45 Ind. 246 | Ind. | 1873
This action originated before a justice of the peace, and was instituted by the appellee to recover from the appellant damages alleged to have been sustained by a breach of contract. The material allegations of the complaint were these: That in the month of July, 1871, the plaintiff contracted with the defendant to sow wheat on forty acres of ground, on the farm of the defendant, during the fall of that year; that the defendant was to furnish him with a team, farming implements, and seed, for the purpose of seeding said ground; and the plaintiff was to give the defendant one-third of the crop of wheat when the same was harvested and threshed; that, in pursuance of said contract, he entered upon the premises of the defendant, plowed, and
The second paragraph was for work and labor done at the defendant’s request, of the value of one hundred dollars.
There was judgment in the justice’s court in favor of plaintiff in the sum of thirty-two dollars and thirty cents, from which the defendant appealed to the circuit court, where he answered in two paragraphs; first, the general denial; the second was by way of cross complaint, claiming damages against the plaintiff resulting from a want of proper care of the team, farming implements, and other property entrusted to him by the defendant, in part performance of the contract set out in the complaint; that the plaintiff violated the terms of said contract by his carelessness and neglect in the care, treatment, and management of a certain mare, of the value of two hundred dollars, entrusted to him for the purpose of performing the labor undertaken; by reason of which want of proper cafe, neglect, etc., the said mare became sick and died, to the damage of the defendant in the sum of two hundred dollars.
The cause was submitted to a jury for trial, and resulted in a verdict for plaintiff of twenty-eight dollars and fifty-nine cents. The court overruled a motion for a new trial, and rendered judgment on the verdict.
The reasons for a new trial were the giving of a certain instruction, and the exclusion of competent evidence.
The instruction complained of was as follows: “ 2. Under the first paragraph of the complaint, if the plaintiff has proven by a preponderance of all the evidence that he did
The evidence is not in the record, but we can readily see from the averments in the complaint, that no evidence could have been admitted which would have rendered the instruction proper.' The principal objection urged to the instruction is, that there being no special damages stated in the complaint, the plaintiff was confined in his recovery to such, damages only as naturally arise from the breach complained of, and that if the damages claimed do not naturally arise from that fact, they cannot be recovered, unless they are particularly
In Olmstead v. Burke, supra, it is said that “ it is a rule of pleading, wherever the damages sustained have not necessarily accrued from the act complained.of, and consequently are not implied by law, then, in order to prevent surprise on the defendant, the plaintiff must state the particular damage he has sustained, or he will not be permitted to give evidence of it.”
General damages are such as the law implies or presumes to have accrued from the wrong complained of. Special damages are such as really took place and are not implied by law. 1 Chit. PL 395. In the present case, the law could not necessarily imply that the plaintiff had sustained damage by the act complained of beyond such as reasonably and naturally resulted, and therefore it was necessary and essential that the complaint should have shown with particularity the resulting damage.
The instruction was wrong upon another ground. The jury were told that the plaintiff was entitled to recover the same damages as though he had performed all that he was required by the terms of the contract to do. Conceding, without deciding, that the true measure of damages, in case
In our opinion, the court erred in giving the instruction complained of, for which error the judgment must be reversed.
The judgment is reversed, with costs; and the cause is remanded for a new trial in accordance with this opinion.