141 Iowa 632 | Iowa | 1908
The Groneweg & Schoentgen Company, a corporation engaged in the wholesale grocery business at Council Bluffs, undertook the erection of a large four-story building for the conduct of its business', and it entered into a contract with plaintiff, another corporation, engaged in the manufacture and sale of elevators, to fur•nish and install a freight elevator in said building with a capacity of six thousand pounds. Electricity was to be the motive power of the elevator. After the plans were all made, a representative of each of said corporations went to the office of the defendant, another corporation engaged
It seems that during the time- material to our inquiry there were two systems whereby the electrical cur
That defendant promised and agreed to and with the Groneweg & Schoentgen Company to furnish electrical power of a specified current and pressure of a nature and style known as the ‘monocyclic alternating current/ with equal potential in the several conductors thereof; that said Groneweg & Schoentgen Company, relying upon said promise, contracted with plaintiff to furnish a fifteen horse power motor attached to and part of an elevator machine to be placed in the warehouse of said Groneweg & Schoentgen Company, and defendant did promise and agree to furnish for said electrical power a monocyclic alternating current of two hundred and thirty volts pressure in each leg of said system; that the defendant wired and led into said warehouse an electrical alternating current, and represented and claimed to said Groneweg & Schoentgen Company that said current from said wires so led to the premises was of a certain potential in each conductor and of sufficient quantity to the uses of certain elevator machinery; that Groneweg & Schoentgen Company purchased from plaintiff an elevator machine, being an induction electrical motor, an approved design adapted to run with a monocyclic alternating electrical current on equal pressure on each leg of said system, and having a specified voltage of two hundred and thirty volts; that the Groneweg & Schoentgen Company erected and built said warehouse, valuable only for use as a warehouse and necessary to have an elevator of a capacity of 6,000 pounds to move rapidly from one floor to another; that plaintiff furnished said elevator machinery and motor to operate the same, and furnished a motor of sufficient capacity and suitable for operating said machinery and adapted to' the use of the current and electrical power designated by defendant and contracted for by Groneweg & Schoentgen Company; that defendant failed and neglected to perform its said contract with Groneweg & Schoentgen Company, and did lead and run wires into the said building and connected the same for the use of said motor and machinery, and did promise Groneweg & Schoentgen Company to furnish over said*638 wires an alternating current on a monocyclic system with a working' pressure of two hundred and thirty volts and sufficient current to operate said motor; that defendant ran and connected their wires with said electrical system, knowing the kind and style of motor contracted for by Groneweg & Schoentgen Company, but that defendant willfully and wrongfully refused to furnish said wires and alternating current of monocyclic system having a pressure of two hundred and thirty volts on each leg thereof, and did ■fail, neglect and refuse to furnish sufficient current and voltage to run any kind of a motor then or since built, and did without any fault or negligence of Groneweg & Schoentgen Company fail to perform their contract, failed and neglected to furnish electricity for power as promised and agreed; that said contract was verbal; that defendant did furnish an alternating current from a monocyclic system, but that said current was less than two hundred and thirty volts under use, and insufficient to operate said motor to its capacity or a sufficient capacity to run said elevator machinery to its full capacity, and failed and neglected to furnish sufficient current in said system to operate said motor or any motor to its full capacity or the full capacity of said machinery, and that, by reason thereof, Groneweg & Schoentgen Company were greatly 'damaged and' kept out of the use of said elevator to its full capacity and forced to transport and lift their goods by other and more expensive means, and deprived of the use of said warehouse, and lost the use of said elevator and warehouse in connection therewith to its full capacity, and that for a period of three months said current furnished by defendant wholly failed to operate said machinery, and said Groneweg & Schoentgen Company were, compelled to install direct electric motor connections with the wires of the street car company at great expense and loss to them; that thereafter the defendant improved its apparatus, and did furnish an insufficient current to operate said motor to its full capacity, but sufficient to partially operate said machinery for about thirty months, by which said Groneweg & Schoentgen Company were greatly damaged.
Defendant in answer, in addition to a general denial, alleged that it was operating an electric light plant on
V.- The trial court gave the following among other instructions:
6. Instructions:law of thethe case It is conceded that there are three legs in a mono-cyclic system. The plaintiff claims that the defendant company, through its manager in Council Bluffs, promised and agreed that it would furnish a current °* ^wo hundred and thirty volts m each of the three legs of its system, and the plaintiff must prove such promise and agreement substantially as alleged. It will not be sufficient upon this point if it merely appear that the defendant promised and agreed*642 that it would furnish a current of electricity.' Nor' will it be sufficient if it but appear that said manager represented that the defendant company had sufficient current to- operate said motor, but it must appear that he promised and agreed to furnish a current of a voltage of two hundred and thirty volts in each of the three legs of the system.' And, unless this is established by the greater weight of evidence, the plaintiff can not recover. Unless the con-1 tract alleged by plaintiff has been established by the greater weight of the evidence before you, the defendant was. under obligation only to furnish such current as could be reasonably furnished by such monocyclic system, and, if you find that the damage, if any, occasioned to the Groneweg & Schoentgen Company, was because the current furnished by the defendant was not adapted to the motor which was installed in the building in question, this would not entitle plaintiff to a recovery, even though another kind of current under another system might have accomplished the purpose and caused said motor to operate. If you find from the evidence that the defendant did promise and agree, through its manager at Council Bluffs, to furnish a current of two hundred and thirty volts in each of the three legs of the system substantially as alleged in the petition, then you should proceed to a determination of the next question of fact submitted to you, but unless you do so find, then your verdict should be for the defendant without proceeding further.
These instructions, whether right or wrong, were the law of the case, and the jury was bound to follow them.
VI. The instruction given by the trial court with reference to the measure of damages reads as follows:
If plaintiff is entitled to recover, the measure of his recovery will be the difference between what would have been the reasonable rental value of said warehouse had said electric current been supplied by the defendant according to the terms of said contract, and what its reasonable rental value was in the manner in which said electric current was in fact supplied by the defendant company, as far as shown by the evidence in this case. In computing such rental value, you should begin with the date bn which said motor and elevator were fully installed and the power of the defendant turned on, and estimate the same from such date up to the time when the defendant company furnished the power provided for under the terms of said contract or sufficient power to operate said elevator to its rated capacity of 6,000 pounds. It is the duty of one who is damaged by the fault or neglect of another to use all reasonable means, within his power, to lessen the amount of his damage, and, if he have the means within his power and fail to use the same to thus lessen the dam-. age, he can not recover for such damages as he could by-such means have averted or lessened. And in this .ease, even though you may find that the defendant contracted to furnish a certain amount of power, and you find that it failed to comply with the terms of its contract, if you further find from the evidence that the Groneweg. & Schoentgen Company, through its officers, had knowledge of some device which could have been installed at reasonable expense, and by which said elevator could have been operated with the power furnished by the defendant company, then it was the duty of the said Groneweg & Schoentgen Company to have installed such device, and if they had such knowledge and failed to install the same within*644 a reasonable time, after having learned of the failure of the defendant, to furnish such power under the contract, then the plaintiff can not recover for such damages as were occasioned after such reasonable time had elapsed within which to install such devise. The amount of plaintiff’s recovery can not exceed $1,799; such being the amount claimed in the petition. The parties will be presumed to have had knowledge of such devices as were in general use at the time, and which were in such general use as that persons engaged in such business ought, in the exercise of ordinary prudence, to have known of. The Groneweg & Schoentgen Company would not be required to resort to experiments in obtaining and putting in use any device or devices to thus lessen any damages by reason of the defendant’s failure to comply with its contract, but they would only be required to use such device or devices as were known to them to be practical or which ought to have been so known to them had they exercised ordinary prudence and foresight in endeavoring to ascertain thereof, and such device or devices as could have been installed at reasonable cost, and which would have enabled the elevator to be operated with the power thus furnished by the defendant company. There was some evidence tending to show that the said Groneweg & Schoentgen Company installed a iy>¿ horse power direct-current motor, and for some time operated the elevator to some extent. The said Groneweg & Schoentgen Company, it appears, adopted this means to enable them to operate the said elevator during a time when the motor in question failed to operate it, and they had a right to do so to lessen the damages which might be occasioned by reason of the defendant’s failure to furnish power. And, if. the plaintiff is entitled to recover in this action, you will also allow as part of the damages the reasonable rental value of the use of said direct-current motor during the time the same was so operated. In estimating the rental value of said building during such time as said direct motor was operated, you will take into consideration the amount, if any, which such reasonable rental value was enhanced by reason of the operation of said elevator by such direct motor during such time as it was so operated.
But it will be observed that thereunder the jury was allowed to apply the same rule for. the entire period covering more than two years during which defendant failed to furnish the agreed current, although it abandoned any attempt to do so in the spring of 1903, and plaintiff and his assignor, knowing of that fact, concluded to accept and pay for such current as was supplied without any complaint, and without effort.to change the system by installing a new motor or any other form of motive power. Defendant, as we have said, did not promise to, nor did it, change its system in order to comply with its contract with plaintiff or its assignor. On the contrary it made every effort to adapt its current to the motor installed in the building until the .spring of 1903, when it ceased any further effort
The rule of compensatory damages surely does not go to the extent contended for by appellee. Neither plaintiff nor its assignor could, after defendant had ceased its efforts to supply the current agreed upon, allow its building to remain vacant and unoccupied and collect rent for an indefinite time in the future because defendant did not and could not furnish the electrical current promised. If this were the rule, one who undertook to. heat a large building at a given temperature, and who failed to make his appliance work, might he .held for the rental value of that building, at least during the winter months, for an indefinite time in the future, limited only by the natural life of the building or of the plant to be installed. It is well known, of course, that there are many kinds of power for the running of elevators, both freight and passenger. Hydraulic, water, steam and gasoline are well-known systems for the running of elevators, and, when defendant abandoned its attempts to run the motors which had been designed for the movement of the elevator, plaintiff, or its assignor, could not sit idly by, and say: “We will charge to defendant the rent of this building until such time as it supplies the current it agreed to furnish.”. When the attempt to run the motor was abandoned, it was the duty of plaintiff, or its assignor, to accept what was being furnished as sufficient and adequate or to change its motive power bv installing some other system which would operate the elevator to its satisfaction. Any other rule would make a vendor of heat, light or power responsible for the rent of buildings for an indefinite and almost unlimited future time. Of course, whatever expense the owner of the building was'put to after the abandonment of the contract by the vendor of the power in order to secure the full enjoyment and use of the elevator by change of system, installation of new
There are not many eases similar to this, but such as we have been able to find lend support to the views expressed. Thus in Cable v. Leeds, 6 La. Ann. 293, where a mechanic undertook to make and deliver a crank to a steamer as soon as possible, he was held liable only for damages due to the detention of the steamer during the time actually necessary to obtain a suitable crank after a reasonable period had elapsed for the performance of his agreement. See, also, Brown v. Foster, 51 Pa. 165. So where a person purchased of a manufacturer a planing machine selecting it with reference to its weight and finish, the agreement being that he was to have the identical machine he had selected, and erected a building and prepared it at a large expense for the especial purpose of accommodating such machine, and the manufacturer refused to send him the machine purchased, having notice of the preparation therefor, by reason of which some time was lost before a machine could be put in operation, the purchaser was allowed to show in an action for the breach what would have been a fair rent for the use of the building and machinery if in running order during the time they lay idle in consequence of the refusal to deliver the machine, not to exceed, however, a period reasonably, necessary for supplying another machine of similar character after being advised of the vendor’s refusal to 'send the machine purchased. Benton v. Fay, 64 Ill. 417. This is merely following the general rule that a purchaser claiming damages can recover no more than it would cost him, with reasonable diligence, to supply himself by resort to the market or other source or means of 'supply. Berkey & G. Co. v. Hascall, 123 Ind. 502 (24 N. E. 336, 8 L. R. A. 65) ; Beymer v. McBride, 37 Iowa, 117. Stated in another way, it is the duty of the purchaser to protect himself from damages by reason of defective or dilatory
In instructing the jury that it might allow plaintiff the difference in the rental value of the building with and without the current agreed upon during the entire time from 1902 to 1905, when defendant changed its system, we think the trial court was in error. Plaintiff was entitled only to this difference for the time that defendant was endeavoring to comply with its contract, and for such reasonable time thereafter as would have enabled the Groneweg Company to have substituted some other known and approved motive power for the running of its elevator. This is the most it would be entitled to under any circumstances. "Whether or not it should have supplied the motor with the clutch or other device to enable it to be started before that time was a fair question for a jury. If, in the exercise of reasonable care and prudence at moderate or small expense, it could have remedied the difficulty, it should have taken that course, and, if a jury should find that this was the proper course to have been pursued, the plaintiff would not have been entitled to the rental value of the building after it became the duty of the Groneweg Company to remedy the defect. As already intimated, this question of the measure of damages is always difficult, and many times incapable of satisfactory solution. Adequate compensation for the loss incurred is the result aimed at; and nothing uncertain or speculative is to be awarded. Moreover, it .is the duty of the purchaser to use reasonable efforts and to go to any moderate and reasonable expense to save himself from the consequences of a breach of contract. He can not sit idly by and charge everything
On account of the errors pointed out, the judgment must be, and it is, reversed.