49 Mo. 406 | Mo. | 1872
delivered the opinion of the court.
The court properly declared the law in reference to the character of the bond, and held that the damages therein provided for were not in the nature of liquidated or stated damages. Where the parties have agreed that in case one of them shall do a stipulated act, or omit to do it, the other party shall receive a certain sum as the just, appropriate and conventional amount of damages sustained by such act or omission, courts will not interfere to grant relief, but will deem the parties entitled to fix their own measure of damages, provided that the damages do not assume the character of gross extravagance, or of wanton and unreasonable disproportion to the nature and extent of the injury; and whether a sum inserted in an instrument, to be paid in case of breach, is to be regarded as a penalty or liquidated damages, must be determined by the nature of the contract and its provisions. I£ the whole scope of the writing shows that it is intended as a penalty, it will be so treated, without reference to any particular language the parties may have used. (Morse v. Rathburn, 42 Mo. 594, where the'authorities are cited and examined.)
By the record in this case it appears that the plaintiff’s intestate entered into a contract with the defendant in which, for the
The parties, when they executed this bond, surely did not intend that the whole $1,600 should be paid at all events, upon any breach or failure to comply with the agreement. Suppose the defendant had made and delivered ninety drills and omitted to make and deliver the other ten, it will hardly be believed that in such case he would be liable to pay, on account of his omission, the whole sum designated in the bond. Yet, for aught that appears in the record, such may be the fact. Did he fail to deliver any, the damages could be easily ascertained and computed ; but certainly they would not be the whole amount of the value of the drills, the labor and the materials-, all of which the defendant was to furnish. By recurring to the agreement, it can never be presumed that the parties had the sum in view as the measure of damages. The full contract price for the drills was $1,600, and the defendant was to be at the whole expense of getting them up. It would be a strange construction to suppose that the plaintiff’s damages, on a failure in fulfilling such a bargain, were fixed at the entire sum of the contract price.
The judgment is affirmed.