208 N.W. 194 | Minn. | 1926
Of the contract there is no dispute. Plaintiff undertook to raise a crop of peas for canning upon a plot of ground selected by defendant, from seed furnished by it, and was to plant, cultivate, cut and *489 deliver the crop under the direction of defendant. Nor is there any contention that plaintiff did not fully perform or did not raise a fine crop of peas to the canning stage. The dispute is over the defense that plaintiff broke the contract by refusing to harvest the peas when directed to, instead electing to let the peas mature for seed, and the contrary claim of plaintiff that defendant breached the contract by delaying, against plaintiff's urgent protest, to examine the crop, in order to determine when it was fit to cut and deliver, as under the contract it had agreed to do, until the peas became too mature for canning, and then refused to accept them. The jury accepted plaintiff's contentions. With the issues thus settled in plaintiff's favor, defendant nevertheless claims the verdict should not stand because of its amount and the faulty instructions as to the measure of damages.
It is well to see what situation plaintiff was in when defendant breached this executory contract for the planting, growing, cutting and delivering at defendant's factory of a crop of canning peas. The peas were then beyond the canning stage and there was no market for that sort of peas. The only thing for plaintiff to do was to seek to reduce his damages by allowing the peas to mature and then harvest them. This he attempted to do, but rain and hail destroyed the entire crop and it had to be plowed under. Every one would recognize the propriety of full recovery for the crop at the contract price, had a hailstorm utterly destroyed the peas, say an hour after defendant had informed plaintiff that the peas were too ripe for canning, therefore it would not accept them, it being its fault or breach of duty that they were not earlier cut. This is not like the case of a breach of an executory contract to manufacture or prepare marketable articles or articles not liable to destruction before they can be fully prepared and disposed of for some price. This was a crop past use for canning, but not fully matured for any other purpose for which there was a market when the breach occurred, and the preparation of which for any use was subject to uncertainty and utter disappointment. The rule approved by this court is the one stated in 2 Sutherland, Dam. (4 ed.) § 648: "A party to a contract *490
which has been broken by the other party must so conduct his affairs, after he has knowledge of the breach, as to lessen the damage he may sustain as the result of it; and to the extent that loss can thus be avoided the vendee will be relieved from liability." Baessetti v. Shenango Furnace Co.
The situation here was akin to where a master dismisses a servant before the contract of employment ends. The servant may sue for the instalments of wages as they become due, notwithstanding he has done no work, provided he has made bona fide effort to find other like employment without success. The burden is upon defendant to show that he could have obtained other employment, and the amount that thereby the damages should be reduced. In Schommer v. Flour City Iron Works,
When this crop was fit to can, plaintiff had earned the full contract price, less the expense of the cutting and delivering. The cutting had to be done in any event. When defendant breached its contract it became liable for the damages then resulting to plaintiff, namely 2 1/4 cents a pound of shelled peas which had been produced fit for canning. The burden was upon defendant to show how much those damages should be reduced by what plaintiff thereafter by *491
proper effort could have realized out of the crop. He had a growing crop on hand, thrust upon him by defendant's wrong. He could not dispose of it as it stood. And it is proper to regard it as defendant's in the hands of plaintiff whose duty it was to handle it for defendant's account. This is in line with the theory of the case of Berquist v. N.J. Olsen Co.
No issue was made by the answer that there was a failure by plaintiff to minimize the damages. The court was not requested to submit such an issue to the jury, and no objection was made at the trial to the charge. Nor is the question presented in the motion for a new trial, the only exceptions there taken are to parts of the charge given. Unless in a jury case certain issues are raised by the pleadings or are so litigated by consent that it is plain that they are for the jury and require appropriate instructions, it is incumbent on the attorneys to call the court's attention to incidental possible issues which might bear on the verdict by requests to instruct or by some reference to the omission before the jury retires. Nothing of the kind was done. It is readily seen that when the court fails to submit an issue that may have been litigated by consent or has been injected, though not made by the pleadings, a party should not be allowed to sit by and keep silent, speculating on a favorable verdict, and then, if that turns out otherwise, be permitted to claim a new trial because of the court's omission or inadvertence. In this case, defendant might well have deemed it to make for a favorable verdict were not the issue of reduction of damages submitted so as to give the jury a chance to compromise. Moreover the issue of minimizing damages not having been made an obvious or direct issue by the pleadings, the evidence, to which defendant now points, *492
viz., that seed peas were valuable and that those harvested by plaintiff's neighbors were at a profit, was properly admissible on the issue directly made by the answer that plaintiff had deliberately breached the contract by refusing to deliver the crop as canning peas, and elected to let them mature for seed purposes. We do not think this case, on the proposition mentioned, comes within Wilcox Trux. Inc. v. Rosenberger,
The charge is attacked as not giving the jury the correct measure of damages, namely, the difference between the contract price and the market price at the time of breach. There are two answers. The evidence did not call for such instruction and it was inapplicable in a contract of this kind. Neither party attempted to prove what the pea crop, as it stood when defendant breached the contract, was worth, so the jury had nothing to deduct from the contract price. In the second place, it is apparent, on a moment's reflection, that the general rule above stated cannot be applied. The crop had then no value for the purpose for which plaintiff had raised it. In order to realize anything out of it, it had to mature, and work not contemplated by the parties remained to be done, and in the meantime the result depended on climatic conditions and other contingencies of which plaintiff had no control. It was entirely lost or destroyed.
Defendant contends that G.S. 1923, § 8438, subd. 3 (§ 64 of the Uniform Sales Act), establishes the proper measure of damages, in substance, as first above stated. It is very doubtful if the act is applicable to the agreement under which the peas were grown, but, if so, subd. 3 of the preceding section is more in point which permits the seller to handle and dispose of the goods for the buyer's account. Leonard Seed Co. v. Lustig Burgerhoff Co.
This observation in St. Louis Range Co. v. Kline-Drummond Mercantile Co.
The court's reference to the "value" of the crop in the instructions no doubt was understood by both counsel and jury as being measured by the estimated amount of shelled peas at the contract price of 2 1/4 cents per pound. In the absence of some suggestion at the time that the word might be misconstrued, defendant should not now be heard to urge a new trial on that account.
The errors assigned upon the rulings at the trial do not merit attention.
The judgment is affirmed. *494