Defendant’s request for the general affirmative charge, refused by the court, presents three questions of fact: (1) Whether there was any evidence tending to show an obligation on the part of defendant to furnish a *186 site on the railroad right* of way for plaintiff’s tipple; (2) whether there was any evidence tending to show that defendant stopped plaintiff from! mining the coal, when he was able, ready, and willing to perform; and (3) whether-there was any evidence tending to show that defendant’s general superintendent, Pennington, was authorized, actually or ostensibly, to make the contract in question with plaintiff.
On the first issue it appears without dispute, from plaintiff’s own testimony, that defendant was not contractually bound to furnish a site for the tipple, but merely and gratuitously promised to give expert advice as to the most desirable location. In so far as plaintiff’s case depended upon that alleged breach, he was clearly not entitled to recover. But, on the second issue, plaintiff testified that Pennington stopped him from carrying .out the contract, which he was ready, willing, and able to do. We would infer from his entire testimony that he was stopped from work merely by Pennington’s failure to provide a place on the railroad, or a spur track, for the tipple. But, as the testimony stood, it was for the jury to say what it meant.
On the third issue it was very clearly open to the
jury to
find that the contract was made with the knowledge of the governing authority of the defendant company, or else that Pennington was ostensibly authorized to make the contract and that plaintiff could properly rel^ upon the appearance of such authority. Wheeler v. McGuire,
“The person injured is not required, however, to make extraordinary expenditures requiring a disproportionate outlay in endeavoring to guard against the consequences of the wrongdoer’s act.” 17 Corp. Jur. 770, § 97.
In the instant case, plaintiff could not have been required to build a spur track at a cost of 8400 or 8500 unless such an outlay was reasonable and prudent under all the circumstances, and unless he had .the means to do so, and the requested instruction that, if he could have secured a loading place at a reasonable cost, the measure of his damages would be such reasonable cost, was at least misleading, and therefore properly refused. The estimated cost of the spur may have been reasonable in the abstract, but it may nevertheless have been an unreasonable burden to impose upon plaintiff under the circumstances, and in relation to his -contract.
Moreover, there is another limitation in the general rule, which we think ig. applicable here:
“Where the party, whose duty it is primarily to perform a contract, has equal .opportunity for performance, and equal knowledge of the consequences of nonperformance, he cannot, while the contract is. subsisting and in force, he heard to say that plaintiff might have performed for him.” Ash v. Soo Sing Lung,177 Cal. 356 ,170 Pac. 843 ; Louisville, etc., R. R. Co. v. Sumner,106 Ind. 55 ,5 N. E. 404 ,55 Am. Rep. 719 ; 17 Corp. Jur. 774, § 99.
We find no prejudicial error in the record, and the judgment will be affirmed.
Affirmed.
<S=>Por other eases see same topic and KEY-NUMBER in all Key-Numbered Digests and Indexes
