19 N.Y.S. 757 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1892
This action was brought to recover damages for an alleged breach of contract for the purchase of real estate. The plaintiff, who was the owner of certain premises in the city of Brooklyn, sold the same at public auction in the city of New York to the defendant, who thereupon paid 10 per cent, on account of said sale, and executed a contract for the purchase. The terms of sale were that the premises were sold subject to a certain mortgage thereon, and also subject to an agreement relating to property on the east. At the time the title was to be closed, the appellant refused to take the same, for the reason that the premises were actually occupied by tenants. It was admitted upon the part of the plaintiff that the premises were occupied by tenants, but claimed they were allowed to remain because the defendant had told him not to remove the tenants, but to keep them on the premises. On the 16th of July, 1890, the plaintiff resold the premises at Auction, but upon different terms of sale; the same being then sold subject to -monthly tenants. At this sale the premises brought $1,300 less, whereupon this action was brought to recover damages in the amount of $2,000; and upon the trial, the foregoing facts being established, the jury rendered a verdict in favor of the plaintiff for $1,433.
Upon what theory the jury arrived at this amount, it is impossible to determine; but it is perhaps unnecessary to inquire, in view of the conclusion we have come to in respect to the rights of the parties in the case. The action seems to have been brought, and the case substantially tried, upon the theory that the plaintiff was entitled to recover as damages the difference between the price at which the property sold when bought by the defendant and that which it brought at the resale. It is true that the court did charge to the jury the correct rule of damages, but the general tenor of the charge was as stated. We are not aware of any such rule of damages, unless there is a provision in the terms of sale (which is not the case here) authorizing such a proceeding for the purpose of determining the damage. The true measure of damages is the difference between the price paid by the purchaser And the value of the property; and the only evidence offered upon the part of the plaintiff to show the value of the property tended to show that the defendant had paid no more than its value at the time when he purchased, and consequently the plaintiff suffered no damage. It is true that on the resale the property was sold at a loss; and perhaps, if the resale had been upon the same terms, it might have been some evidence to go to the jury as to what the real value was. But clearly, it was not necessarily the measure of damages, as it seems to have been claimed upon the trial below. The court was requested to charge that, in order that the second sale might be used inascer