32 Barb. 530 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1860
By the Court,
The only question in this case is one of damages. In December, 1856, the plaintiffs, at San Francisco, California, contracted with Locan & Co. of that place, to purchase for them, in New York, on commission, 300 Colt’s pistols, (revolvers,) and to deliver such pistols in San Francisco, by the steamer which should leave New York on the 20th January, 1857; for which the plaintiff's were to receive a commission of 7-|- per cent on the cost of the pistols; and they agreed to “hold themselves responsible to the sum of five hundred dollars, to be paid to Locan & Co. by them, if they failed to fulfill the agreement.”
For the purpose of executing this agreement the plaintiffs
Commissions on the purchase of the pistols, to which they would have been entitled if the contract had been performed, —......„-------- $462 00
The amount paid to Locan & Co. as damages for non-performance,_________________________ 500 00
Amount paid defendants for transmitting the dispatch,________________________________6 50
Interest on $10,000, the receipt of which by plaintiffs in New York was delayed five days by the non-delivery of said dispatch to them,________ 9 59
The referee allowed only the two last items of damages, and reported $16.59 for the plaintiffs, for which judgment was entered, with costs to the defendants. The plaintiffs excepted and appealed.
It is perfectly clear, in my judgment, that by reason of the non-performance by the defendants of their agreement to transmit and deliver immediately the telegraphic dispatch above referred to, the plaintiffs have sustained the first two items of damage above mentioned as well as the other items, and that such non-performance was occasioned by the defendants’ negligence, for which they are liable to the plaintiffs in damages; and yet I am constrained to concur with the referee in the conclusion at which he arrived, that the amount of said two first items cannot be recovered against the defendants in this action.
‘ The rule of damages applicable to this and other like cases is clearly stated in the opinion of Judge Selden, (in which all the judges of the court of appeals concurred) in the case of Griffin v. Colver, (16 N. Y. Rep. 489,) as follows : “ The broad general rule in such cases is, that the party injured is entitled to recover all his damages, including gains prevented
Sutherland, Allen and Bonney, Justices.]
The first of these conditions appears to.me to exclude said first two items of damage. On receiving this dispatch for transmission, the defendants had no information whatever in relation to it, or the purposes to be accomplished by it, except what could be derived from the dispatch itself. The effect of any delay in the delivery of the dispatch would naturally and necessarily be equal delay in the receipt by the plaintiffs, in Hew York, of the $10,000 therein mentioned. The defendants were not informed of any special use intended to be made of this sum of money \ and what damage might they naturally expect to follow from the delay in the receipt of it ? Clearly, the loss of the use of that sum during the time that its receipt was delayed, and the damages for the loss of such use are, by the laws of Hew York, determined to be the interest on the money for the period of the delay, at seven per cent per annum.
The rule laid down, and the illustrations thereof given, in the opinion referred to, appear to me entirely decisive of the present case, and to fully sustain the judgment of the referee.
By the case of Hadley v. Braxendale, (26 Eng. L. and E. Rep. 398,) it appears that the same rule is recognized and acted upon in the English courts. The late decision in our court of last resort, above referred to, must be considered as stating the settled rule of law in this state, and renders it unnecessary to refer to any other of the numerous authorities on this question.
The judgment must be affirmed, with costs,