54 Miss. 264 | Miss. | 1876
delivered the opinion of the court.
This suit was brought by Echols & Green, a firm composed of John H. Echols and W. H. H. Green, to recover damages for the non-performance and abandonment by the defendant of its contract with them, after the plaintiffs had expended time, labor and money in the purchase of materials and appliances, and the partial erection of them, in order to put themselves in condition to supply water to its locomotive engines.
The declaration states the contract to be this, in substance : that, on the 15th day of September, 1870, the plaintiffs agreed and bound themselves to locate and establish a water-station on the line of the defendant’s road, between mile-posts 175 and 176, to supply the locomotives and cars of the defendant; the precise point of the location to be designated by the defendant. The plaintiffs were to build the water-station, furnishing all the necessary conveniences and appliances (except the tank, which was to be furnished by the defendant). The plaintiffs were to dig the well, and supply the pumps, pipe for lifting the water into the tank, and all the structures and machinery needed for that object (except the tank), and to keep a supply of water at all times, in quantities required by the company ; for which they were to pay the plaintiffs forty dollars per month.
It further avers that the plaintiffs, at great expense, procured the necessary apparatus, pipe, pumps and timbers for the wells, but that the company for a period of seven months neglected to designate the point for the station and to provide the tank, after the plaintiffs were prepared, in every particular on their part, to execute the contract; and that the defendant
Expense of digging and curbing well .... $250.00
Lumber for same.100.00
Lumber for frame of tank.160.00
Labor on frame for tank. 250.00
Cost of pipe, shafting and pulley wheels, $450, now worth $150; loss. 300.00
Digging foundation and preparing for frame . . 25.00
Loss by railroad agent refusing to comply with terms of agreement, and not furnishing information in order that the water contract could be put into operation, for seven months, at $50 per month. 350.00
The assignment of error chiefly relied upon is the refusal of the court to reject a portion of the testimony of the witness Echols. The bill of exceptions certifies that the witness, on his examination in chief, proved the contract as laid in the declaration. “ He also stated and testified to the correctness of all the items in his bill of particulars, except the last one of $350, as to which all testimony was excluded.” Respecting the item of $450, for the “ cost of pipe, shafting and pulley wheels now worth $150,” he said, these articles “ when they were purchased cost about $450, and his present valuation was $150.” On cross-examination, the witness “ was asked as to the cost of the pipe, and its length, and the same of the shafting and pulley wheels.” He answered, “ They were all purchased
This full statement is necessary in order to consider the merits of the application to exclude. It must be kept in mind that Echols, on his examination in chief, had testified' “ to the correctness of all the items of his bill of particulars,” and, speaking specially in reference to the cost of pipe, shafting and pulleys, said, “ when they were purchased, cost about $460.” The cross-examination was directed to the point that Echols did not have knowledge or memory accurate enough to speak as to the value of these articles, and that upon all his disclosures his •testimony should be excluded. Certainly he was competent to depose as to the cost of the articles and their present value. He had stated the cost, or about the cost, from memory. When pressed, on cross-examination, it turned out that he could not, on inspecting the bill of particulars, state from recollection the cost of the articles. That response may very properly have had the effect of weakening his previous statements in
If the plaintiffs had relied upon the bill of particulars, and Echols’s statements in reference to it, as evidence of the truth of the several particulars thereof, we hardly think that it would have been competent. The memoranda were not made at or about the time of the occurrences, nor shortly after, but more than two years afterwards, and post litem motam. The rule is, that a writing or memorandum made at the time, or near the time, of a transaction, for the purpose of preserving evidence of it, is admissible, though the witness who made it cannot recollect the particulars. If made in the ordinary course of business, such memoranda may be more reliable than the fading memory of witnesses. Haven v. Wendell, 11 N. H. 112 ; Seavy v. Dearborn, 19 N. H. 351. If the offer had been to read the bill of particulars in evidence, as proof of the correctness of the items, it should have been excluded; for it was not made at or about the time of the events, nor, indeed, for the purpose of preserving the truth.
There was no error in refusing the third prayer of instruction asked by the defendant. This prayer assumes that, inasmuch as the declaration alleges that the machinery and appliances were of no value to the plaintiffs, they cannot recover for a partial deterioration. We think that under this averment the plaintiffs may show a partial loss. The articles enumerated in this instruction were bought by the plaintiffs, and were to continue their property. The defendant was only responsible for such damages as resulted from the abandonment of the contract. The plaintiffs could have removed the articles, and have applied them to any other use for which they were fit, or might have sold them. They could not, however, abandon them, and claim their full cost price. This principle of law is correctly stated in the introductory part of the fifth instruction, which was also refused. As assumed in that prayer, the
The rule laid down in Vicksburg Meridian Railroad v. Ragsdale, 46 Miss. 458, 482, we think, is sound in law and morals ; viz., “ A party subject to injury from breach of contract is under duty to make reasonable exertions to reduce his damages as much as practicable. If he, through negligence or wilfulness, allows the damages to be unnecessarily enhanced, the increased loss should justly fall upon himself.” Echols & Green could not (because the railroad had abandoned the contract) suffer the property to go to decay and become utterly useless, so as to hold the defendant for the original cost and value. It was their duty either to sell the articles for the best price obtainable, or to put them to some use for which they were adapted.
The plaintiffs should have been made whole. That would be accomplished by giving them the difference between the original cost and the present value. There was no effort to prove that they were valueless for any other purpose than to raise water into the tank. The concluding sentence of this prayer, put in the form of a deduction of law from the preceding premises, is hardly correct. If the plaintiffs failed to sell, or made no effort to do so, they did not lose their right to recover. They could elect to retain the property; and, in such case, their damages would be the difference between the actual value of the articles and their cost, which could be shown by proof of what they would bring in the market, or by any method of determining the value.
Judgment affirmed.