189 Mass. 124 | Mass. | 1905
This is an action for the breach of a written contract dated June 26,1900. The defendant notified the plaintiff on January 22, 1901, that he would no longer act under the contract, and this was the breach relied on. It was admitted that from that date the contract was no longer in force. The defences relied on were that the contract was procured by fraud
The next and remaining exception is to the refusal of the justice to rule as requested that in estimating the damages, if any, which the plaintiff was entitled to recover, such expenses as the plaintiff would have been subjected to in carrying out the contract on its part were to be deducted from the profit, meaning thereby, we assume, the gross profit, which would have accrued to it under the contract. We think that this instruction should have been given. The plaintiff was not entitled to be put in a better position by reason of the breach than it would have been in if the contract had been carried out by the defendant. The damages are to be assessed on the footing of what the plaintiff’s profits would have been if the contract had been carried out by the defendant according to its terms, and the plaintiff is to be made whole for what he has thus lost by the defendant’s breach. The jury properly were instructed that the plaintiff was entitled to recover the net profit which it would have made if the contract had been performed. But in order to arrive at that it was necessary to take into account the expense to the plaintiff of completing the contract on its part. It cannot have the same benefit of the contract that it would have had, if it had been
Exceptions sustained; new trial granted but on the matter of damages only.