100 Kan. 376 | Kan. | 1917
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The Kansas Flour Mills Company brought this action against E. L. Dirks to recover damages for breach of a contract- to deliver wheat. The contract for the wheat was as follows:
Shaffer, Kansas, Dec. 3, 1914.
“To The Kansas Flour Mills Company.
“I hereby offer to sell you 1000 bushels of wheat to he delivered to your elevator at Shaffer, Kansas, on or before Dec. 30th, 1914, for $1.00 per bushel, off grades to be settled for at market difference on day of delivery. If I fail to make delivery as above specified, you may extend*377 time of delivery, cancel contract, or buy in for my account, at your option. “E. L. Dirks.
“The above offer is accepted this 3rd day of December, 1914.
“The Kansas Flour Mills Company.
“By Geo. W. Vanhorn.”
The defendant, without any valid or legal excuse, failed to deliver but seventy-eight, bushels. On December 31, 1914, plaintiff, for the purpose of extending the contract, wrote the following letter which the defendant received in due course of mail:
“On Dec. 3rd you contracted with our agent at Shaffer 1000 bu. wheat for delivery on or before Dec. 30th and up to the present writing have delivered only 78 bu. We are extending this contract until Jan. 15th and must ask that you deliver the wheat by that time. If you do not deliver the wheat we will have to buy it in for your account, and charge you with our loss.’!
On December 30, 1914, the market price of wheat at Shaffer was $1.12 per bushel, and on January 15, 1915,. it was $1.29. The defendant contended that the contract was breached on December 30, and that plaintiff could not exercise the option after that time, and the trial court decided that plaintiff’s letter of December 31 did not extend the contract as it had already expired, that its breach occurred on December 30. Judgment was rendered in favor of plaintiff for $32.64, the difference between the market price on December 30 and the contract price, less $78, the value of the wheat defendant had delivered to plaintiff.
On this appeal it is insisted that the defendant had all of December 30 in which to make delivery, that the earliest possible day for plaintiff to make its election to extend the contract was December 31, that the contract was duly extended to January 15, that the market price on that date should govern in determining the damages to which it was entitled, and that it should have been awarded judgment against the defendant for $189.38 with interest thereon from January 15,' 1915. Did the contract end on December 30, or was it continued by the action taken by the plaintiff on the following day? Defendant was1 entitled to all of December 30 in which to make delivery of the wheat just the same as he was to the 29th day of that month. Delivery under the contract was to be made on or before the 30th day of December and defendant
A proper measure of damages where "the seller fails to deliver grain or other chattels at the time stipulated in the contract of sale is the difference between the contract price and the market price at the time and place of delivery. (Stewart v. Power, 12 Kan. 596; Gray v. Hall, 29 Kan. 704.) While holding 'that the contract was not extended, the court awarded the plaintiff the difference between the contract price of $1 per bushel and $1.12, which was the market value of wheat on December 30. It appears that before that date defendant did deliver 78 bushels, and reckoning the value of the balance of the wheat, 922 bushels, at 12 cents per bushel, the difference between the contract and market prices, it would amount to $110.64; but it appears that the plaintiff had not paid for the 78 bushels that had been delivered, and Subtracting the value of that quantity from the increased value of that not delivered we have $32.64, the amount for which judgment was given.
■ The plaintiff insists that it was entitled to an award based on the price of wheat on January 15, 1915, the time of delivery fixed by the extension of the contract. This contention must be sustained. The option to extend the time of delivery was a part of the contract. It was supported by the same consideration as the stipulation fixing December 30 as the time of delivery, and when the option was exercised and a reasonable
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded with directions to enter judgment in favor of the plaintiff for $189.28, with interest thereon at the rate of six per cent per annum from January 15, 1915.