Smith v. Sherwood

2 Tex. 461 | Tex. | 1847

Mr. Justice Wheeler

delivered the opinion of the-court.

For the appellant it is insisted,

1st. That the court erred in refusing the instruction asked..

2d. That the verdict was for an amount excessive and not warranted by the evidence.

1. The instruction asked by the defendant went to the question of a failure of consideration. But there is in the answer-no averment of a failure of consideration and no intimation off any intention on the part of the defendant of relying upon that defense. And we have repeatedly decided that a party cannot avail himself thus of an affirmative, substantive defensa-which he has not averred.

*463. But bad this defense been properly presented, it was unsupported by the evidence.

Graham, who acted for Sherwood, apprised the overseer of Smith, who seems to have been acting as agent for the latter,, that the corn was ready for him, but he refused to receive it. Here was an offer to deliver and a refusal to receive; and this has been adjudged a sufficient compliance with a promise to-deliver specific goods, and as changing the relation of the parties to that of bailor and bailee. 4 Wend. 525; 13 id. 95; 3 J. C. 243; 2 Kent, 508, and cases cited. No objection was made that the corn was not designated and set apart; but the refusal to receive was placed by Smith’s agent upon the express and sole ground of his own. want of readiness. If in any event, it would have been necessary to have had the corn more particularly designated and set apart, this conduct of the agent of Smith dispensed with that necessity; and Graham subsequently held the goods as his bailee and at his risk. 8 J. R. 474. If the corn was afterwards destroyed in consequence of not having been removed, it was not the fault of Sherwood,, but the consequence of Smith’s own refusal or neglect to-receive and remove it; and upon no principle of law or justice can Sherwood be held responsible to him for the consequence of his own voluntary refusal or neglect to perform an act which seems to have been incumbent upon him in the contemplation of the contracting parties.

2. The remaining objection relates to the verdict.

There appears to have been no other evidence of any damage sustained by the plaintiff than the value of the corn as proved. Yet the verdict was for a sum more than double that value.. There was no evidence of any fraudulent conduct, wanton violence, or malicious outrage, on the part' of the defendant. There were no circumstances of aggravation to bring this case within the principle of those cases in which the jury are allowed to give vindictive or exemplary damages; and the verdict cannot, as has been supposed, be maintained on that ground. The class of cases to which that principle applies has been thus defined by Mr. Sedgwick in his recent treatise on the *464Measure of Damages: “There is a large class of cases where the common law in giving relief loses sight of the principle of compensation, and gives damages by way of punishment, for ■acts of malice, vexation, fraud and oppression. In those cases it has been found difficult to set any fixed or prescribed limits to the discretion of the jury; or, in fact, to prescribe any rule whatever. In other words, they are left to what Domat, speaking of the court, calls, as we have seen, la prudence dujuge, reserving only to the bench the right of control over verdicts which bear the evident impress of prejudice, passion or corruption.” Sedgwick on the Measure of Damages, p. 84.

But “in all cases of civil suits, injury or breach of contract, except that of a promise of marriage (id. 27, n.), with the exception of those cases of trespasses, or torts, accompanied by oppression, fraud, malice or negligence so gross as to raise •a presumption of malice, where the jury have a discretion to award exemplary or vindictive damages; in all other cases the declared object is to give compensation to the party injured for the actual loss sustained.” Id. 26, 27.

And again, “ In all cases growing out of the non-performance of contracts, and in those of infringement of rights, or non-performance of duties created or imposed by law, in which there is no element of fraud, willful negligence or malice, the ■compensation recovered in damages consists solely in the ■direct pecuniary loss, which includes, in mere money demands, interest for the detention of the amount claimed and the costs of the suit brought for the recovery of the demand.” Id. 36, 37. •

It is clear that, according to these principles, the present case, as it appears from the evidence in the record, was not a case in which the jury were entrusted by the law with a discretion to give vindictive or exemplary damages. And having no such discretion, their verdict was excessive and illegal.

There was, however, no motion for a new trial in the court below. But the case having been decided in that court before the decision of this court in the case of Foster v. Smith, 1 Tex. 70, a case in which I did not sit, a majority of the court are of opinion that it be, and it therefore is, the. judgment of *465-the court, that a new trial be here granted, according to the rule laid down in that case.

The j udgment is therefore reversed and the cause remanded for a new trial.

midpage