108 N.Y.S. 402 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1908
This action'was brought to recover the damages caused by the . defendant’s breach of a contract made January 8, 1904, whereby the defendant agreed to purchase from the plaintiffs-the entire supply of metal used by it in making collapsible tubes and ketchup caps between January 8, 1904, and January 8,1907,'the metal to be rolled to the thickness required and to be satisfactory in every respect, and to refrain from selling to any one but the defendant coated metal for making collapsible tubes during the period covered by the contract.
The complaint alleges that the plaintiffs performed each and every of the terms of the agreement on their part required to he performed ; that the defendant committed a breach of the agreement in that it failed to purchase from the plaintiffs, as by the agreement it was required to do, all the metal used by it in making collapsible tubes and ketchup caps, but had on the contrary purchased the metal it used in making collapsible tubes and ketchup caps from persons, firms or corporations other than the plaintiffs.
The answer admits the making of the contract; denies that the plaintiffs performed the contract on their part; admits that the defendant purchased and used metals in making collapsible tubes from persons and corporations other than the plaintiffs, and sets up a counterclaim. Upon the trial it was proved- that the defendant commenced to take metal from the plaintiffs under the contract in March, 1904; that the defendant purchased from others than the plaintiffs during the period covered by the contract 21,765 pounds of tin which at the contract price would amount to $28,895.79, which would have been $652.95 above the market price of tin during that period; that the cost of rolling the tin would have been $103.39, malting the damage sustained by the plaintiffs by reason of the .defendant refusing to purchase the tin from the plaintiffs, under the
It would seem, therefore, that immediately after the contract was made the plaintiffs purchased 100 tons of lead and 10 tons of tin to be used by them' in carrying out the contract; that that amount of lead and tin would have produced 225,000 pounds of the manufactured product which would have been sufficient to supply the requirements of the defendant to May, 1906; that for any additional metal that the plaintiffs would have been required to purchase to manufacture the product they would have been compelled to pay an increased price, so that it may fairly be said that there would have been no profit in carrying out the contract. The first question relating to .the measure of damages is whether there can be said to be a total breach of the contract by the defendant in consequence of its neglect to purchase from the plaintiffs the metal that it required from time to time. I do not-think there was any total and final breach by the defendant. The defendant never refused to carry out the contract; no demand was ever made by the plaintiffs that it receive any particular amount of this metal; and there was no refusal by the defendant to comply with its contract. There was complaint made about the quality of the metal furnished by the plaintiffs, with promises by the plaintiffs to improve the quality. Both parties to the contract understood the purpose for which the metal was to be used, and the contract made was based upon that knowledge. It does not appear that metal that was satisfactory to the defendant, or that it was bound to consider as satisfactory, was ever furnished or tendered. It seems to me, therefore, that the case must be considered as if each purchase of metal by the defendant was a partial breach of its contract to purchase all the metal it required from the plaintiffs, and the plaintiffs were entitled to recover the difference between what it would have cost them to furnish each lot of metal that the defendant purchased from others and the price which they would have been entitled to receive from the defendant. If we may assume that the conduct of the defendant would have justified
Applying this rule the solution seems to me quite plain. What sum will indemnify the plaintiffs for the failure of the defendant to comply with its contract and purchase this metal from the plaintiffs ? Surely tlie difference in the cost of- manufacturing the metal •and the amount that the plaintiffs were to receive for it from the defendant. The plaintiffs had supplied themselves with the constituent metals necessary for the manufacture of the completed product. If the defendant had complied with its agreement the plaintiffs would have manufactured that metal thus on hand and purchased for that purpose into the coated metal and delivered it to the defendant and would, therefore, have made as profit the difference between the' cost of the product to be delivered to the defendant and what the defendant would have been required to pay for it. During the period that the metal purchased would have sufficed to supply the wants of the defendant the price of the component metals had not advanced so as to make a serious difference in the result. It seems to me that the plaintiffs were entitled to recover this difference upon the 225,000 pounds of metal that the 100 tons of lead and 10 tons oj: tin would provide; but it is also equally clear that as to the balance of the coated metal the plaintiffs could not have purchased the component metals at a price that would have yielded, any profit, and that, therefore, as to the subsequent installments the plaintiffs were entitled only to nominal damages.
Were this the only question presented I think we could reduce the damages to the amount indicated and affirm as to that amount, for on the trial the question was treated purely as a question of law, and there was no substantial dispute as to any of the facts which would have a bearing upon the ease under the construction of the contract which we have adopted. It seems to me, however, that it was error for the court below to refuse to admit evidence to show that the metal that the plaintiffs furnished was not satis
It follows that the judgment and order must be reversed and a new trial ordered, with costs to the appellant to abide the event.
Patterson,-P. J., Laughlin, Clarke and Scott, JJ., concurred.
Judgment and order-reversed, new trial ordered, costs to appellant to abide event.