Green was the highest bidder at a public auction of a house and lot offered for sale by Mrs. Ansley, and his bid was accepted, but after a delay of some weeks he
The main question argued before us was, whether the plaintiff was entitled to recover without proof of notice to the defendant of her intention to resell and of the time and place of the second sale. We think that, to authorize a recovery in this action, it was necessary that the defendant should be notified of the intention to resell at his risk and hold him bound for any difference between his bid and the price obtained at the resale, but it was not necessary, in addition to this, that any direct notice should be given him of the time and place of the sale. According to some of the authorities, the measure of damages where one refuses to accept land which he has contracted to buy, is the difference between the contract price and the salable value at the time the contract was broken; and this value may be conclusively established as against him by a resale, provided the vendor in reselling complies with the conditions the law imposes, as to diligence, etc. We think, however, that where a resale is resorted to in order to fix the measure of damages, the true test, if these conditions are complied with, is not the difference between the contract price and the value at the time of the breach, but the difference between that price and the price obtained at the resale, together with the expense incurred in reselling, without regard to what the value was at the time the contract