Did the court apply to the facts the right measure of damages ? That is the sole question for solution.
As we view the case the referee reached a conclusion without fully appreciating one feature of the rule in Hadley v. Baxendale, 9 Exch. 341, and the court reached a different conclusion without fully appreciating the real basis for such rule, that no rule should be extended beyond the reason for it, and that the very reason often gives rise to an exception when the generality of the situation to which the rule applies is so departed from, in the peculiarities of the particular situation, as to render the way which is ordinarily productive of justice, productive of the opposite.
We shall not discuss at any considerable length the general rule for measuring damages for breach of an executory contract of sale of personal property and the common exception thereto. The formulation of the principle thereof is most notably found in Hadley v. Baxendale, supra. As there phrased it has been adopted by this court and courts in general. Cockburn v. Ashland L. Co. 54 Wis. 619, 12 N. W. 49; Guetzkow Bros. Co. v. A. H. Andrews & Co. 92 Wis. 214, 66 N. W. 119. The party wronged is entitled to such sum from the wrongdoer as will compensate him for damages arising “according to the usual course of things” from the wrong and such as is “reasonably to 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.” In harmony with that principle, which fits all ordinary cases of breach of an executory contract for sale of personal property, it is presumed that, at the inception of an agreement, the parties mutually contemplate that, in case of failure of a vendor to deliver, the vendee will be damnified to the extent of the difference between the contract price and the fair market value of the subject of the transaction at the time and place for such
Extraordinary situations so mutually known and contracted with reference to, are liable to occur, and that gives rise to the necessary supplementary rule that, in any such a case, the parties are presumed to have had, at the inception of their agreement, in mutual contemplation as a result of the breach of it, such damages as may reasonably and fairly be considered as arising according to the usual course of things from such breach under the special circumstances.
The special situation to which the exceptional rule of damages is most generally invoked, was fully discussed in Guetzkow Bros. Co. v. A. H. Andrews & Co., supra, i. e. it is where a person after having contracted to sell an article not commonly readily obtainable in the market, to another, contracts with a third person, who knows of such executory sale, for such article at a less price. The ordinary rule is generally supposed to fix the minimum of damages and the exceptional rule to enable the injured party to recover such additional amount as will fully compensate him for the injuries which fall within the scope of mutual contemplation at the inception of the agreement as probable results of a breach of it, in view of special circumstances then mutually known. Whether it may be invoked by the wrongdoer to reduce his liability below what it would be in an ordinary case, as well as by the wronged party for the opposite effect, is not necessary to here decide, as we view the ease. The referee evidently thought to the contrary and decided accordingly, upon the theory that defendants sold the lumber before they purchased the same, or had done so substantially, and that the contract with appellant was for the purpose of carrying out a substantially al-. ready agreed upon trade with another party. The facts seem to be otherwise.
From the foregoing it is clear that the rule of damages which became a part of the contract, usable under all ordinary circumstances in case of the breach of it, was the ordinary one above indicated, and the one which the trial court applied to the case. Did the logic of the situation justify such application ? That is the question.
It must be remembered that the law of a contract in respect to the rule of damages, governing in case of the breach of it, till superseded by some exceptional circumstance thereafter happening, is definitely fixed and becomes a part of the agreement when made. We are now speaking of the rule or measure of damages, not what such rule or measure will produce. That waits upon the breach and application of the rule to the conditions then found, but the rule itself is agreed upon in the nature of an impersonal arbiter, at the time of and in the contract itself. All the authorities are to the effect that the damages are such, and only such, as are referable to the situation from the standpoint of mutual knowledge when the minds of the parties finally met contractually. That has been emphasized, time and again, in the adjudications of this and other courts, and it is the very vital principle of the rule in Hadley v. Baxendale, supra; Guetzkow Bros. Co. v. A. H. Andrews & Co., supra; Serfling v. Andrews, 106 Wis. 78, 81,
In the foregoing and many other cases that might be referred to, this court has said, in terms or effect, the rule of damages is written into the contract when made, the result in case of a breach is dependable upon applying that rule to the situation as it exists at the time of the breach. Therefore, as indicated, in case of a breach of an executory contract of sale of personal property, there being no special circumstances rendering more than ordinary damages presumably within the contemplation of the parties at the time of making the contract as likely to occur from the breach of it, the limit of legal damages is the difference between the market value of the property at the time and place of delivery, if there is such market value, otherwise the market value at a point as near thereto as practicable, and the price the executory purchaser agreed to pay therefor with legal interest from the date of the breach.
Underlying the foregoing rule is the basic reason thereof, that he, who by his fault in respect to performing contractual obligations causes injury to the one contracted with, should, in justice, make that one whole as regards the result of such fault, so far as in legal contemplation he must be held to have anticipated such result when he contracted, as a probable consequence of such fault. The idea, it will be seen, which vitalizes and limits the whole system of recoverable damages for breach of contract, is to measure out justice upon a common-sense basis; to compel the wrongdoer to respond within the written or unwritten calls of the agreement with an equivalent for the loss inflicted. Compensation for loss, not penalizing for the fault to the enrichment of the person wronged, is the right of the matter in contemplation of law. The law does not concern itself with either profit or loss to the person
Erom the foregoing it would seem that whenever a situation is created subsequent to the making of a contract, either by mutual acts of the parties, or by the act of either, so that a breach by the executory vendor, under the rule incorporated into the contract, would yield a profit to the executory vendee, the reason for such rule is thereby superseded; suspended as to the particular case, calling for an exceptional rule in harmony with such reason. In other words, as to a peculiar situation to which the dominant thing and the rule springing therefrom apply for all ordinary cases cannot be applied with the result such dominant thing calls for, from the standpoint of mutual justice; that is to put the person suffering from the breach in the same position he would have been but therefor, the latter should prevail regardless of whether the history of decided cases furnishes any precise precedent to fit the particular situation or not. That is the real spirit of Hadley v. Baxendale, 9 Exch. 341, as elucidated in Guetzkow Bros. Co. v. A. H. Andrews & Co. 92 Wis. 214, 66 N. W. 119, and enlarged upon as an elementary principle in 1 Sutherland on Damages -(3d ed.) § 12, relied upon by the referee in reaching his conclusion.
The following, supported by authority, was promulgated by the elementary writer and challenged the attention of the learned referee:
“The principle of just compensation is paramount. By it all rules on the subject of compensatory damages are tested and corrected. They are but aids and means to carry it out; and when in any instance such rules do not contribute to this end, but operate to give less or more than just compensation for actual injury, they are either abandoned as inapplicable or turned aside by an exception.”
In connection with that the writer paid heed to the exist-, enee of arbitrary rules “which have been adopted from con
. Here we have the situation to which the logic of what has been said seems to apply. The respondents, subsequently to-their contract of purchase, resold at a certain advance on their purchase price, not all the subject of purchase, but all thereof which they might obtain by performance by their executory vendor. Thereby they liquidated the possible amount of their probable damages by failure of such vendor to fully perform. Whether, — had such vendor breached his contract for the purpose of taking advantage of the advance in market price of the lumber over the selling price to respondents’ ex-ecutory vendee; characterizing the breach by a species of fraud, — he could profit by the terms of the resale contract, which fixed the actual loss of his vendee at much less than would have been the result in an ordinary case, — we have not before us; though that he should not would seem to be in harmony with the legal principle of justice suggesting the legitimate basis of administration. The facts seem to be that there was no such moral unfairness in this ease. The appellant did not reserve a part of the stock he agreed to turn over for the purpose of reaping an advantage thereby. He furnished all he accumulated for the purpose of carrying out his contract, and used reasonable diligence in respect to the matter, so far as there is any evidence in the record. Under those circumstances should he suffer loss by being required to pay respond-
From the foregoing we deduce tbe following auxiliary to tbe ordinary rule and tbe common exception made conspicuous in Hadley v. Baxendale, supra, and adopted as indicated, by this and other courts: Where an executory vendee, subsequent to making bis agreement of purchase, contracts to resell tbe subject of tbe transaction at an advanced price, protecting himself against possible loss in case of bis being prevented from performance by default of bis vendor, by agreeing to deliver to tbe second vendee only such part of such subject as comes to bim from such vendor, and tbe latter without bad faith fails to perform, tbe measure of damages of such ex-ecutory vendee cannot exceed tbe difference between bis agreed purchase and selling price.
Thus we reach tbe same result as did the referee but on a somewhat different line of reasoning though upon substantially tbe same principles. Tbe reasoning is different, in that tbe circumstance supposed by tbe referee to exist, — that respondents made their contract to sell before they made tbe con
By the Court. — The judgment is reversed, and cause remanded with directions to enter judgment in accordance with the conclusion of the referee, with costs.