85 Mo. App. 1 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1900
— This is a suit begun before a justice of the peace to recover damages for the breach of a contract for the sale and delivery of cord wood. In the circuit court the plaintiff had judgment for one hundred and ten dollars and defendants have appealed.
There is little or no dispute as to the facts which the evidence conduces to establish. The plaintiff entered into
There was some evidence adduced which tended to prove that the wood in the condition it was when plaintiff purchased it, and before it had been partly culled, could have been'sold in Kansas City for a net advance of about one dollar per cord. The plaintiff testified that after he made the purchase of the wood from the defendants that he had engaged to deliver it to a manufacturing corporation in Kansas City for three dollars per cord for oak and three dollars and seventy-five cents for hickory; that it was part oak and part hickory, there being some twenty-five or thirty cords of the latter.
The principal complaint now made is that the plaintiff should have received the wood that the defendants had left undisposed of, and that he ought not to recover damages for that. The plaintiff was under no obligation to receive the inferior wood which had been rejected as “culls.” He was entitled to the delivery of the wood- as it was when he purchased it, both in respect to quantity and quality. Tiedeman on Sales, secs. 101, 335. It is not to be supposed that after some sixty cords of the best wood had been selected and separated from the ricks that that which remained, including ' the “culls,” was of the same value per cord that it was before the selection and separation took place. The average quality
There was little or no evidence offered tending to show a market at Blackwater for wood of the ldnd the plaintiff had contracted for with the defendants. The court did not err in refusing the defendants’ instruction submitting the case on this theory. The jury were told by an instruction for plaintiff that if it found for him that the measure of his damages was the difference between the price agreed and the market price of the wood-at Blackwater, and of the wood of the kind contracted for; and if it had no market price at Blackwater, then he was entitled to the difference between the agreed price and that which the evidence showed was the reasonable value at Blackwater at the time he was to have received the wood under contract. This instruction, as is seen by reference to the evidence and to some of the adjudged cases in this state, was far more favorable to the defendants than they were entitled to. Vanstone v. Hopkins, 49 Mo. App. 386; Cobb v. Whitsett, 51 Mo. App. 146; Anderson v. Frank, 45 Mo. App. 482. Indeed, this seems to have been their own theory of the case, as appears from the evidence adduced by them at the trial. The defendants are therefore in no situation to complain of the plaintiff’s instruction relating to the measure of damages.
It is probably true that the testimony of the plaintiff touching the price at which he had sold the wood was irrelevant, yet, in view of other evidence showing that the plaintiff was entitled'to recover, and that the verdict for him was so moderate, we can not think the defendants were in any way prejudiced by the action of the court in admitting such testimony.
The defendants assail the judgment on the further ground that the plaintiff was not represented by a next friend. The record discloses that the plaintiff’s father filed
The judgment was for the right party and will be affirmed.