41 Neb. 567 | Neb. | 1894
The Horn, Brannen & Forsyth Manufacturing Company, hereinafter called the “ Horn Company,” brought an action in the district court of Douglas county to recover from F. M. Russell and Orlo H. Pratt, copartners doing business as Russell, Pratt & Co., and hereinafter referred to as “Russell & Pratt,” $1,285.22, with interest, alleged to be due the Horn Company as a balance for goods sold and delivered to Russell & Pratt. The account attached to the petition showed charges against Russell & Pratt amounting to $4,562.93, and credits amounting to $3,277.71. Russell & Pratt answered, admitting payments to the Horn Company of large sums of money for gas fixtures and mer
Certain rulings of the court on the admission and rejec
Upon the subject of the first counter-claim, the sale of goods to Hendrix, the evidence tended to show that Hendrix was erecting a number of houses and that Russell & Pratt had made, or caused to be made, two bids for furnishing gas fixtures therefor. These bids contemplated the use of fixtures other than those of the Horn Company’s manufacture. Mr. Ryan, a traveling salesman of the Horn Company, appeared in Omaha. At the request of Russell & Pratt, he went with Mr. Russell to Balfe & Read, who were gas fitters in Omaha, was introduced to a member of that firm by Russell and made for Balfe & Read an estimate for the fixtures for the Hendrix houses. The bid formulated by Balfe & Read upon that estimate was accepted by Hendrix and the goods sold directly without the further intervention of Russell & Pratt. Russell & Pratt claim that it was the agreement between them and the Horn Company that the Horn Company’s salesman should assist them when desired in making sales; that Ryan acted ostensibly for that purpose; that it was the understanding with Ryan that while he should make the estimate, the sale was to be to Balfe & Read on behalf of Russell & Pratt, not a direct sale by the Horn Company; that Russell & Pratt would be entitled under their agreement to purchase the goods at a discount of $1,086.65 from the list price, and that in violation of their contract with the Horn-. Company they were deprived of this sum by reason of Ryan’s making the sale directly. There was evidence tending to establish this contention. The Horn Company claims that it was the voluntary proposition of Russell & Pratt that Ryan should make the estimate and the sale, and that Russell & Pratt had in this instance waived their right of insisting that the Horn Company should sell no goods except through them. This contention is also not
Complaint is made of the eighth instruction given by the court at the request of the Horn Company. It' is as follows: “You are instructed that before the defendants are entitled to recover any damages under their second counter-claim, they must first prove that the plaintiff has sold his goods within the defendants’ territory between the date of March 1,1889, and March 1,1890, and the amount which the defendants would be entitled to recover would be the profit which the plaintiff made by selling to outside dealers ■ over what it would have realized had it sold to Eussell, Pratt ■& Co., unless you further find that the defendants have suffered actual pecuniary loss by reason of the plaintiff’s so selling its goods; and if you find the defendants have suffered such loss, then the measure of damages is such an amount as the defendants have proven by a clear preponderance of the evidence they lost in profits on the sale of plaintiff’s goods, which they can show with reasonable certainty they would have made had the plaintiff not sold any of its goods within the defendants’ territory.” We do not think that Eussell & Pratt were prejudiced by this instruction. We agree with them that where one person has by contract the exclusive right to buy from another and resell within a certain territory goods in which such other person enjoys a monopoly, and such other person, in violation of his contract, sells such goods to other persons within the territory, the measure of damages is the profit which such first person may with reasonable certainty show that he would have realized if the contract had been performed by the other party. (Mueller v. Bethesda Mineral Spring Co., 50 N. W. Rep. [Mich.], 319; Hale v. Hess, 30 Neb., 42.)
Upon the subject of Russell & Pratt’s measure of damages upon the third counter-claim the following instruction was given at the Horn Company’s request: “ You are instructed that under their third counter-claim the defendants are only entitled to recover as damages the difference between the agreed price of the goods purchased of the plaintiff and their market value at the time the plaintiff refused to deliver them, and the defendants must prove that market value, which would be the amount Russell, Pratt & Co. and other like dealers would have to pay the plaintiff for such goods at the time of the refusal to ship them.” The measure of damages upon this counterclaim would be the difference between the price at which the Horn Company had agreed to sell the goods to Russell & Pratt and the market value of such goods at the time and place when and where they should have been delivered. There was evidence tending to establish both of these facts. The failure in this instruction to state the place where the market price was to be fixed was probably cured by another instruction, but the definition given of markét value in this instruction was erroneous. There was evidence tending to show that such fixtures as those ordered were purchasable in Omaha at the time of the alleged breach of contract at a discount of twenty per cent from the list price. This instruction practically excluded such evidence from consideration. The market value at
There were many other assignments 'of error, but upon consideration we find that in respect to them the action of the trial court was substantially correct, and the conclusions reached upon the- instructions referred to render a further discussion of the record unnecessary.
Reversed and remanded.