105 Ala. 493 | Ala. | 1894
This is an action by Hyett & Smith on a promissory note for five hundred dollars executed to them by Moulthrop & Stevens. The consideration of the note was a brick-drying machine called a “Smith Hot Blast Heater, No. 45.” The defendants
The trial was had without jury, the judge at the request of the parties making a special finding of facts. There were several rulings made on the pleadings and the competency of testimony to which exceptions were reserved by the defendant. None of these rulings, however, had any bearing upon the point on which the case was decided against the defendants, and whether they were erroneous or not is wholly immaterial if the judge of the city court correctly adjudged that particular point, since if erroneous no injury resulted to the defendants.
¡ The decision of the court was “that defendants’ plea 'of recoupment in consequence of the alleged failure of consideration is not sustained by that character of evidence from which the law can fix defend ants’damages.” The evidence in this connection was to the effect that for six months after the machine was put in operation there was an active demand for brick, that if the heater had had a drying capacity of 25,000 per day as represented, the defendants could have made from 30,000 to 40,000 brick a week, but that with its actual capacity they “made on an average from 15,000 to 18,000 brick a week, and that their profit on the brick manufactured by them during that period was $3.50 per thousand. We concur with the trial court that this evidence did not entitle the defendants to damages byway - of recoupment, or otherwise, against the plaintiffs. The damages which it tends to show are entirely too speculative,,conjectural, uncertain and far beyond the contemplation of the parties to bo recoverable. The profits which the purchaser of-a chattel expects to make by the use of it are not recoverable in an action for damages against the seller for its non-delivery according to the terms of the sale — and the principle is the same where the chattel is delivered but is incapable of the uses — or less capable — for which it was intended — because the loss of them is neither the necessary nor the natural consequence of the seller’s failure to
r The entire soundness of these views is aptly illustrated in the case at bar. Here the machine was operated for six months, and its operation appears to have been stopped because of circumstances wholly disconnected with the machine itself and wholly fortuitous. But for these untoward occurrences, namely, the outbreak of an epidemic, of yellow fever in Decatur and New Decatur and the collapse, from that among other causes, of the building boom that had existed there during the six months of operation, it is fair to assume that the machine would have continued a much longer time in operation, possibly until the present time. The nearest approach that the defendant’s evidence makes to the amount of lost profits by reason of the machine’s not coming up to representations during the six months they used it, is'from $42 to $87.50 per week or somewhere from $1,092 to $2,275 for the six months. The evidence no more tends to show the Qne amount than it tends to show the other ; and there is confessedly no certainty that either is the true amount, or even, we feel justified in saying, that any ascertainable amount greater than the less and less than the greater of the sums named would truly represent the lost profits of the defendant. But even the smaller sum far exceeds the price of the machine. Can it'be possible that the plaintiffs should in six months be called on to pay as damages for failure in respect of the machine’s efficiency a sum somewhere from one and a half to three times the price of the thing sold? And had the fever not come, and the boom continued from 1887 to the present time, the damages, according to defendants, would have been somewhere from $15,000 to $32,000 for the failure of a $750 machine to accomplish fully what was claimed for it. And even if the time be computed to suit brought, the damages would be somewhere from $2,200 to $4,600. And this, too, when it seems the defendants had at all times the right, which the plaintiffs were at all times ready to effectuate, to return the machine to the seller. It is absurd to say that such damages were in the contempla
There is no way of ascertaining the amount of such damages. They are not within the contemplation of the parties. They are not the necessary or natural consequence of the wrong complained of. They are not recoverable jJ
And the judgment of city court is affirmed.