20 Fla. 27 | Fla. | 1883
delivered the opinion of the court.
L. M. Merritt and E. B. Merritt, merchants and part
“ Pensacola, May 17, 1879.
“W. L. Wittich sells, and L. 1ST. Merritt & Son purchase a cargo of p. pine, loaded on board of the British ship TT. Mosher, say about one-half of hewn timber, averaging ninety cubic feet per log, and about one-half of sawn timber, averaging forty cubic feet per log, with timber for beam filling, and deals ior stowage, timber guaranteed of the season’s manufacture, of fair average quality. The measurement guaranteed to overrun the specification. The price to be paid, estimated upon the intake measurement and to be for beam fillings forty-five shillings for load of fifty cubic feet, for deals eight pounds ten shillings per standard of 165 cubic feet, and cargo fifty-three shillings per load of fifty cubic feet, less two and a half per cent, commissions, payable on signing bills of hiding.
(Signed.) W. L. Wittich,
L. M. Merritt & Son.
“ Witness both signatur.es,
J. R. McGauohy.”
The defendant, for plea, said that he performed his contract, that the timber was of said season’s manufacture, of fair average quality, and did overrun the specifications.
The plaintiffs filed their replication and issue was joined.
The case was tried in January term, 1883, and the jury found for the defendant, and judgment was entered.
From this judgment the plaintiffs bring their appeal.
The errors assigned are :
First. The court below erred in sustaining the objection to the interrogatory adressed to Wilford Carter.
The record shows that the plaintiffs introduced witnesses who “ testified, that the fair average quality of pitch “ pine timber ar Pensacola was not different from the fair “ average quality of such timber at Pensacola in other sea- “ sons, and that the fair average quality of pitch pine “ shipments from Pensacola to Liverpool, in L879, was not “different from the fair average quality of shipments in “ other seasons, or to other ports, and that, the fair average “ quality of such shipments from Pensacola to Liverpool “was'not different from the fair average quality of such “ timber at Pensacola, and that the timber in question was “ not of fair average quality of the season’s shipment of “ pitch pine timber from Pensacola to Liverpool ” ; and then and there by their attorneys, offered the deposition of Thos. Harrison, taken at Liverpool under a commission, and upon written interrogatories, in the course of which said deposition and in answer to the following interrogatory:
“ State whether in the year 1879 you became the purchaser of a cargo, or part of a cargo of pitch pine timber shipped from Pensacola, Flprida, United States of America, to Liverpool, on the British bark FT. Mosher, by L. iVL Merritt & Son., and if so, state what was the description and quality of said, cargo. Was it, or was it not merchantable Y Was it, or was it not of fair average quality of pitch pine shipments from Pensacola to Liverpool, in previous years Y Please'state whether the average quality of pitch pine shipments to Pensacola previous to H79 were better or worse than the shipments of 1879 ?”
The said witness answered and said : “ In the year 1879 his firm of Gilbert, Harrison Brothers purchased from Messrs. Carter, Tyner & Parker portions of the cargo of the
It also appears by the record that the plaintiffs produced and offered the deposition of Wilford Carter, of Liverpool, taken under a commission upon written interrogatories; that he was one of the firm of “Tyner, Carter & Pai’ker,” who were the purchasers of the cargo of timber on the U.
The witness answered as follows: “ Witness saith his firm claimed -an allowance under the circumstances as stated in his answer to the last interrogatory. Negotiations in regard to the claim were conducted between his firm and Messrs. Merritt, by Mr. Smith, of the firm of James Smith &. Co. In result, witness agreed to accept-an allowance of £47 and £63, making together £110 from the contract price, and such amount was duly paid to the witness’s firm. The witness has no hesitation in saying that the amount of the allowance was not more than the true difference between the value of the timber, and value of the average shipments from Pensacola, estimating also, the deficiency in measurement.”
To "this íhteh’bgatóiy and-answer the defendantVeouhsel duly objected, because the same was irrelevant and impertinent. The court sustained the objection,- and decided that the answer should not be read to the jury. The plaintiffs duly excepted to the ruling of the court.
The contract in this ease was made in Pensacola, and in' it there is no reference as to the place of delivery of the timber by the ship." Witticli sells and Merritt & Son buy at Pensacola. The title there passes and the delivery is made. The declaration charges the same fact, to wit:
The case of Cahen vs. Platt, 69 N. Y., 348, was an action brought to recover damages for the alleged breach of a contract of purchase and sale. In the city of Now York plaintiff sold to defendants certain boxes-of glass, to be paid for in New York upon, bills of lading, by bills of exchange on Antwerp. It was to be delivered on board of vessels at Antwerp, and to be thereafter at the risk of the defendants.
“ Upon a contract to deliver goods, the general rale of “ damages for non-delivery is the market value ot the goods. “ at the time and plaee ot the promised delivery, if no-' “ money has yet been paid by the vendee;. but. if the ven- “ dee has already paid the price in advance he may recover “ the highest price of such goods in the same place, at any “time between the stipulated day and the time of trial” 2 Greenleaf on Ev., 13 Ed., p. 252.
-In Wait’s Actions and Defences, Vol. 3, page 521, it is Said: “ The damages recoverable will be calculated as the “ market value of the goods at -the time and plaee when and “ where they ought to have been delivered, and cites Lawrence vs. Knowles, 5 Bing., N. C., 399; s. c., 7 Scott, 181; York vs. VerPlanck, 65 Barb., 316. “ And evidence of “ the value of such goods in a foreign market cannot be “ received upon the question of damages, unless it is averred
Again, he says in Vol. 2, page 460 : “ Where the vendor “ incurs liability to the vendee for the detective quality of “goods sold, whether his liability arises through fraud or “ a breach of contract, the measure of damages is the differ- “ ence'in value at the time between' goods corresponding “ with the representations made, and those actually deliv- “ ered.” Likes vs. Baer, 8 Iowa, 368.
In the ease of Converse vs. Barrows, 2 Minn., 229, cited by counsel for appellants, the declaration alleged that the pork was to he furnished to the plaintiff for supplies at Eort Eidgley in the Territory of Minnesota, which plaintiff had contracted to supply, which fact was well known to the defendant. In the case under consideration, neither the contract nor the declaration in any way indicate the intention of plaintiffs to export the timber, or the defendant to become liable for a breach of the guarantee at any place except Pensacola, where the sale and delivery took place.
If the court was correct in sustaining the objection to the answer to the interrogatory addressed to Harrison, it was also right in sustaining the objection to the answer of Carter. The amount of allowance of ,£110 from the contract price in Livérpool, was iu no sense evidence of the differ-, enee in value of the timber as guaranteed in Pensacola, and its market value at Pensacola.
There was no error upon the part of the court and the judgment is affirmed.