64 So. 658 | Miss. | 1914
delivered the opinion of the court.
This suit was instituted in the court below by appel-lee, a retail ice dealer at Hazlehurst, against appellant, a corporation engaged in the manufacture and sale of ice at Brookhaven, to recover damage alleged to have been sustained by him, by reason of the breach by appellant of a contract to sell him ice during the season of 1909. According to appellee’s testimony, appellant’s manager came to Hazlehurst during the month of January, 1909, in order to arrange for the sale to him of ice for the sea
At the close of the evidence, appellant requested the court to exclude the same and to grant it a peremptory instruction. This motion was overruled and the instruction refused. The grounds of this motion and request for a peremptory instruction are: First, that the evidence hereinbefore set out discloses, if anything, a unilateral contract, that is, one by the terms of which appellant only is bound. Second, that the contract is void under section 4779 of the Code for the reason that it is for the sale of personal property of value greater than fifty dollars, is not in writing, and there was no delivery to ap-pellee of any part of the property contracted to be sold.
There is no merit in either of these contentions. Ap-pellee’s testimony, if true, discloses a complete contract,, partly performed, in which he agreed to purchase, and appellant to sell, the ice therein referred to.
Appellee testified that the thirty tons of ice delivered to him were delivered in part performance of this contract, and if that is true the contract is valid, and the truth thereof was a question for the determination of the jury. Stonewall Mfg. Co. v. Peek, 63 Miss. 342.
Appellee, over the objection of appellant, was permitted to recover the profits which he claimed he would have made by a resale of the ice had it been delivered to-him by appellant according to the terms of the contract. It appears from appellee’s testimony that he purchased this ice with the knowledge of appellant for the purpose of reselling it in an established retail business for the purpose of making a profit thereby, and, if this is true, he was unquestionably entitled to recover whatever profit he would have realized by the resale of the ice. Railroad v. Ragsdale, 46 Miss. 458; White v. Leatherberry, 82 Miss. 103, 34 So. 358; Beach v. Johnson, 102 Miss. 419, 59 So. 800.
In addition to loss of profits, appellee introduced evidence showing, and was erroneously permitted to recover, the expense incurred by him in preparing to handle and sell the ice. Had he made the profits claimed, he would necessarily have incurred this expense, and his profits would have been the net amount after deducting from his gross receipts the amount which he paid for the ice plus the expense of carrying on his business.
Reversed and remanded.