21 Wis. 562 | Wis. | 1867
This is an action to recover damages for a breach of contract in refusing to accept and pay for a quantity of wheat. It was alleged in the complaint, that what wheat the plaintiff had then in store in his barn, amounting, as it was
These instructions the court refused to give, but charged the jury that if they found from the evidence that the defendant made the purchase of the wheat as alleged in the complaint, and failed to comply with the contract by taking the wheat and paying for the same, then the rule of damages was the value of the wheat at the contract price; and if the plaintiff disposed of the wheat, or any part thereof, after the defendant failed in performing his part of the contract, the jury would apply the sum received by the plaintiff for the wheat so disposed of, together with any sum paid by the defendant at the time of making the contract, against the aggregate amount of the contract price of the wheat; and their verdict should be for the contract price, less the sums so received. We think the ruling of the court was erroneous in respect to the rule of damages, upon the facts of the case.
According to the plaintiff’s case, the wheat was sold on the 15th of July, 1864, to be received and paid for within fifteen days thereafter. The defendant did not perform his contract, and the evidence clearly shows that the plaintiff elected to treat the wheat as his own property. The mere fact that the plaintiff put the crop raised in 1864 with the wheat sold the defendant, thus putting it out of his power ever to deliver the identical wheat which was the subject matter of the contract, fully warrants this view of the case. Upon what principle, then, should the damages be assessed for the failure of the defendant to perform the contract and receive the wheat? The general rule is, when the vendee refuses to accept and pay for goods sold at the time expressed or implied in the contract of sale, that the vendor may, if he sees fit, proceed and resell the goods, and charge the vendee with the difference between the contract price and that realized
Now the plaintiff kept the wheat in this case some fifteen months after the default of the defendant. It appears that the wheat might have been sold soon after the defendant failed to accept and pay for it. And in the most favorable view which can be taken of the case for the plaintiff, he ought only to recover the difference between the contract price and the market value of the wheat at or about the time the defendant should have received it. Perhaps the plaintiff might wait a short time after the expiration of the fifteen days, to see whether the defendant would receive the wheat as he said he would. But certainly he could not wait fifteen months, until the condition of the market was entirely changed, and then sell, and call upon the defendant to make up the deficiency between the contract price and the one realized. He was bound to sell within a reasonable time, in order to entitle himself to the right to call upon the defendant to make up the loss.
The instructions asked by the defendant and refused, were quite as favorable to the plaintiff as the facts of the case would warrant.
By the Court. — The judgment of the circuit court is reversed, and a venire de novo awarded.