121 Wash. 512 | Wash. | 1922
The purpose of this action was to recover damages which accrued by reason of the breach of a contract. The cause was tried to the court without a jury, and resulted in findings of fact and conclusions
The appellant, at Seattle, was engaged in the lumber and shingle brokerage business. The respondent was a corporation doing business in the city of Tacoma. On or about April 24, 1920, the appellant sold to the respondent 200,000 feet of 1 x 4 to 12 inch, number 3, common and better rough fir lumber. The lumber was to be shipped to the National Box Company at Chicago, Illinois, to which company it had been sold by the respondent. After the contract had been entered into, the appellant placed an order for the lumber with the Brace & Hergert Mill Company, at Seattle, which company was to manufacture it, load it upon cars and bill the same to the National Box Company. After the lumber was loaded upon the cars, the Brace & Hergert Company sent the bills of lading and the invoices to the appellant, and that company thereupon transmitted the bills of lading, together with the draft attached, to a bank in Tacoma, which presented them to the respondent. The drafts, as they were presented, were paid. Ten cars of lumber in all were shipped from time to time. When the lumber arrived at Chicago, six cars were rejected by the National Box Company and three were unloaded and held subject to adjustment. After the respondent was informed of the rejection, it immediately notified the appellant and requested that an inspection of the lumber be made. This was not acquiesced in by the appellant. Three of the cars rejected were placed in storage by the railroad company. The tenth car was shipped after notice to the appellant of the rejection and is not involved in this proceeding. In fact, the only question here to be determined is whether the demurrage, penalty, recon
The appellant argues, first, that this is not a proper item of damages because it was not the natural and proximate result of the breach of the contract, and was not within the contemplation of the parties making the contract. The breach of the contract, as found by the trial court, consisted in failing to ship the kind of lumber which the contract called for. It may be admitted to be the rule that, where two parties make a contract which one of -them breaks, the damages which the other party can recover are such as may be fairly and reasonably considered as the natural and proximate result of the breach, and such as were within the contemplation of the parties at the time the contract was made, and are the probable result of the breach of it. Benjamin v. Puget Sound Commercial Co., 12 Wash. 476, 41 Pac. 166; Ransberry v. North American Transp. & Trad. Co., 22 Wash. 476, 61 Pac. 154.
Whether the damages claimed come within this rule in any particular case depends upon the facts incident thereto. In this case, the appellant knew that the lumber was to be delivered to the National Box Company and that, in the ordinary course of affairs, it might be rejected as not meeting the requirements of the contract. It also knew that, if such rejection took place on account of the failure on its part to ship the kind of lumber agreed upon, there might, and probably would, arise as a result thereof a demurrage and penalty charge, which the railroad company requires when there is delay in unloading. The facts of this case bring it within the rule above stated.
It is argued, however, that the respondent did not use reasonable efforts to minimize the damage and, therefore, this item should not be allowed. The rule is
The appellant seeks to avoid the force of this rule by stating that the storage charges on the three cars of lumber unloaded by the railroad company are shown in the evidence offered by the respondent. It is true that the storage charges as to those three cars appear in the evidence, but that does not meet the requirements as to the issue here presented. Had the two cars upon which the demurrage and penalty charges accrued been placed in storage by the respondent, when the lumber therein was thereafter re-sold, reloading and re-transportation charges would have necessarily accrued, and what these would have amounted to does not appear. But aside from this, the respondent’s place of business was some two thousand miles from the destination of the lumber, and the appellant had refused to join in an inspection after it had notice of the rejection. It also may be reasonably inferred from the evidence that part of the charges complained of had accrued prior to the time that the respondent had notice of the rejection. The trial court found that, in view of the facts and circumstances of the case, the respondent acted in all respects as a reasonably careful and prudent person and made diligent efforts to dispose of the lumber in the cars. With this view, after a careful reading of the evidence, we are in accord.
The judgment is affirmed.
Parker, C. J., Holcomb, Mackintosh, and Hovey, JJ., concur.