84 Mo. App. 456 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1900
On September 30, 1898, the defendant, living at Kansas City, Missouri, sold to plaintiffs, living at Baltimore, Maryland, ten thousand bushels of corn as per the following contract:
“Office of the E. P. Smith Commission Oo.
“Rooms 421-422-423-424 Exchange Bldg.
“Kansas City, Mo., Sept. 30. 1898.
“Bought of Johnson-Brinkman for Gill & Eisher, Baltimore, Md., 10,000 bushels No. 2 Mixed corn at 26 & 1-2 cts. E. O. B. Q. cars Kansas City, Kansas Oity grades, destination weights, 15 days shipment.
“Bill acct. Gill & Eisher, Baltimore, Md., care B. & G. S. W. Ry., East St. Louis. Draw on Gill & Eisher, Baltimore, Md., without exchange. Please load large cars and 10 per cent over marked capacity. Kindly confirm above to them to-day by mail.
“Johnson-Brinkman Commission Co.
A. D. J. Pt.”
“Kansas City, Mo., Sept. 30, 1898.
“Messrs. Gill & Eisher, Baltimore, Md.
“Gentlemen:—We confirm sale tó you this day, through E. P. Smith Commission Co., 10,000 bushels No. 2 mixed corn at 26 & 1-2 cts. E. O. B. Q. cars Kansas City, Kansas City grades, destination -weights, 15 days shipment.
“They instruct us to bill to Gill & Eisher, Baltimore, Md., care B. & O. S. W. Ry., East St. Louis and draw on you at Baltimore, without exchange.
“Yours truly,
“Johnson-Brinkman Commission Co.”
Afterwards defendant delivered, as required by the contract, 3,900 bushels of the corn, except that it billed the corn in its own name and indorsed the bill to plaintiff with draft attached for the purchase juice and forwarded to a bank at Baltimore for collection. Defendant failed to deliver the remaining 6,100 bushels within the fifteen days mentioned in the contract, or, at any other time. Plaintiffs did not learn of defendant’s failure until about ten days after the time expired and then, being in need of the corn, went on the market at Baltimore and purchased the number of bushels, so remaining undelivered by defendant, at a large advance over the contract price. Plaintiffs then brought this action laying their damages at the advance price they jtaid at Baltimore. Defendant conceded at the trial that plaintiffs were entitled to recover some damages, but contended the amount should be limited to the difference in the price named in the contract and the market price in Kansas City, Mo., on the last day it should have been delivered. Plaintiffs position was, and is, that the difference in price should be governed by the market at Baltimore when they
The ride is, that where the delivery of personal property is to be made at the place of sale then the measure of damages to the purchaser for the failure of the seller is the difference between the contract price and the market price at that place and at the time agreed. But where there is a sale of goods at one place to be shipped to the purchaser at a distant place, a question frequently arises as to which is the point of delivery. It is well settled that if the purchaser selects the carrier by which the shipment is to be made the delivery to the purchaser is complete when made to the carrier. The latter is deemed the purchaser’s agent to receive and transport. 2 Sedgwick Dam., secs. 734-738; Scharff v. Meyer, 133 Mo. 428; Griffith v. K. C. Co., 46 Mo. App. 539; Meyer Bros. v. McMahan, 50 Mo. App. 25.
2. In this case the written contract, as set out above, provides not only that the shipment shall be by the “Q” carrier, but directs how the cars shall be loaded. The place of delivery was therefore to be at Kansas City.
But plaintiffs claim that in point of fact the corn was to be billed to defendant and that plaintiffs were not to have title to it until it arrived in Baltimore and was paid for. That Baltimore was therefore the place of delivery. They claim that defendant so shipped the 3,900 bushels. That it took the bill of lading in its own name, indorsed it and sent it with draft attached to a bank in Baltimore. The trial court ignored this view in the instructions; holding, in effect, that evidence of such understanding would contradict, alter and vary the terms of the written contract and was therefore not to be allowed to control. • We think that was the proper construction of the law and the contract. The contract clearly specifies that the corn was to be shipped
But plaintiffs insist that such was the understanding of plaintiffs, and that defendant knew they so understood it, and ought not now to be allowed to claim a different understanding, or to place a different interpretation on the agreement. When a contract is not sufficiently specific to be certainly interpreted, the understanding of the parties to it will fix its meaning; especially will their action under it. But where its terms are clear—not subject to two interpretations—parol evidence is not admissible, since that would simply substitute a verbal contract for a written one.
After the court rejected plaintiffs’ view that Baltimore was the place of delivery, they then sought to fix the time when the market value at Kansas City should be ascertained at the time when plaintiffs learned that defendant had not, and would not, comply with the contract, which they did not learn until about ten days after the contract time expired, corn then being higher. The court refused this. The reason for fixing the market value as the measure of damage is that it is supposed the buyer could make himself whole by going into the market and getting what the seller has failed to deliver. To do this, plaintiffs contend, he must be aware of the seller’s failure. And where he lives at a distant place he could not be expected to ascertain the default until time required for transportation had expired. If we should concede this proposition, it would not aid plaintiffs. Eor they made their purchase through their agent or representative at Kansas City and he should be presumed to know whether the contract was complied with on the day it should have been. It was the same as though plaintiffs were per: sonally present. If it be said that this agent was only for the single purpose of the isolated act of purchase, yet the contract provides for still another agent, viz: the carrier.
Plaintiffs also sought to recover special damages. This can be done where the circumstances of the sale justify it. Mfg. Co. v. Mfg. Co., 76 Mo. App. 76. If there are special circumstances communicated to the seller whereby he must be presumed to contemplate special damages will follow his default then he will be liable to such damages. Benjamin on Sales, secs. 870, 871. The record fails to put plaintiffs within this rule, either in pleading or evidence.
The judgment will be affirmed.