55 F. 584 | 3rd Cir. | 1893
This was an action of assumpsit by the defendant in error against the plaintiffs in error, upon a written contract dated January 29, 1890, by which the defendant sold to the plaintiffs certain ore, at prices named, to be shipped in as nearly equal monthly proportions as possible, and to be delivered free on board vessels at Philadelphia. The contract recited that the defendant had purchased from the Marabello Iron Ore Company the total output of their mines for the 12 months commencing March 1, 1890, and the sale to the plaintiffs was of one third of that ore. The contract contained this clause:
“Freight rate. The above prices [for the ore] are based on an ocean freight rate of twelve sMUiugs per ton. All freight over twelve shillings to be added to the invoice as part of the price of the ore, and all-freight under twelve shillings to be deducted from the invoice.”
Several cargoes were delivered and paid for, but others, subsequently delivered, were not; paid for, and to recover a balance
1. That the defendant received from the stevedores $4,096.10 under the circumstances which have been mentioned, and that, if the sum so received should have been applied in reduction of freight, the plaintiffs were entitled to a corresponding deduction from, the defendant’s claim, was admitted. There was no allegation of fraud in this particular transaction. The point made was, and is, solely as to the true construction of the freight-rate clause of the contract. The defendant contended, and now insists, that this money was properly paid to and received by him as "commissions allowed by stevedores” for Ms services in procuring them the job of unloading cargo, and was not a reduction of the “ocean freight.” If this view of the matter is the correct one, then, in the absence of any charge of fraud in connection with it, the plain language of the contract determines the question. The learned judge who presided at the trial instructed the jury that the contractual provision, “all freight under twelve shillings to be deducted from the invoice,” was not applicable to these commissions, because the service of unloading was distinct from that of ocean carriage, to which alone the provision referred; and we are of opinion that this construction of the clause, and consequent restriction of its operation, were clearly right.
2. A more important and difficult subject is now to be dealt with. The defense chiefly relied upon was that the contract of purchase was procured by fraud. Upon this point, the case was tried, and properly, precisely as if the positions of 'the parties upon, the record had been reversed, and the action had been for deceit The burden was upon the defendants below to show, and it is now to be assumed that they did show, that a material statement of fact had been made to them by the plaintiff below, which was untrue, and which he knew to be untrue; and that, it was made with intent to induce the defendants to make the contract, who, in reliance on the statement, did make it, and thereby suffered damage. AH of these elements of the actionable wrong of deceit must, we repeat, be, for the present purpose, assumed to have been established, and therefore it is not necessary to refer to the evidence which was adduced in proof of their existence. The only question is as to what loss resulted I herefrom for which the defendants below were entitled to compensation in damages; and, as pertinent to this question, hut a single additional fact, and that an undisputed one,, need be stated. Although the defendants below believed the state
Certain broadly expressed rules of the law respecting recoverable damages and the measure thereof have been long settled, and the present case, like many to be found in the books, presents no difficulty which does not arise from its special circumstances, and which is not wholly dependent for its solution upon the discriminating application of established general principles to particular facts. The principle that the damages recoverable in an action of deceit are such only as naturally and proximately result from the fraud is not open to question. Indeed, resultant damage is an essential component of the wrong. “When you have proved that the statement was false, you must further show that the plaintiff has acted upon it, and has sustained damage by so doing.” Edgington v. Fitzmaurice, 29 Ch. Div. 459-482; Peek v. Derry, 37 Ch. Div. 541-551. If the fraudulently induced act and the damage be not connected as cause and effect, the injury itself is not complete, and, without injury, of course nothing can be recovered. Hence it is manifest that, in order to establish that the wrong of deceit has been committed, as well as to supply the measure of the compensation to which the person wronged is entitled, damages naturally and proximately occasioned by doing the induced act must be made to appear. Keeping this in mind, we recur to the material facts of this case. From time to time, after the making of the contract, the defendants below accepted deliveries of the ore. .These acts were not constrained, but voluntary. They were not influenced by the fraud, for that had been discovered; and, as has been not only admitted but insisted on behalf of the plaintiffs in error, they retained and used the ore only because the exigencies of their 'business required that they should do so. They knew that they were
It is, however, earnestly contended that our understanding on this subject conflicts with the views of the learned judges by whom the case of Peek v. Derry, 37 Ch. Div. 541, was decided; and also that the supreme court, in Smith v. Bolles, 132 U. S. 125, 10 Sup. Ct Rep. 39, has authoritatively determined the question here involved in such maimer as to require a reversal of the judgment now under review. But careful examination of the reports of these cases discloses that in neither instance is the judgment of the court to the effect supposed. On the contrary, upon scrutinizing each of them with reference to the facts upon which it was founded, it becomes quite manifest that in neither was it intended to disregard the familiar principles to which we have adverted, or to depart (and that without the expression of any such purpose) from the prior judicial decisions, both in England and in the United States, which had theretofore been accepted as settling the law in accordance with those principles.
Peek v. Derry was an action of deceit. The plaintiff had been fraudulently induced to buy certain shares, and had taken them before he discovered the fraud. Colton, L. J. said, (37 Ch. Div. 591:)
“The damage to be recovered by the plaintiff is the loss which he sustained by acting on the representations oí the defendants. That action was taking the shares.”
And, per Lopes, L. J., (page 594:)
“Any damage occurring after the discovery of the fraud, when the plaintiff might have rescinded the contract, and which would not be attributable to his acting on the misrepresentation, but to other causes, in my opinion would not be recoverable.”
We cannot suppose that the judges who used this language intended either to gainsay or to renounce the rule we have heretofore stated. Indeed, we think it would be difficult to more posi
The judgment in Smith v. Bolles is binding upon this court, but it does not rule the precise point now' under consideration. The plaintiff there had, in February, 1880, upon false representations; “agreed to buy” certain stock from the defendant, “which contract was completed in the month of March, 1880, by payment in full of the purchase price.” The contract seems to have been treated as having been actually made in March, and the purchase and payment as having been contemporaneous; but, .be this as it may, it at least did not appear that the plaintiff completed the transaction with knowledge of the fraud, and when he might have rescinded the contract. Consequently, not only the making of the contract, but the acts done in pursuance thereof, were attributable directly to the wrong committed, and of course any damage sustained from doing those acts were recoverable. There was no question about this, but only as to how, in such a case, the damages should be estimated; and it was with reference to this state of facts, and to this precise question, that the court held that “the measure of damages was not the difference between the contract price and the reasonable market value if the property had been as represented.” The reason for this is obvious. The plaintiff having, as a result of the fraud, taken the stock, and paid for it, damages occasioned by making the contract merely would not have been co-ordinate with the injury. He was entitled to “what he had lost by being deceived;” to “such damages as naturally and proximately resulted from the fraud,” and were “legitimately attributable to defendant’s fraudulent conduct.” Mow, when it is remembered that in the case before this court the vendees’ acceptance of the ore is not attributable to tbeir acting on the representation, hut to other causes, the essential character of the difference which distinguishes it from Smith v. Bolles cannot fail to be comprehended; and we may add that attentive reading of the whole opinion in that case has satisfied ns that the principle upon which it rests was clearly perceived by the court below, and whs properly adapted to the especial facts of the case on trial.
The judgment is affirmed.