120 Iowa 584 | Iowa | 1903
Prior to March 4, 1899, the Benton County ■Creamery Company, a copartnership composed of Chester A. Hodge and L. C. Eggleston, was engaged in establishing ;a creamery at Yin ton. A building for that purpose was nearly completed. A canvass had been made, and oral agreements entered into with farmers, by whom the milk •of ten or twelve hundred cows had been pledged on condition that, beginning May 1st, it should be taken at the farms, and, after the separation" of the butter fat therefrom, the skim milk returned, and the expenses incident to making the butter, shipping, and marketing it paid, all at a cost to them of four cents per pound, they to receive the balance obtained for the butter. To carry out their part of the arrangement, the defendants had employed a .butter maker at $50 per month, and men with teams to haul the milk on various routes, all i^o commence work May 1st. Some correspondence had been had with plaintiff, and on March 4, 1899, acting through an agent, Pat-feiam, it contracted to furnish defendants an outfit for said creamery for $1,625, tobe shipped “at any time designated by second party after three weeks from date thereof and before sixty days from date thereof.” The agent was fully informed of the arrangements detailed, and of the necessiiy of having the creamery ready for operation by May 1st. On the 14th of April the machinery for an ice plant was bought through the same agent, on the representation that the creamery outfit was ready for shipment, and that the refrigerator machinery, except some coils and tanks, was also ready, and all save these would be placed in a car and forwarded wifhiit forty-eight hours. This is ■denied by the agent, but satisfactorily established by other ■evidence. Had the shipment been made as proposed, the
.Recovery of anticipated profits was generally denied, in the earlier decisions. An exception seems to have been-first made in the casé of torts. Gibson v. Fischer, 68
Turning now to the case at bar, it is to be observed that neither the making of profits, nor providing the opportunity to do so, formed a part of the contract. No doubt, the ultimate purpose of all business enterprise is the derivation of some advantage through the investment of labor or capital, or both; butj when the manufacturer engages to supply machinery for a plant, it is no part of the contract that a profitable business shall be carried on by the machinery furnished. If there be delay, he may be responsible for the loss of the use, or possibly for inter-ést on the investment, where there is no rental value, but not for loss of profits in the business proposed, which necessarily are contingent upon many circumstances, and which might or might not have been made. Penneypacher v. Jones, 106 Pa. 237, 242; Mining Syndicate v. Fraser,. 130 D. S. 611 (9 Sup. Ct. Rep. 665, 32 L. Ed. 1031); Howard v. Stillwell, 139 U. S. 199 (11 Sup. Ct. Rep. 500, 35 L. Ed. 147). Moreover, this enterprise was new, and exper-
II. Under the contract the plaintiff was to erect the ice plant in “first-class order” in the creamery, with coils necessary “for the proper cooling” of four rooms, in each of which a tank was to be placed, “adapted in size and ■construction to aid in maintaining a uniform degree of refrigeration,” and to be well and thoroughly constructed, of suitable material, and “brine-tight.” Upon the completion of the icé plant, it was further stipulated that plaintiff was “to operate it six days, and in this time to produce the temperature agreed upon”; that it would "‘cool the rooms alone to the temperature named in from five to six hours’ run, and will cool seven hundred pounds o? butter introduced in the cooler, and one thousand five hundred pounds of cream run over the Blair cooler, in one and one-half hours’ longer run”; and that “if, upon com
The evidence conclusively shows that the tanks were not ‘‘brine-tight,” and that a test such as agreed upon was never made. As constructed, it was incapable of cooling
But it is argued that, notwithstanding all this, the ice plant was accepted. It is said that defendants prevented the completion of the plant. The evidence fails to establish
It is urged, however, that defendants have made use >of the plant as their own. It was in pursuance of the understanding had with McNish that the machinery was taken from the depot, and plaintiff’s expert permitted to place it. There is no question but that he left it without making the test stipulated, and we think that defendants undertook to operate it, at the express invitation of Pattiani, until he could send a man to complete it. While •the latter denied this, the. testimony of Hodge to that ¡effect is confirmed by Eggleston and all the circumstances of the case. The plant was merely left in defendants’ ■care, and was so continued by plaintiff’s attorney. The „ purpose in employing the expert, Affleck, was to ascertain its condition, and not to mend it for use.
Appellant also claims that lien on the property for ■damage was asserted by coupling the demand that the ■machinery be removed with a request that the damages for delay be settled. Evidently counsel overlooks the fact that the contract is in the nature of a proposal, the -consummation being dependent on the defendants’ acceptance. Nothing is shown to have been written or said which can be fairly construed as a demand for the payment •of damages, as a condition precedent to such removal. We-conclude that, as it did not comply with the conditions
III. By the terms of the contract entered into March, 4-, 1899, the plaintiff guaranteed all the articles constituting the creamery outfit “to be of first quality in every respect.” The evidence conclusively showed that the-“ideal automatic skim-milk weigher,” priced at $100, was worthless. It is conceded that the sum of $144 advanced, for freight on the refrigerator machinery should be allowed defendants as an offset. The weight of the evidence-is to the effect that all the machinery was to be putin one car, rather than transported as separate articles, as was-done; and the difference in the expense, amounting to $62.50, was rightly allowed. Three of the vats were defective, and we are not inclined to reduce the damages-($205) awarded by reason thereof. Such articles, when not constructed as required, are ordinarily of little value. As Hodge had investigated the prices of articles essential in making up a creamery outfit, he was, in a measure,, qualified to testify. These articles were not received with full knowledge of their condition, and hence the-authorities relied on by appellant are not in point. See Berthold v. Seevers Mfg. Co., 89 Iowa, 506.
IV. The defendants paid $500 on the contract, and' should be allowed as damages $514.50. This leaves a balance owing of $610.50. The indorsement on the contract
Decree modified and cause Remanded.