48 N.H. 455 | N.H. | 1869
In this case it is objected that there is a variance between the amount of wool delivered to the defendants, as alleged in the declaration, and the amount proved; the allegation being that a large quantity of wool of the plaintiffs, to wit, 7837 pounds, was so delivered, and the proof being of a smaller quantity. The inquiry is, then, whether the plaintiff was bound to prove the precise amount laid in his declaration ; and this must turn upon the question whether the amount so stated is material and traversable or not. If it is, the consequences of a variance will not be avoided by the fact that the allegation is under a videlicet. On the other hand, if the matter is not material, the party is not concluded by the allegation in this form; 1 Ch. PL 10th Am. ed., 317, 318, and cases; 2 Saund. 291 c. note, where it is said by Sergeant Williams that if a party does not mean to be concluded by a precise sum or day stated, he ought to plead it under a videlicet, for if he do not, he would be bound to prove the exact sum or day laid.
In the present case the action is brought to recover damages for not transporting in due time a large lot of wool, to wit, 7837 pounds, of great value, to wit, $5000 ; and it is obvious from the form of the allegation, that the pleader did not intend to bind himself to the precise amount of wool, or its value, as stated under the videlicet.
Had the declaration stated the contract to be that defendant would transport that precise amount of wool, proof of a different amount might have been a variance, as being a different contract in fact; but no such thing is stated here. The material allegations are that plaintiff delivered to defendant a large quantity of wool which the defendant agreed to transport, &c. ; and what is said about the weight and value is much as if stated as matter of estimate, and not as a material part of the contract. Besides the variance suggested is not that the contract was to transport another and different quantity of wool, but that the quantity delivered was less than the quantity stated.
It is very clear, we think, that the precise quantity delivered was not a material allegation ; and no issue could be taken upon it, any more than upon the allegation as to value. The declaration is in the ordi-. nary form in suits against common carriers; and we find nothing that
In Hamer v. Raymond & al., 5 Taunt. 789, it was held, in an action on the case for running foul of posts in the river supporting the plaintiffs wharf, that it was not necessary to prove the posts or wharf to be at the place at which they were, under a videlicet, alleged to be situate.
The next question respects the statement of the consideration. The declaration states the delivery of the wool at the Northumberland depot, to be safely carried and conveyed from that depot to Portland, immediately and without delay, to wit, by the next train of cars, and there, to wit, at said Portland, to be delivered by said defendants for the plaintiffs, to be thence transported by another party to Boston ; and it is then averred that in consideration thereof and of a certain reward and compensation to be paid by the plaintiffs to the defendants in that behalf, defendants promised to carry the wool at the time and in the manner above stated. A second count is substantially like the first, except the promise is alleged to be to carry the wool within a reasonable time after its delivery at the depot.
The exception is that there was no evidence of the contract declared on ; and the defendants urge that the proof shows the contract, so far as any was made, to have been made before the wool was delivered at the depot, and also that there was no proof of a promise to deliver the wool in Portland tó be transported by another party to Boston.
The point of the first objection is that the consideration in the promise is not proved as laid; that the previous delivery of the wool to be carried to Portland was laid as the consideration in part for the promise, while the proof was only of a promise made before the wool was delivered.
The declaration states a delivery of the wool to the Eailway Company at its depot, to be carried to Portland without delay, and by the next freight train of cars ; and that in consideration thereof, and of a certain reward to be paid, the defendants promised so to carry it; and the question is whether there was any evidence of such a contract. To prove that, it was necessary to show not only the promise but the consideration as laid.
It would seem that there was evidence tending to support the second count, which was on a promise to carry and deliver the goods in a reasonable time, because if no time is specified the law implies an undertaking to do the service in a reasonable time. But the jury may have found for the plaintiffs upon the ground that the promise was to carry the goods by the next freight train without considering the question of reasonable time ; and therefore it is necessaiy to consider whether there was evidence tending to sustain the first count.
If there was no evidence tending to prove that the previous delivery of the wool, at defendants’ request, was a part of the consideration for the promise, then the exception would seem to be valid ; but we are inclined to think that there was evidence on which the jury might have
In Streeter v. Horlock, 1 Bing. 34, which was assumpsit against a carrier for not delivering goods according to contract, one count stated a promise made upon a past consideration, viz., that plaintiff had caused to be shipped at defendant’s request certain goods, whereas by the evidence it appeared that defendant had engaged to carry and deliver the goods, before the goods, or at least before the whole of them, had been actually shipped, and it was therefore urged on the part of the defendant that the consideration ought to have been stated in an executory form, viz., that the plaintiff would cause to be shipped, &c.
But it was held that the count might be supported in its present form ; Parke J., laying it down that whenever, as in this case, an order is given previously to the delivery of goods to a carrier or other bailee to deal with them in a particular manner, to which-he assents, and afterwards the goods are delivered to him accordingly, a duty arises on his part, upon the receipt of the goods, to deal with them according to the order previously given and assented to ; and the law infers a promise by him to perform such duty. “ In the present case,” he says, “ the promise might have been stated as a promise by the defendant to do his duty in that behalf, which would have been a more concise mode of stating that which is in effect stated.”
The doctrine of this case is decisive of the question here, and we are disposed to regard it as sound. It is in fact like many other cases, where, upon the execution of the consideration, a duty remains, as to pay money; and the law implies a promise to perform such duty, and it may be enforced by an action of assumpsit in some general form.
The other exception is.that there was no proof of any promise to deliver the wool in Portland to be transported by another party to Boston. On that point we do not understand that there is any allegation of a promise to carry the goods to Boston, but simply to deliver them in Portland for the plaintiff. The statement that they were to be transported from thence to Boston is to be regarded not as stating an obligation by defendants to take them there, but simply as a statement of the object of plaintiffs in having them carried to Portland, viz., to get them to Boston where a sale of them had been made and they were to be delivered. There was evidence tending to prove that such was the fact and that the agent of the defendants had notice of it. We are of the opinion, then, that there was no variance on this ground.
The exceptions to 15th interrogatories in the deposition of Richard W. Bailey, and the 13th in the deposition of Selden A. Moore, do not appear to be insisted on and we are not aware that they, are objectionable.
Interrogatory 14th in Moore’s deposition is not, .we think, leading. He was asked if he put the wool into the car, and if not, why not, and
In some cases, a form like the one adopted here might be open to the objection of suggesting that some agreement had been made, or other thing done, and in all such cases the question ought to be disallowéd; but we do not perceive that in this case’ the witness was likely to be led by the form of the question ; had any particular agreement been indicated it might have been objectionable.
We think the 16th interrogatory in Moore’s deposition is not leading. There is no ground to suppose that the question was designed to lead to an answer that the wool was sent on either of the days named in the question, for the plaintiffs’ case must have gone upon the ground that it was not sent until many days after that, and so it appears from the defendants’ testimony; and yet if the question has any tendency to lead the witness, it must be in a direction unfavorable to the party putting the question.
The substance of the inquiry is whether the wool was sent the day after it was drawn to the depot, or the next day, and if not, how long it remained there to the witness’s knowledge, and we think there was nothing in the form of the question to lead the witness to the prejudice of the defendants.
The exception to the answer to the third interrogatory in the deposition of William Greenough, Jr., is mainly that he states the contents of letters written by himself and the plaintiffs. It does not, however, appear that the exception taken at the trial was put upon that ground, specifically, but was general, and it is therefore well settled that-it cannot avail the defendants. Had the objection been specific, it might have been removed by the production of the letters, and it is too late after the trial to make it. Carter v. Beals, 44 N. H. 408, and cases cited.
So we perceive no objection to the witness’s statement to the purchaser of the wool that it would soon arrive, and that the purchaser was satisfied. The purchaser could not be regarded as á third person merely. It was proper that he should be informed as to the time when the wool might be expected to arrive, and the conversation tends to show a recognition at that time of the contract of sale. The statement by the witness that the information was satisfactory to the purchaser was equivalent to saying that he made no objection or that he expressed himself satisfied. This objection is rather a formal one and ought to have been specifically made. This conversation with the purchaser tends also to show an assent to the sale after notice that the proposition was accepted by the plaintiffs, and that the goods were shipped; and thus
The evidence tends to show an offer for the wool by the Atlantic Delaine Company of fifty-six cents per pound, an acceptance of that offer by the plaintiffs, and a subsequent recognition and assent by the Delaine Company ; and we think the jury could legally have found a binding contract of sale, unless it was made to appear that it was invalid within the statute of frauds for want of a writing. But as that objection was not taken at the trial, nor urged in the argument, we need not consider it here. Besides it doe.s not clearly appear that 'the contract was not in writing.
The answer of Mr. Greenough to the fourth interrogatory in his deposition is not objectionable on account of his reference to what he supposed to be the law. If it was correct it could do no harm. If not, the court would correct it; and his statement of the purchasers’ reasons for not taking the wool cannot now be objected to even if derived from the correspondence, because that objection was not taken at the trial.
The same may be said in respect to the answer of John D. Parker to the third interrogatory in his deposition. Carter v. Beals, 44 N. H. 408, before cited.
Another question has respect to the instructions to the jury upon the subject of special damages arising from the loss of the sale to the Delaine Company. It is urged by the defendants that such damages could not be included, because no binding contract of sale was shown; but for the reasons already suggested we think the jury might have found a valid contract. The defendants also argue that, if there had been a valid contract, damages could not have been given for the loss of it. This raises the question whether the carrier of goods which he undertakes to transport, is liable, under the circumstances of this case, for damages arising from the loss of a sale when caused by his delay in delivering the goods.
On this point the evidence tended to prove that the plaintiff, having a lot of wool which he had contracted to sell at fifty-six cents per pound, to be delivered in Boston, called upon the defendants’ agent at Northumberland station, and stated to him that he had a lot of wool that he had sold or bargained, deliverable in Boston ; that he wanted it to go immediately to Boston, and that it was sold if it could go right in ; that he wanted it to go by the White Mountains Railroad, or by the Grand Trunk Railroad, whichever route was the quickest; that he was told by the agent that he would provide two cars for the wool to go by the freight train next day ; that the agent told the plaintiff to send up the wool the next morning and it should go without fail. That plaintiff did send the wool the next morning, but that defendants did not forward it until as late at least as March 16th, the arrangement about it having been made on the twenty-first day of February, 1866. The evidence also tends to show that the purchaser declined to take and pay for the wool, assigning, among other reasons, that it had been so long on the
No objection is made to the sufficiency of the notice that the wool was contracted to be sold deliverable in Boston, and that plaintiffs desired it to be forwarded immediately on that account; and the jury have found that the station agent made an agreement binding oii the defendants to forward the wool by the next freight train. Upon this testimony we think it was competent for the jury to find that by the breach of the defendants' agreement the plaintiffs lost the sale to the Atlantic Delaine Company, and were obliged to sell the wool for a diminished price.
The inquiry, then, is whether for this loss the defendants may be charged. This subject has of late been much discussed on both sides of the Atlantic. The leading English case is Hadley v. Baxendale, 9 Exch. 341, where Alderson, B., after great consideration, lays it down as a general rule that “ where two parties have made a contract which one of them has broken, the damages which the other party ought to receive in respect of such breach of contract should be such as may fairly and reasonably be considered either arising naturally, that is, according to the usual course of things, from such breach of contract itself; or such as may reasonably be supposed to have been in the contemplation of both parties at the time they made the contract, as the probable result of the breach of it.”
The action here was against the defendants as common carriers for not delivering seasonably a broken iron shaft sent to the manufacturers as a pattern for another for plaintiffs’ mill, and it was held that the plaintiffs were not entitled to damages for the loss of profits while their mill was stopped in consequence of defendants’ delay; notwithstanding the plaintiffs’ agent told the defendants’ clerk when the shaft was sent to them that the mill was stopped, and the shaft must be sent immediately, and the clerk replied that it would reach its destination the next day. The opinion of the court was that this was not notice of such special circumstances as would lead the defendants to contemplate such loss of profits as a natural consequence of a delay in forwarding the shaft, inasmuch as, for aught that was said to defendants, the plaintiffs might have had another shaft; or there might have been other defects in the machinery that would have stopped the mill. The verdict which included such profits was therefore set aside. The court, however, held that if the special circumstances under which the contract was actually made were communicated by the plaintiffs to the defendants, and thus known to both parties, the damages resulting from the breach of such a contract, which they would reasonably contemplate, would be the amount of injury which would ordinarily follow from a breach of contract under these special circumstances so known and communicated.
The general doctrine of this case, which was decided in 1854, has been recognized and followed in both the English and American courts, and is regarded as a leading case. Sedgwick on Dam., 4th ed., 81 to 84, notes and cases, and also p. 406, 409. See, especially, cases collected on p. 81. Copper Company v. Copper Mining Company, 33 Vt. 92.
In 2 Kent’s Com. 480, in note, it is laid down that “ damages for breaches of contract are only those which are incidental to, and directly caused by, the breach, and may reasonably be supposed to have entered into the contemplation of-the parties, and not speculative profits or accidental losses, or the loss of a fancied good bargain.”
In Blanchard v. Ely, 21 Wend. 342, the court recognizes the doctrine laid down in Evans’ Pothier, London ed., 1806, in these words : “ In general the parties are deemed to have contemplated only damages and interest, which the creditor might suffer from the non-performance of the obligation in respect to the particular thing which is the object of it, and not such as may have been accidentally occasioned thereby in respect to his other affairs and the court quotes the illustrations of Pothier, that, in the case of the failure of title to land demised, the lessor would not be liable for the loss of custom in a business established by the lessee while residing there, although he would be bound to pay the lessee the expense of removal; but that a party may incur liability for extrinsic damages if it appear that they were stipulated for, or tacitly submitted to in the contract, — as if a party stipulate to deliver a horse in'such time that a certain advantage may be gained by reaching a certain place, — when for a default the party shall pay for the loss of such advantage; and, as an instance of a tacit submission, the case of demising premises expressly for use as an inn is put, and there, it is said, that if the tenant is evicted for want of title, the loss of custom may be taken into account.
These illustrations furnished by this eminent writer accord substantially with the rule laid down in Hadley v. Baxendale, and the provision of the French code, as stated by Sedgwick in his work on Damages, p. 67, is also in accordance with that rule. The substance of it-is that “ the debtor is only liable for the damages foreseen, or which might have been foreseen, from the breach of the contract.” And Parke, B., in Hadley v. Baxendale, said that was the sensible rule.
It now must be considered as settled both in the English and American courts, that for the breach of a contract to transport goods, the consignee may recover damages for the depreciation of the goods in market during the delay; that is, the difference between the market price when and where they should have been delivered, and when they were actually delivered. Sedgwick on Dam., 75, 78, and 356, 360, and cases ; 2 Red. on Rail., 166; Griffen v. Colver, 16 N. Y., 491. And it is obvious that this is in the nature of general damages, as in contracts for
There is difficulty in determining, sometimes, what are, and what are not, the direct, immediate and natural results of the breach complained of. But we think that the decisions which allow, as damages, the difference between 'the market price of the goods at the time and place when and where they should have been delivered, and the market price when they were in fact delivered, must govern this case.
There it is assumed that if the goods had been delivered to the consignee, according to the contract, they would have been worth to him as much as the then market value, because he' could have sold them at that price; and, of course, it is assumed that the injury is the direct, immediate and natural result of the carrier’s breach of contract. Such an injury must have been foreseen, and in the contemplation of the parties when the contract was made. It would be so equally in the case of a previous sale of the goods, which was communicated to the carrier when he received them, and when the contract was entered into for the express purpose of enabling the seller to complete the sale.
In such a case the loss would be the difference between the price at which the goods were bargained, and the price the consignee was enabled to sell them for in market, and the loss would be the direct, immediate and natural result of the carrier’s breach of contract as in the other case.
In the one case the difference in the market price is the measure of damages, because it is assumed that the consignee could certainly have sold them at the market price, had the goods been delivered in due time. In the other case the sale was already made and the price fixed, and had the goods been delivered in due time the consignee would have received that price for them as surely as in the other case he would have obtain-' ed the market price; and even more surely, because he might not have chosen then to sell.
The damages for the loss of a sale would fall under the denomination of special damages; and, without notice of the fact of such sale, it could not be understood that such a loss would have been foreseen or contemplated by the parties. It is proper that the carrier should understand the extent of the responsibility he assumes, and the consequences of a failure on his part; and if no special circumstances are communicated to him he ought to be held responsible only for the consequences which might ordinarily be supposed to flow from his breach of contract.
In the cases of sales with warranty, or contracts to sell and deliver goods, it is often held that the vendee cannot recover damages for the loss of a contract of resale, arising from the breach of warranty or the failure to deliver the goods. Clare v. Maynard, 6 A. & E. 519; Masterton v. Mayor of Brooklyn, 7 Hill 68, and cases cited.
In these cases, however, it does not appear that the contracts were made with any reference to a resale, and therefore they could not come within the principle we have been considering. But a very different case is presented where the contract is entered into for the express purpose of enabling one party to complete a sale, or to obtain some other advantage, and it is so understood by both parties. In this respect the illustrations given by Pothier, before referred to, are in point. In such cases the special damages are deemed to be within the contemplation of the parties.
In the recent English case of Berries v. Hutchinson, 18 C. B. (N. S.) 445, which was a contract to sell and deliver to the plaintiff a quantity of caustic soda, which was designed for sale in Russia, and the defendant knew it was designed for a foreign market, and before the time of delivery he knew it was to be sold in Russia; it was held that defendant was liable for the loss of the profits on the resale in Russia caused by defendant’s failure to deliver the goods according to his contract, and to the additional cost of freight.
So where defendant had agreed to deliver to a farmer a thrashing machine at a time fixed, knowing it was to be used to thrash wheat in the field, and by his failure to deliver it, the wheat was injured by the rain, it was held that defendant was liable for" the injury since the parties might well have anticipated such injury to result from the breach of the contract. Smeed v. Foord, 1 Ellis & Ellis 602, cited in Sedgwick on Damages 81, in note; see also cases collected in Sedgwick on Damages, 4th ed., 333, 335; among them, Randall v. Raper, 1 Ellis, B. & Ellis 84, (96 Eng. Com. Law 82), where defendant sold the plaintiff some barley, warranting it to be “ Chevalier seed barley,” and plaintiff sold it with similar warranty upon the strength of defendant’s warranty, and it proving not to be that kind of barley, it was held that defendant was liable for what plaintiff was bound to pay his vendee. See also Waters v. Towers, 8 Exch. (W. H. & G.) 401, and Woodbury v. Jones, 44 N. H. 206, and cases cited.
Upon these views we think there was no error in the instructions to the jury in respect to damages for loss of the sale to the Delaine Com
The instructions in respect to the authority of Cummings were sufficiently favorable to the defendants. He was the station agent at the Northumberland depot, and he testified that he had full charge of receiving and forwarding freight at that station ; and although he also testified that his duties in regard to freight were to receive, weigh, fill and get it off as soon as possible and that he had no authority to make contracts, and no authority over the locomotive power of the road, and that he never agreed to send any freight, except live stock, at any particular time, we think the jury might legally find that defendants held him out as their agent authorized to contract for sending freight the next day.
This was the substance of the instructions on this point, and we think there was no error. If, for the convenience of the corporation, Cummings was voluntarily placed in a situation of apparent authority, and so held out to the public as competent to make the contract in question, the defendants will be bound, although the agent had in fact exceeded his authority, and even if the defendants were entirely innocent of any purpose to mislead ; for when one of two innocent persons is to suffer, he ought to suffer who misled the other into the contract by voluntarily placing the agent in a situation of apparent authority.
In this case the agent was apparently clothed with the sole charge of receiving and forwarding freight at that depot, and it might well be supposed to be within the ordinary scope of his duties to make agreements as to the time of forwarding such freight. If such power was possessed by any one at that depot it must have been by him, and we think the jury were well warranted in finding as they did.
In 2 Redfield on Railways 113, it is laid down that station agents who receive and forward freight have power to bind the company that the goods shall be forwarded to a point beyond the terminus of that road before a particular hour, notwithstanding a general notice published that the company would not be liable beyond their own road; and so is Wilson v. York, New Castle and Berwick Railway, 18 Eng. Law. & Eq., 557; Story on Agency § 443, 127; Backman v. Charlestown, 42 N. H. 125, 131, 133; Burnside v. Grand Trunk Railroad, 47 N. H. 554.
In respect to the first count, the evidence offered by defendants as to the unexpected rush of freight was properly rejected ; and the jury having found a binding contract to carry the wool by the next freight train, the verdict will not be disturbed, even if the evidence were admissible under the second count. When the carrier contracts to carry goods within a prescribed time, no temporary obstruction or even an absolute impossibility of complying with the engagement will be a defence to an action for failing to perform his engagement; for when a party by his own contract creates a duty or charge upon himself he is bound to make it good, notwithstanding any accident or delay by in
With these views there must be
Judgment o'n the verdict.