(after stating the faets as above). We do not find it necessary to decide whether the appointment of the seller’s receivers and the subsequent correspondence constituted an anticipatory breach of the contract. Even if they did, the damages are not to be computed in disregard of 'what took place between then and the filing of the claim, or for that matter — this being in equity — up to the entry of the decree. It is, indeed, one of the consequences of the doctrine of anticipatory breach that, if damages are assessed before the time of performance has expired, the court must take the chance of forecasting the future as best it can. That does not mean that it will ignore ■what has happened, when the period of performance has already expired. Damages never do more than restore the injured party to the position he would have been in, had the promisor performed; this is not a rule peculiar to anticipatory breach, though that is an instance. Hence it is always an answer, in that or other similar situations, to show that, had the contract continued, the promisee would not have been entitled to the performance, though he was apparently so entitled when the promisor disabled himself or repudiated. Gray v. Smith,
In the case at bar the contract was personal to the buyer; he was not to assign it, nor were there to be assignments by operation of law. This was a valid provision, and really did no more than in earlier times the law itself effected. Burck v. Taylor,
As to the earlier period, what we have already said in disposing of the claim of the Gulf States Oil & Transport Company (claim B-6), New York Trust Co. v. Island Oil & Transport Corporation,
Decree reversed; claim dismissed.
