Opinion op the Court by
Reversing.
This was an action for damages against a common carrier by the owner of a sawmill, who shipped parts of the machinery and engine from Rockcastle county to a point in Ohio for repair and return. The carrier negligently delayed the return shipment, so that the articles were lost for about two months. The plaintiff alleged that by reason of the delay a certain quantity of logs which he had. on hand deteriorated in quality, to his damage in the sum of $1,000; also,
The leading case as authority on this subject is Hadley v. Baxendale, 9 Ex. 341. The principles announced therein have been applied both in England and America with varying consistency ever since the opinion was rendered. Its interpretation has not always been the same; but the weight, and it may be said the result, of innumerable cases in which it has been followed since, settle the principle to be that in any breach of a contract the plaintiff may recover always such damages as normally result therefrom, or he may, by showing special facts to have been known to the defendant at the time of the contract, which would give notice to him that a breach of the contract would result in an otherwise unexpected loss, recover his special damages. Hadley v. Baxendale was very much like the case at bar. The plaintiffs were owners
The object of every rule on the subject is to ascertain that damage resulting from the breach which the parties, at the time the contract of affreightment was made, presumably had in mind. “Damage” means loss. Compensation would be inadequate that did not cover the loss sustained. It might be, in such a case as we have at bar, the deterioration of material on the mill owners’ hands which was occasioned by the delay; but he might be entitled to more than his sound material, or its equivalent in money, for his object in having the material was to manufacture it into planks for sale. If he had a market for the lumber when so made, or contracts of sale already entered into, his profits, which were lost by reason of the delay in delivering the parts of the machinery,
Advancing to the next step, the notice mentioned: 'When and to whom should it be given, and what should it contain? As may be gathered from what
Applying these principles to the facts of our case here, we find that there is no evidence of notice having been given to appellant’s agent at Cincinnati, Ohio, where the cylinder and rod were delivered to it for return to appellee. There is no complaint that the outward shipment by appellant was not promptly executed; but the charge is that the articles were delivered to appellant in Cincinnati, Qh-io, by a connecting carrier, on May 16, 1904, to be carried by appellant to Mullins Station, in Rockcastle county, Ky., and that it failed for 66 days thereafter to deliver the said machinery, whereas, two days was a reasonable time within which to have delivered it . Now, it is not shown by any evidence that appellant’s agent at Cincinnati knew, or was informed when he accepted the freight for shipment from that point to appellee at Mullins Station, that there existed any special condition that would involve special damages to appellee if the contract of shipment was breached by appellant The evidence on the subject of notice was this: One Dooley was acting as appellant’s agent at Mullins Station. He was informed at or about the time of the shipment of the machinery from Mullins
As the case must be returned for a new trial, it is proper. that other matters complained of by appellant, and appearing to the court to be material, should be noticed. Dooley had been appellant’s agent at Mullins Station before the outward shipment of the 'machinery; but he had resigned, and his resignation had been accepted. No one else was appointed for over a year. In the interim, the company left the keys of the station with Dooley, who personally saw to billing freight, although he did not sign the bills of lading. No notice of Dooley’s discharge was given to the public. He was permitted to act substantially as he had done before his resignation. These acts constituted him an agent, in our opinion, so far as the public was concerned. The question of his actual authority is not so material; but his apparent authority, exercised under circumstances where appellant had knowledge of it, is enough. Appellant’s acquies
There was some .incompetent and irrelevant evidence admitted. There was no evidence that appellant was ever notified of the fact that appellee had contracted to sell some of the lumber to be cut at his mill to the Covington parties. In the absence of such notice (given as indicated in this opinion), evidence of the prices at which the lumber was sold, or of the loss sustained by appellee because the contract of sale was not fulfilled, ought not to have been' received. Horne v. Midland Railway Co., L. R. 7 C. P. 583, 8 C. P. 131; Borries v. Hutchinson, 18 C. B. (N. S.) 445, 463; Messmore v. N. Y. Shot & Lead Co., 40 N. Y. 422. Nor was it relevant that appellee was forced to sell his mill at a less price than its actual value, because he could not get bad?: his missing machinery. If the evidence should be on another trial as it was on the last, then the jury should be instructed to award nominal damages only.
Judgment reversed, and cause remanded for a new trial under proceedings consistent herewith.