133 F. 914 | 3rd Cir. | 1905
The defendant in error was plaintiff in the court below, and the plaintiff in error was defendant. The action was brought to recover damages for the breach of a contract for the delivery of cottonwood lumber during the winter of 1902-03; that is to say, as was agreed upon the trial, on or before March 21, 1903. The only specifications insisted upon go to the admission, against objection, of certain evidence upon the subject of damages.
“The whole case for the plaintiff in error” is stated in his brief to be that, ina'smuch as the inquiry was “as to the value of the lumber on the 21st of March, 1903, * * * proof as to what the value was in the month of May, 1903, and, still further, what it was on the 7th of March, 1903, introduced irrelevant and incompetent evidence.” This position is untenable. It is true, of course, that no fact is relevant which does not tend either to prove or to disprove the matter in issue, and it is likewise true that the evidence with which we are now concerned was directed to the ascertainment of the value of cottonwood lumber, in the vicinity of Pittsburg, on the 21st of March, 1903. But it does not follow that the testimony should have been strictly confined to that day, and the question before us is whether the learned judge, in admitting the evidence of value as of two weeks before and about two months after March 21, 1903, ■ committed reversible error. It would be difficult to supply any precise test for determining, in all cases, whether any fact proposed to be proved is or is not too remote to be material, and we believe that no attempt to do so has ever been made. The circumstances of each case are necessarily controlling, and the action of the trial judge will not be disturbed by an appellate court, unless, an abuse of discretion quite clearly appears. If the evidence be so remote as to be wholly immaterial, it is, no doubt, his duty to reject it; but, if it be sufficiently near to have a tendency to lead a reasonable man to a belief respecting the matter in dispute, it ought not to be excluded, but should be submitted to the jury, which, in determining the weight to be given to it, may
“It ts the general rule of law that In the sale of goods and chattels, whether the subject-matter of the sale is wheat, or lumber, or cattle, or whatever it may be, where a contract is broken by a failure of the vendor or seller to deliver, the measure of damage is the difference between the contract price and the market value of the articles at the time and place of de livery under the contract. * * * No special circumstance has been disclosed here that takes this case out of the general rule of damages established by the courts everywhere, and which I have laid down to you — the difference between the contract price and the market value at the time and place when and where this lumber was to be delivered. * * * They could have delivered it on the 21st of March, and they were not bound to deliver it before; * * * and in so far as there was a failure to deliver the lumber due under this contract the plaintiff is entitled to recover for the undelivered lumber the difference between the contract price and the market value at McKees Rocks, or in Pittsburg, which is the same thing, on that date. And what that was is to be determined by you from a consideration of all the evidence in this case. What was, under the evidence, the fair market value of cottonwood lumber of the kind described in this contract at McKees Rocks, or in Pittsburg, on or about — we will say on — the last day when this lumber was to be delivered? And that you ought to determine from a calm and fair consideration of all the evidence in the case. The object of the law is, so far as it is humanly possible, to compensate a person who justly complains of the breach of a contract. It is not intended to punish the man who is in default. That is not the purpose of the law; but it is to compensate the party to the contract, who has been disappointed, who has lost the article for which he contracted. And, in determining that question, I repeat that the jury ought to give a fair consideration to all the testimony in the case bearing upon that point, and to be governed by the preponderance of the evidence, the weight of the testimony.”
These instructions not only accurately stated the applicable rule of law, but distinctly impressed upon the jury that it should consider all the testimony with reference to the latest day upon which the defendant might have made delivery under the contract. More than this could not properly have been done. Cottonwood lumber was not always in the Pittsburg market, and the restriction of the evidence of its value to any narrowly limited period would probably have defeated what the learned judge rightly regarded as the fundamental object of the law— “to compensate persons who justly complain of the breach of a contract.” His discretion, we think, was correctly, as well as rightfully, exercised; for, in our opinion, the evidence which it has been supposed he should have excluded was neither wholly irrelevant, nor so remote as practically to be immaterial.
The judgment is affirmed.