220 S.W. 191 | Tex. App. | 1920
Appellee sued appellant upon an enrollment contract, in which the school catalogue of appellee was referred to and made a part thereof. The contract provided for the payment of $600, and it was admitted that $94 had been paid. The judgment was for $505.40, with interest.
The defendant answered by general demurrer, general denial, and various special pleas, none of which are involved in the questions arising upon this appeal. It may be appropriate, however, to call attention to the fact that in these pleas was contained an allegation showing that defendant's son withdrew j from plaintiff's school about a month after entrance.
The plaintiff filed a supplemental petition, consisting of exceptions, a general denial, and a special answer, setting forth various provisions of the catalogue, and alleging that under the terms of the contract defendant's son was enrolled for the full session, and that plaintiff was at all times ready, able, and *192 willing to carry out its contract to furnish board, lodging, and tuition, and would have done so, had defendant not withdrawn his son from the school. The trial resulted in a judgment for plaintiff for $505.40, with interest.
The appellant contends that, as the evidence discloses that his son withdrew from the school about a month after entering same, it is apparent that appellee was not required to furnish board and lodging during the remainder of the term, and therefore it should not recover the full contract price. In other words, appellant invokes the usual rule that upon the breach of an executory contract the measure of damages is, not the contract price, but the profit the plaintiff would have made, had the contract been carried out. He contends, further, that if the contract be viewed as one stipulating that the entire sum must be paid in case of a breach by defendant, then that such provision is unconscionable and should be treated as providing a penalty.
The enrollment contract reads as follows:
"Sign here: Mrs. J. M. Peirce."
The catalogue provisions are in substance, if not literally, the same as those stated in the opinion in the case of Vidor v. Peacock,
So far as tuition is concerned, it seems to be well established that the full sum agreed to be paid for the session is ordinarily recoverable upon the withdrawal of the student, even though the contract does not specially provide that there will be no deduction before the end of the session. Sedgwick on Damages (9th Ed.) 612; International Text-Book Co. v. Martin,
So far as board is concerned, It seems that it is possible to show with the required certainty a pecuniary outlay which the plaintiff has been saved by the breach. The rule, therefore, is that —
"Where board and lodging are obtained for a fixed time at an agreed price, the damages recoverable by the landlord, where the boarder leaves before the expiration of the time agreed upon, are the pro rata amount of the board furnished, due and unpaid up to the time the boarder leaves, and compensation for the loss of the profits on the contract to the end of the term, and this latter usually consists of the profits the landlord would have made, had the contract not been broken." Elliott on Contracts, § 2230.
The author recognizes an exception, however, in the following language:
"Where, however, the contract specially stipulates for `no deduction in case of absence,' the landlord is entitled to the pay agreed upon until the place of the defaulting boarder is supplied by another paying the same or a higher price."
The case of Wilkinson v. Davies,
We find that contracts made with schools for board, lodging, and tuition, which contain provisions clearly showing that the contract is for an entire session and that no deduction is to be made if the student leaves before the expiration of the session, have been held to authorize a recovery of the price stipulated to be paid for the entire session. Vidor v. Peacock,
The parties have agreed that $600 is to be paid for the session, even though the student withdraws. This provision was doubtless inserted because of the fact that it would be exceedingly difficult to ascertain just how much profit would be derived by the school from a contract fully performed by both parties. If it be held that the burden rests upon plaintiff, notwithstanding such provision, to plead and prove what its profit would have *193 been, then such provision would be held to be entirely meaningless and of no force.
The suggestion has been made that the provision for payment of the entire sum should be treated as providing a penalty, and therefore plaintiff should not be permitted to recover more than the profit it would have made. If that contention is correct, the parties do a useless thing in providing in any contract that there shall be no abatement of the price contracted to be paid, for plaintiff would have to establish what profit would have been made, had the contract been fully performed.
We conclude that the judgment should be affirmed.