92 F. 293 | 8th Cir. | 1899
This case involves the right of the intervener and appellee, Walter L. Clark, to payment for the purchase price of a gear wheel and pinion which was sold by his assignor, the Midvale Steel Company, to the Denver City Cable-Railway Company in 1892, out of the property of the latter company, notwithstanding a prior mortgage upon it, represented by the Central Trust Company, as trustee for the bondholders secured thereby. Clark intervened in the foreclosure suit brought: by the trust company against the railway company, and insisted that his claim was entitled to a preference in payment over the bonds secured by the mortgage. The trust company contested this claim for a preference, and also pleaded that the Midvale Steel Company, by its delay in delivering the gear wheel and pinion, had inflicted damages upon the cable company in excess of the purchase price of the machinery. The circuit court sustained the position of the intervener, and refused to hear the claim of the trust company to offset the damages caused to the cable company by the steel company’s delay against the amount owing for the purchase price of the machinery. Upon an appeal from a decree based upon that ruling, this court decided that the claim of Clark was a preferential debt, but that the trust
The appellants proved these facts: The cable company was a corporation operating a cable railway in the city of Denver, in the state of Colorado, and the steel company was a corporation engaged in manufacturing machinery in or near the city of Philadelphia, in the state of Pennsylvania. By means of telegrams and letters sent to each other between September 1, 1892, and October 4, 1892, these parties made a contract on October 3, 1892, to the effect that the steel company would make and deliver to the cable company a gear wheel and pinion suitable to operate its railway on January 3, 1893, in consideration of a stipulated price to be paid for it by the cable company. The delivery was not made until May 14, 1893. There was no provision in the contract that time was of its essence, and there was nothing in the correspondence which led to the contract to indicate that haste was required, or that delay would probably cause unusual loss. On January 3, 1893, and from that time until May 14, 1893, the old gears which the cable company was using were cracked and patched, so that its engineers considered it unsafe to move its cars at a greater speed than seven miles an hour, although their normal speed was ten miles an hour. During this time these gears were in such a worn and weak condition that occasional breakages and stoppages occurred, and the reduction of speed increased the spaces between the cars 25 per cent. After this evidence had been introduced, the appellants offered to prove that early in December, 1892, these old gear wheels, to replace which the contract in question was made, entirely broke down; that thereafter the condi
In the arguments and briefs in this case our attention is sharply and repeatedly called to the fact that the damages sought consist entirely of losses of anticipated profits. The mere fact, however, that damages claimed as a result of the breach of a contract consist of anticipated profits, neither establishes the right nor bars the claim to their recovery. Some profits may be and others- may not be allowed. The rules which govern their recovery do not differ materially from those which measure the recovery of expenses incurred or other losses sustained through the breach of an agreement. One who breaks a contract of sale of merchandise is liable in damages for the difference between the contract price and the market value of the goods at the time and place of delivery, although this difference is in fact nothing but the profit which the purchaser would have made if the contract had been performed, and which he necessarily lost by its breach. One who prevents his contractor from performing his agreement is liable in damages for the profits which he would have made if he had performed it, because such profits are the direct and immediate fruits of the contract which the parties necessarily contemplated, and in fact promised, when the agreement was made. Masterton v. Mayor, etc., of Brooklyn, 7 Hill, 61, 69; Railroad Co. v. Howard, 13 How. 307, 344; U. S. v. Beham, 110 U. S. 338, 4 Sup. Ct. 81; Mining Co. v. Humble, 153 U. S. 540, 14 Sup. Ct. 876. On the other hand, it was held in the leading case of Hadley v. Baxen-dale, 9 Exch. 341, 354, 356, that one who delivered a broken shaft to a common carrier to take to a manufacturer as a model for a new one, and who at the same time notified the carrier that his mill was stopped on account of the break, and asked him to forward the shaft immediately, could not recover from the carrier what he would have gained by running his mill during the latter’s unreasonable delay. In Howard v. Manufacturing Co., 139 U. S. 199, 206, 11 Sup. Ct. 500,
(1) Those damages which are the natural and probable result of a breach of a contract, those which the parties may reasonably anticipate as the effect of the breach under the particular circumstances of the case which are known to them when the contract is made, and those only, may be recovered in action upon a contract: Rockefeller v. Merritt, 22 C. C. A. 608, 617, 76 Fed. 909, 918, and 40 U. S. App. 666, 680, and cases there cited.
(2) In the absence of proof aliunde of knowledge by the defaulting party at the time the contract is made of special circumstances which make other damages the natural and probable effect of a breach, such damages only as are implied by the contract itself, such ,as would naturally flow from its breach in the usual course of things, such as would reasonably be anticipa led by the parties to such contracts in the great multitude of such cases, and such damages only, may he recovered. Drug Co. v. Byrd, 92 Fed. 290; Railroad Co. v. Bucki, 16 C. C. A. 42, 46, 68 Fed. 864, 868, and 30 U. S. App. 454, 460; Hadley v. Baxendale, 9 Exch. 341, 354, 356; Primrose v. Telegraph Co., 154 U. S. 1, 29, 14 Sup. Ct. 1098; The Ceres, 19 C. C. A. 243, 72 Fed. 936, 943; Boyd v. Brown, 17 Pick. 453, 461; Ingledew v. Railroad, 7 Gray, 86, 91; Railway Co. v. Mudford (Ark.) 3 S. W. 814, 816; Kempner v. Cohn, 47 Ark. 519, 527, 1 S. W, 869.
(4) Damages which are the natural and probable result of a breach of a contract, and which, may be reasonably anticipated therefrom, but .which are so speculative and so dependent upon numerous and changing contingencies that their amount is not susceptible of proof with any reasonable degree of certainty, may not be recovered. Howard v. Manufacturing Co., 139 U. S. 199, 205-210, 11 Sup. Ct. 500, and cases there cited; Cahn v. Telegraph Co., 46 Fed. 40.
The application of these rules to the facts of the case in hand readily answers the question it presents. The contract of the steel company was to deliver a gear wheel and pinion within three months of October 3,1892. The damages to the cable company, with which the appellants seek to reduce the claim for the purchase price of this machinery, consist of the loss of income entailed upon the cable company during the delay in the delivery of the wheel and pinion after January 3, 1893, by the fact that the machinery to replace which they were ordered broke down early in December, 1892, and was thereafter so badly cracked and worn that it was insufficient to operate the cable at more than three-fourths of its normal speed. The purchase price of this machinery was $10,500. The lowest estimate of the cable company’s loss by the delay of four months and a half in its delivery is $22,000, or at the rate of about $181 per day. No knowledge by or notice to the steel company at or before it made this contract that this gear wheel and pinion were ordered to replace old machinery, or that the old machinery was badly worn or weak, or liable to break or to be insufficient to operate the railroad at its normal speed, or that the income of the cable company was liable to be reduced $181 per day, or at all, by its failure to complete its contract on January 3, 1893, was either proved or offered to be proved at the trial of this case. The contract, therefore, falls under the second rule we have announced, and the only damages recoverable for its breach are those implied by the contract itself, those which are the natural and probable effect of the breach in the usual course of affairs. In Hadley v. Baxendale, 9 Exch. 341, the loss of the profits of the mill during the carrier’s unreasonable delay in taking the broken shaft to a manufacturer was held to be too remote and .inconsequential to authorize a recovery, although the carrier knew, when he received the shaft, that the mill had stopped because4 it was broken. In Howard v. Manufacturing Co. the anticipated profits from operating a mill during the delay in the completion of a contract to reconstruct and furnish the machinery for it, and to have it finished and ready to operate on July 15, 1885, were held to be such as did not naturally flow from a breach of the contract, such as could not reasonably have been anticipated by the parties when they made.it, and their allowance was refused. How, then, can it be said that a manufacturing company, which simply agrees to make a wheel and pinion for a railway company within a certain time, and
The conclusion already readied renders it unnecessary for us to consider the objection that the damages which the appellants sought to prove are so speculative and contingent in their nature that they may not form the bar-is for a recovery.
The objections of the appellee to the consideration of this case on the merits have not been considered, because the result we have reached is the same we should have attained if these objections had been considered and sustained. The decree below must be affirmed, '>nd it is so ordered.