict rendered. The trial court ruled that the damages Were fixed at the time the contract was broken, and that defendant was not entitled to any reduction in the amount because plaintiff afterwards succeeded in reducing his loss by sales to others.
The questions to be here decided may be thus stated: (1) Did the trial court give the correct rule as to the measure of damages for the 200 cords of lagging that had been cut but not delivered at the-time of the breach? (2) Did it give the correct rule as to the measure of damages for the lagging and mining timber that had not been cut at the time of the breach, considering the fact that, after the-breach, plaintiff cut the same? (3) What effect on the amount of damages recoverable for the breach has the subsequent sale to others of the lagging and mining timber?
The general rule as to the measure of damages for breach by the vendee of an executory contract for the sale of personal property, is that the vendor may recover the difference between the contract price and the market value. 3 Sutherland, Damages, 430. This rule is subject to modification where the property has no market value. Where the goods are to be manufactured to fill the contract, and the vendee renounces the contract before this is done, then the measure of damages is the difference between the contract price and the cost to the vendor of completing the contract. Morrison v. Lovejoy, 6 Minn. 224 (319); Glaspie v. Glassow, 28 Minn. 158, 9 N. W. 669; Mississippi & R. R. Boom Co. v. Prince, 34 Minn. 71, 24 N. W. 344; Ennis v. Buckeye Pub. Co. 44 Minn. 105, 46 N. W. 314; Silberstein v. Duluth News-Tribune Co. 68 Minn. 430, 71 N. W. 622; 35 Cyc. 594; Hinckley v. Pittsburgh B. S. Co. 121 U. S. 264, 7 Sup. Ct. 875, 30 L. ed. 967; Kingman v. Western Mfg. Co. 92 Fed. 486, 34 C. C. A. 489.
Plaintiff in the case at bar was not obliged to cut and prepare the lagging and mining timber. Indeed he had no right to do so in order to increase the damages. But we think that having gone on and ■completed the article, ’ thereby lessening his damages, the amount of his recovery should be measured by the market value and not the cost ■of completing his contract. 2 Sedgwick, Damages (9th ed.) § 752; Hemingway Mnfg. v. Council Bluffs C. Co. 62 Fed. 897. There ¡ seems to be a conflict of authority on this pr9position, but we con- . ceive the logical rule to be as stated. To allow the vendor to recover -.¡profits based on the difference between the contract price and the cost
The evidence is conclusive that the plaintiff only had for sale the timber growing on the three forties on which he had the stumpage .rights, and that, notwithstanding the notice of cancelation given by defendant, he continued to cut the trees into lagging and mining timber and had it all cut and ready for sale before the time specified in the contract for delivery, and before this action was commenced. We think the evidence shows conclusively that at the time there was a market value at the mines in the vicinity for such lagging and mining timber. This is pretty well shown by the actual sales made by plaintiff as well as by other evidence. It follows that the trial court applied the wrong measure of damages.
Where the vendor, for instance, is a dealer in lumber, and agrees
To the same effect is Allen v. Murray, 87 Wis. 41, 57 N. W. 979, though in this case the court recognizes what we conceive to be the real basis upon which the rule stands. Pinney, J., said: “The exclusion of evidence to show what the plaintiffs made under a second logging contract, made with Carmichael, during the same logging season, after the breach of the contract with the defendant, offered in reduction of damages, was correct. The contract was not one for personal services, and non constat but that the plaintiffs might have obtained means and resources with which to put in these logs for
In the case at bar plaintiff had a particular lot of timber and no more. It is as if plaintiff had owned a particular horse or a particular forty of land, and defendant had canceled a contract to purchase at an agreed price. Can it be doubted that, if plaintiff immediately sells his horse or his land to another purchaser, he has suffered no damage beyond the difference between the contract price and the price received, if that happens to be more than the market value ? We think that plaintiff, having cut the timber and sold it, cannot have both his profit on such sales and the profits he would have made had the sale to defendant been consummated.
We are not of the opinion that judgment should be here ordered for any specific sum. It is a case for a new trial, on which, if the evidence is practically unchanged, the rules for measuring plaintiff’s damages as we have stated them in this opinion should be applied.
Order reversed and new trial granted.