52 So. 843 | Ala. | 1910
Plaintiff in the court below, appellee here, recovered judgment for the breach of a contract by which defendant agreed to lend him sufficient money, in no event to exceed $2,000, with which plaintiff was to construct a dam of stone and concrete across Town creek where he then had a wooden dam which furnished power for the operation of a grist mill. Plaintiff undertook, also, with the money to be advanced, to purchase and set up in readiness for operation a turbine wheel and band sawmill, guaranteeing that the sum named would be sufficient for the improvements specified, and that he would complete them out of' his own purse in the event it proved insufficient. To secure the loan defendant was to have, and did get, a mortgage upon plaintiff’s water power and surrounding tract of land. The contract also contained a provision that for a fixed period after the completion of the improvements plaintiff was to saw logs for defendant at a fixed schedule of prices, giving preference to defendant’s logs at any and all times. Defendant was to furnish logs enough to make the bill for sawing equal to the amount of money advanced. Payment was to be made in that way. After defendant had furnished money to an amount between $400 and $500, it refused to furnish more or to go further with the performance of the contract. Defendant, however, contended that it had fully complied with its contract by purchasing a mill for plaintiff by plaintiff’s direction, the price of which, along with the money furnished, made up the sum agreed upon. Meantime plaintiff ‘had torn away the
Notwithstanding Judge Stone’s criticism of the leading case of Hadley v. Baxendale, 9 Exch. 341, in Daughtery v. American Union Tel. Co., 75 Ala. 168, 51 Am. Rep. 435, and his refusal to apply the doctrine of that case to the peculiar facts of the case he had in hand — a case in which the defendant company had failed to correctly transmit a cipher telegram — he assented, and the courts generally assent, to the proposition that if the plaintiff’s special, ulterior purposes in making the contract are disclosed, they then become an element of the duty thereby imposed upon the defendant, and afford a substantial basis for the assessment of special damages. The rule is clearly stated by the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts in the following language: When the special circumstances are known to both parties, it is obvious that each may have contracted with reference to them; and that, if such was in fact the case, the party in fault may be held justly to make good to the other whatever damages he has sustained which were the reasonable and natural consequences of a breach under the circumstances so known and with references to which the parties acted. In such cases the larger damages may be recovered as having been in the contemplation of both parties and as naturally resulting, under the special circumstances, from the breach itself. —Lonergan v. Waldo, 179 Mass. 135, 60 N. E. 479, 88 Am. St. Rep. 365. The rule here stated requires that
The principle on which special dajnages are recoverable for breaches of contract have been applied on correct
In Lowe v. Turpie and Western Union Tel. Co. v. Hearne, supra, it was held that the plaintiff suing for the breach of a contract to lend money, and seeking to recover special damages, must allege, not only the peculiar facts causing the damages and notice of the same to the party guilty of the breach, but that all reasonable means within the power of the plaintiff had been adopted to prevent loss. In Baxley v. Tallassee & Montgomery R. R. Co., 128 Ala. 183, 29 South. 451, this court held that the complaint should contain an averment of the special circumstances and that defendant had notice. Further the court did not go because the exigencies of the case did not require it to do so. There may be good reason for the rule of the Indiana and Texas cases re
Profits such as the plaintiff may have expected to realize from the operation' of the mill in its improved form,
There are many assignments of error. We do not think the occasion demands a separate treatment of ■each of them. By reference to the opinion herein advanced it will be seen that the trial court in a number •of rulings on the evidence and in some special instructions to the jury misconceived in part the measure of recoverable damages, and for those errors the judgment will be reversed, and the cause remanded for another trial. In other respects, the record shows no error.
Reversed and remanded.