159 N.Y. 371 | NY | 1899
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The Appellate Division rested its reversal of the judgment entered upon the report of the referee upon exceptions taken to the refusal of the referee to permit two questions to be answered. Unless that court rightly determined that it was error not to allow the questions to be answered, its order of reversal is without support on this review. The findings of fact made by the referee are unreversed, and are controlling here, and fully support the judgment rendered. They show that the plaintiff and the defendant entered into a contract by which the defendant agreed to deliver to the plaintiff 4,000,000 feet of lumber, known in the trade as No. 2 cutting up and better, and that the same was to be sawn from logs the defendant was then getting out in Ashland county, Wisconsin, and to be sawn at the mills of said defendant at Morse Station, in dimensions as directed by the plaintiff, at $28.50 per thousand feet; said deliveries to be F.O.B. in canal boat at Tonawanda, and all completed before Oct. 1st, *377
1890; that the defendant failed to keep and perform its contract in that it delivered only 2,791,100 feet, leaving undelivered 1,208,900 feet, and that the market value of the lumber that the defendant agreed to deliver to the plaintiff under the contract was, at the time and place of delivery, $32.50 per thousand feet, and judgment was rendered for the difference between the contract price and such market value. The findings contain other details, including a modification of the contract as to price by which it was reduced from $28.50 to $27.50 per thousand feet. But they are all set forth in the statement of facts, and in this connection the substance only of the controlling findings are presented; they show, as we have seen, the making of a contract, its breach, and the damage to the plaintiff, measured by the difference between the contract price and the market value at the time and place of delivery. The only opportunity for legal controversy involved in this statement relates to the measure of damages,i.e., whether the referee was right in holding that the plaintiff was entitled to recover the difference between the contract price and the market value at the time and place of delivery. That such is the general rule both in England and in this country, is beyond question, and in this state the rule has been not only recognized but asserted on a number of occasions by the courts. In Todd v. Gamble (
This brings us to the exceptions taken to the refusal of the referee to permit Crane, who was an officer and a large owner in the defendant and also half owner of A.M. Dodge Company, to answer certain questions. Before quoting the questions it should be said that the witness had already testified that A.M. Dodge
Company had yards at Tonawanda and occupied offices jointly with this defendant; that the same clerical force did the work for each, and that they had for sale during that period of time what was known as Grand Haven pine, which the witness had described and characterized as *380
fully as good, if not better, than the lumber of the Penokee Company. Then this question was put to him: "Q. This 1,208,000 feet of Grand Haven pine, which you testified was in the possession of A.M. Dodge and Company in its yards at Tonawanda, on or about November 6, 1890, would you have sold that amount of pine to the plaintiff in this action at the prices mentioned in the contract in suit?" There are several objections to this question, but a statement of two of them will suffice to show that the referee did not err in his ruling. In the first place the question did not call for a fact, but instead for a mere operation of the witness' mind, the secret undisclosed intent of the witness in the event of the presentation of a situation calling for action. It did not inquire of Crane whether he had tendered that quantity of pine lumber to the plaintiff at the same rate as the contract called for, or that he offered it to him, but it sought merely to elicit from him his secret mental operation, which was safely beyond contradiction. Such evidence is not admissible. (Newell v. Doty,
The other question was: "Q. You have sold in open market at Tonawanda, this 1,208,000 feet of Grand Haven *381 stock in the month of November, 1890?" Had there been added to the question "at $28.50 per thousand feet," or any other sum under $32.50 per thousand feet, the question would have been material and relevant. One of the most important of the issues was the market value of the lumber in November, 1890, and the defendant would have been entitled to prove this or any other sale as bearing upon that issue. But an answer to the question would have furnished no assistance whatever if it had been in the affirmative. The presumption still would have been that the sale was at the market rate, which witnesses who testified said was $32.50 per thousand feet. To the suggestion that the learned Appellate Division may well have treated this question as but an introductory one to the general subject, and, therefore, not to be treated in any narrow spirit, the answer seems to be that the referee's attention was not drawn to the fact, if it was a fact, that the defendant asked this question for the purpose of showing market value. No evidence apparently having a bearing on that subject was excluded by him, and this question followed next after the one already considered in this opinion and which called for a statement from the witness as to what he would have done had the plaintiff been willing to take the Grand Haven lumber. It was a question based apparently upon the theory entertained by the defendant, that the plaintiff was obliged to look about for lumber to take the place of that which it had refused to deliver to him, instead of relying upon the market value of the lumber at the time and place of delivery as and for his indemnity. The referee was, therefore, not advised by the connection in which the question was asked, any more than he was by the form of the question, that the purpose of the counsel in asking it was the introduction of evidence tending to show the market value of the lumber that was the subject of the contract. If the defendant had in any way pointed out that this evidence was but an entering wedge towards establishing market value at a lower rate than that proved by plaintiff's witnesses, the reversal might be justified, but that was not the situation. The referee *382 was not apprised that such was the purpose of the testimony, and, therefore, we must treat it precisely as if an affirmative answer to that question had been given, and nothing more, that is, that he had sold in open market at Tonawanda this one million two hundred and eight thousand feet of Grand Haven lumber in stock in the month of November, 1890. With that evidence in the case the referee would have had no assistance from it whatever, as the presumption as to price would be that it was sold at the market price as testified to by several witnesses, which was not less than $32.50 per thousand feet.
We are unable to agree with the Appellate Division that the referee erred in his rulings upon the two questions considered.
The order, therefore, should be reversed, and the judgment entered upon the report of the referee affirmed, with costs.
All concur, except O'BRIEN and HAIGHT, JJ., not voting.
Order reversed, etc.