This appeal is from a judgment of the trial court awarding the appellee, Lee Farm Oil Company, as plaintiff in the court below, damages against the appellant, Osage Oil & Refining Company, for breach of contract for the drilling of a well by the plaintiff on the premises of the defendant.
As the only assignments which we shall discuss deal with the question of the damages resulting from the Violation of this contract by the appellant, we will confine our statement to such facts as will make such discussion intelligible. It appears that the said parties entered into a written contract under the terms of which the Lee Farm Oil Company, a partnership, agreed to drill a well on the property of the Osage Oil Company “to the depth of 2,000 feet, or down to what is known as the ‘big lime,’ provided the said ‘big lime’ is found at a less depth than 2,000 feet. Said first parties (Lee Farm Oil Company) agree, however, to stop the drilling of said well at a less depth than 2,000 feet in the event oil or gas is found in paying quantities at a less depth than 2,000 feet, and parties of the second part (the Osage Oil & Refining Company) so desire and request.” The Osage Company agreed to furnish the fuel and water necessary to do the drilling and pay therefor the sum of $3 per lineal foot. The plaintiffs alleged that upon the execution of the contract they moved their drilling machinery onto the said premises and drilled said well to about 300 feet, when the “defendant breached the contract in its entirety to plaintiff’s damage in the sum of $3,000”; that plaintiff “would have máde at least $3,-000 had it been permitted to go ahead with said drilling and had the defendant complied with its portion of said contract.” These being the allegations of damage, the plaintiffs were permitted on the morning of the trial to insert in their petition the following additional allegation:
“Plaintiff further alleges that the plaintiff, relying on the authority of the parties who made the contract, moved on the premises, and, was out above $300 for moving thereon, and drilled to a depth of about 400 feet at a cost of $1,200, and that the defendant received the benefit of the plaintiff’s acts and works, which was of the reasonable value of $1,500.”
The following are the issues and answers pf the jury thereto pf damages submitted by the court to the jury:
“Special issue No. 3: Find what would have been the plaintiff’s net profit, if any, after deducting all necessary expense of fulfilling said contract. Answer: $1,500.
“Special issue No. 4: Find what amount would reasonably compensate the plaintiff for the necessary expense of moving in to the Watkins farm and drilling the well that he did drill to the depth he did drill on said farm, and claimed to have drilled by reason of the contract introduced in evidence in this case. Answer : $435.
“Special issue No. 5: What did it cost the plaintiff to set up his rig? Answer: $75.
*520 “Special issue No. 6: What did it cost the plaintiff to drill to the depth he did drill? Answer: $200.”
The court entered, judgment' on the verdict of the jury in favor of the plaintiff for the sum of $2,210. The appellee has filed a re-mittitur in this court of the two items of $200 and $75.
Under the fourth, tenth, and eleventh assignments it • is claimed that there was a double recovery allowed, in that the item of $435 found in responso to the fourth issue included the items of $75 and $200 found in response to the fifth and sixth issues. The appellee has remitted the said sum of $275, so that it will not be necessary to discuss these assignments.
The seventh, eighth, ninth, fourteenth, fifteenth, and seventeenth assignments are concerning the trial of an issue of the agency of the party executing the drilling contract in behalf of the defendant. Appellant’s attorney, on oral argument, admitted that no claim of error can be successfully urged as to these matters because of the fact. that there was no sworn denial of agency, as required by the statutes, so that we need not discuss these assignments.
“There can be no recovery of profits, the difference between cost and contract price in this class of eases unless plaintiff shows that he could not have procured other employment and thus have prevented the damage.”
If the proposition be sound, yet the court would not have been warranted in giving defendant a peremptory instruction; for there were other elements of damage on which the plaintiff had the right to go to the jury. This reason alone would require that the assignment be overruled. But we do not think the proposition itself is sound. It is true that, if the plaintiffs could have secured other employment for their machinery and diminished thereby their damages, they would not be entitled to recover such damages as they could thus have avoided. The courts apply a similar rule in such case, as in the case of contracts for personal service. Frazier v. Clark,
In the event appellee files a further remit-titur of the sum of $200, as herein suggested, within 15 days from this date, the judgment of the lower court will be affirmed; otherwise it will be reversed, and the cause remanded.
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