77 Md. 331 | Md. | 1893
delivered the opinion of the Court;.
. We cannot agree with the Court below as to the construction of the contract in question, and for a breach of which this suit was brought. The plaintiff agreed to buy of the defendant all the oyster shells made by him and H. F. Hemmingway, for the season beginning 1st ¡September, 1891, and ending May 1st, 1892. He agreed that boats shonldjbe kept at the docks of the defendant constantly, so as to keep the oyster houses clear of shells, and on these boats the shells were to he delivered until the 20th November, 1891. No shells were to he piled on the defendant’s premises until about that time, and all shells thus piled were to he taken away by the plaintiff before the 15th July, 1892. The plaintiff further agreed to pay on the first day of each and every successive week for the shells delivered during the previous week. That is to say, all shells delivered during the first week
As to the rule in regard to the measure of damages, there cannot be, it seems to us, any difficulty in regard to this question. In an action on a contract of this kind, the damage is the actual loss sustained by the plaintiff
And the Court in'granting the plaintiff's fifth prayer, as we understand it, so instructed the jury. At the same time we deem it proper to say that the prayer is encumbered with a good deal of unnecessary verbiage, a matter always to be avoided in the trial of all causes.
As to the several instructions offered by the defendant, these were all properly rejected. The first and third were properly rejected, because if it be assumed that there had been a breach of the contract by the plaintiff himself, these instructions do not submit to the jury to find whether the breach or breaches by him had been condoned or waived by the defendant.
The second instruction presents the question whether the tender made by the plaintiff on the 28th of December of his cheque for $112.47 in payment of the weekly bills for the 14th and 21st December, constituted a lawful tender. He had been in the habit of making payment for the weekly deliveries by cheques, and when the cheque in question was tendered to the defendant he refused to accept it, not because the tender of payment was made by cheque instead of lawful money, but because
The defendant’s fourth prayer was not pressed in argument. If there was a breach of the contract in refusing-to deliver the shells to the plaintiff, the latter was under no obligation to go into the market and purchase other shells, even though he might have purchased them at the same or less than the contract price. If there was no difference in fact between the contract price and the market price at the time the shells were to be delivered, the plaintiff, it is true, sustained no actual loss from the breach of the contract. But at the same time, even though he failed to prove any bona fide substantial loss or damage, he was still entitled to nominal damages. Whenever a contract is broken, the law presumes that some damage has been sustained, and if the plaintiff should fail to prove any actual loss or injury, he is still entitled to a verdict for nominal damages. Feize vs. Thompson, 1 Taunt., 121; Embrey vs. Owen, 6 Fxch., 353.
Judgment reversed, and new trial aiuarded.