89 N.Y.S. 289 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1904
The facts in this case are set out in detail" in its consideration on a former appeal (84 App. Div. 287). They remain the same upon-
Upon the former appeal a majority of the court held that plaintiff was entitled to recover substantial damages, but refrained from laying down any precise rule for their measurement. There was no difference of opinion upon the subject of a breach of the contract by the defendant. The difference arose upon the question of damages, the minority view being that while there was a breach of the contract, only nominal damages had been established and that the court would not reverse a judgment even though an exception was properly taken in order to permit the recovery of nominal damages, and such is the general rule. It is subject, however, to the exception that where it appears that a substantial right is in controversy which may be defeated, prejudiced or impaired by a dismissal of the complaint and which may be saved by the recovery of judgment for a nominal sum, the judgment will be reversed when necessary to protect such light. Cases cited in the minority opinion established this rule. The decision by this court upon the former appeal required the learned trial court to submit the case to the jury upon the question of damages and the failure so to do was a disregard of the rule announced upon the former appeal. In any event the court was required either to submit such question to the jury or to direct a verdict in favor of plaintiff for nominal damages upon the proof as it stood. The defendant in its answer to the complaint averred by way of a counterclaim an indebtedness upon the part of the plaintiff for the value of certain work, labor and services which it had bestowed upon the plaintiff’s bicycle, amounting to the sum of twelve dollars, and it further averred a claim for storage at the rate of twenty-five cents a week from July 21, 1899, to the date of the trial of the action, which amounted at the time when the complaint was dismissed to something over fifty dollars. The contract established at the trial was an entire contract and required the defendant not only to make the repairs upon the wheel, but also to ship it to Portland, Me., and this understanding on its part it was bound to fulfill in order to entitle it to be paid for the' cost of the repairs. As it was guilty of a breach of such contract, no obligation to pay for the repairs arose upon the part of the plaintiff, and thereafter the continued holding
We are also of opinion that the plaintiff’s proof entitled him to a recovery of substantial damages. Upon the former appeal the evidence bearing upon this question so far as.it related to the new wheel which the plaintiff purchased at Portland consisted of an offer to prove the cost of the bicycle, purchased and nothing more. Upon the last trial the plaintiff testified that he purchased the same kind of a bicycle as that which he had left with the defendant to repair and offered to prove what he paid for the same. This was objected to as incompetent, immaterial and irrelevant and not affording a proper measure of damages, and the court sustained the objection. Plaintiff’s counsel asked if it was upon the ground that the cost was no evidence of the value and the court replied : “ Upon the ground that that is not the proper measure of damages.” The purchase price of property, or what it realizes upon a sale, even under execution, is some evidence of its value. (Montignami v. Crandall Co., 34 App. Div. 228.) It is not controlling and the party who seeks to establish value is required to show what such value is, and what it sold for at a fair sale is some evidence. It is fair to presume that the plaintiff would have supplied such proof had it not been for the announcement of the court that it was not proper, not because it was not evidence of value, but for the reason that it did not furnish the proper measure of damages, and thus the plaintiff was -entirely prevented from pursuing this branch of the subject. In further pursuit of evidence bearing thereon the plaintiff called a witness to testify as to the value of such wheel at second hand in the city of New York after plaintiff returned from his trip, in which he had used the bicycle. This testimony was also excluded and to the ruling thereon the plaintiff excepted. We think this testimony was competent and should have been received. When the defendant
It is said that plaintiff was bound to reduce the damages occasioned by the breach. And so he was. But such obligation did not require him to make a new contract with the defendant. He was not bound to acquiesce in the breach, pay the bill for repairs and procure a delivery of his wheel. That did not go in reduction of damages for the breach, but would amount to a species of coercion upon the defendant’s part to compel him to pay for the repairs and accept his wheel. He was under no obligation to yield to such demand, even though by yielding he might have diminished .the damages. He was only required to supply himself ' with what ' the defendant refused to deliver as cheaply as possible. His obligation extended no farther.
It follows that the judgment should be reversed and a new trial granted, with costs to the appellant to abide the event.
Van Brunt, P. J., O’Brien, McLaughlin and Laughlin, JJ., concurred.
Judgment reversed, new trial ordered, costs to appellant .to abide event.