160 Ky. 346 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1914
Beversing.
This action was instituted by the appellant, Fairbanks, Morse & Company, in the Whitley Circuit Court to recover of the appellee, Carson-Muse Lumber Company, $350.00, the purchase price of a steam-engine, and $18.55, freight paid thereon. The appellee’s answer, without controverting these demands, set up a counterclaim for $1,103.50 damages, alleged to have been caused it by a delay of fifteen days in the delivery, on board of cars at Cincinnati, Ohio, of the engine by the appellant for shipment to its stave manufactory. To this answer and counter-claim a demurrer was sustained by the circuit court and judgment rendered in appellant’s behalf for the amounts, respectively, claimed in the petition. From that ruling and judgment Carson-Muse Lumber Company, the present appellee, prosecuted an appeal to this court, which reversed the judgment and remanded the cause, with directions to the circuit court to set aside the judgment, overrule the demurrer to the answer and counterclaim and permit such further proceedings, consistent with the opinion of the Court of Appeals, as the parties might desire to take. (See opinion in Carson-Muse Lumber Co., v. Fairbanks, Morse & Co.. 151 Ky., 404.)
Following the return of the case to the court below and the completion of the issues, by the filing of a reply controverting the affirmative matter of the counterclaim, there was a trial, which resulted in a verdict in favor of the appellee, Carson-Muse Lumber Company, upon its counterclaim, for $131.45, awarded it as damages in excess of the demands sued for by the appellant, Fairbanks, Morse & Company. From the judgment entered upon that verdict the latter has appealed.
The only ground relied upon by appellant for a reversal of the judgment is, that the trial court erred in giving to the jury an instruction marked “No. 2.” which reads as follows:
“If the jury believe from the evidence that the defendant purchased from the plaintiff an engine on or about the second day of March, 1911, with the definite understanding on its part and with a promise on the part of plaintiff to deliver the engine on board the cars at Cincinnati, Ohio, on the fifth day of March, 1911, for immediate transportation to the place of business of the defendant in Whitley 'County, Kentucky, and that the
The specific objection urged by appellant to this instruction is, that it does not confine the recovery of the damages claimed by appellee to such loss of profits, if any, and the deterioration, if any, of the material then on hand for use in manufacturing staves, to the fifteen days during wnich the delivery on board of cars for shipment of the engine sold it by appellant, was alleged to have been delayed by the latter. The objection is well taken, for the error is patent and one that was well calculated to mislead the jury. As to the question of damages made by the- appellee’s counterclaim, we, in the opinion on the former appeal, said:
“It is apparent from the averments of the answer and counterclaim that the special circumstances under which the contract was made, were communicated by appellant (Carson-Muse Lumber Company), to appellee (Fairbanks, Morse & Company), at the time of its purchase of the engine; that is, that appellant would be unable to operate its manufacturing plant until it received the engine ; that its delivery on the car March 5th, 1911, for immediate transportation to appellant’s manufactory was imperatively necessary, and that any considerable delay in the delivery of the engine would inevitably result in a
It will be observed that the instruction in question does not, as directed by the opinion, supra, confine the recovery of appellee’s damages to loss of profits and deterioration in value of material arising during, or by reason of, the delay of fifteen days in the delivery of the engine on board of the cars, and this omission may have misled the jury into the belief that they were authorized, under the instruction, not only to allow appellee such damages as arose in the particulars named from the deday of fifteen days in the delivery of the engine on board
It appears from the evidence introduced in appellee’s behalf that the frequent rains, freezes and sudden weather changes of March, the month in the early part of which appellant was to deliver to it the engine for operating its stave manufactory, produce conditions that quickly injure timber, particularly such as has been converted into “bolts” for the manufacture of staves, causing it to check (i. e., crack) into seams and rents; and that appellee had on hand during the fifteen days appellant delayed the delivery of the engine enough bolts to make ninety thousand staves, which bolts were so injured by checking during the fifteen days as to reduce the staves made from them from first to second class staves, thereby greatly depreciating their market value; one or more witnesses putting such reduction of value at from $65.00 to $24.50 per thousand. Other evidence in appellee’s behalf conduced to prove further loss sustained by it in its business, because of its having no engine to operate its plant during the fifteen days appellant delayed the delivery of the engine purchased by appellee of it; some of this evidence being to the effect that the latter, if it had been in possession of the engine during the time, it is claimed, appellant delayed its delivery, could have made, by operating its plant, seven thousand staves per day, at a clear profit of $1.00 per thousand, or $7.00 per day. But the evidence as to the deterioration in the value of the timber during and caused by the- delay of fifteen days in appellant’s delivery of the engine, seems to have been more especially relied on as a basis for the claim to damages made by appellee. Upon another trial of the case the court should change and correct instruction No. 2 so that it will read as follows:
If the jury believe from the evidence that the defendant on or about March 2, 1911, purchased of the plaintiff an engine for operating its stave manufactory, with the understanding on its part and the promise on the part of the plaintiff, that plaintiff would deliver the engine on board the cars at Cincinnati, Ohio, March 5, 1911, for immediate transportation to the defendant at its place of business in Whitley County, Kentucky; and that the plaintiff failed to comply with its promise, if
It appears from the evidence that the engine sold the defendant by plaintiff was loaded on the cars at Cincinnati March 20, 1911, but was not started to its destination by the railroad company until the next day, March 21, nor received by appellee until March 28th. If this interval of seven days between March 20th and 28th, be regarded an additional delay in the shipment of the engine to appellee, it was delay caused by the railroad company undertaking its transportation, and appellant is not liable for any injury to appellee’s business or for any deterioration in its stave timber that may have occurred during or by reason of this interval or delay of seven days. If appellant is liable at all, it is for such damages as were sustained by appellee, in the particulars claimed by it, during, or because of, the delay in delivering the engine on board the cars, covering the interval, or some part thereof, between March 5th and
The jury are further instructed that the appellant is not liable for any damages that appellee may have sustained, either by way of loss of profits in its business or deterioration in the value of its stave timber, during or resulting from the delay, if any, on the part of the railroad company in transporting the engine to appellee’s place of business in Whitley County, after it was delivered by appellant on board the cars at Cincinnati.
For the reasons indicated the judgment is reversed and cause remanded for a new trial consistent with the opinion.