51 So. 531 | Ala. | 1909
Action for breach of contract, by a purchaser against a seller, for the sale and delivery, at or by a stipulated date, of a. locomotive. The complaint, at different stages, contained counts 1 to 5, inclusive. Counts 3 and 4 were stricken in response to demurrers. Counts 1 and 2 were well drawn for the recovery of at least nominal damages for the breach of the contract alleged. Furthermore, the court, at defendant’s (appellant’s) instance, affirmatively instruct - ed the jury that on these counts no more than nominal damages could be awarded. Count 5, claiming, after amendment, special damages, is the count out of which the chief question argued here arises. The reporter will set out this count (5) as last amended. The court, at defendant’s request, charged the jury (charge 8) that “the plaintiffs cannot recover both the rental value of their plant and the interest on its selling value as special damages under the fifth count of the complaint.” Accordingly no possible injury could have resulted to defendant- by reason of the claim, averred conjointly in
What the contract between these parties was obviously was a jury question, as the trial court held. The evidence was in palpable and immediate conflict between the litigants; one asserting that a date for delivery was express] y stipulated for, and the other that no such date was stipulated. The insistence for appellant, that the writing signed by the parties in October, 1907, was the sole expositor of the contract, and hence incapable of alteration by parol evidence, cannot be approved. The sole theory of the defense on the trial rested on the assumption, and insistence by it, that the contract of purchase and sale of the locomotive was that resulting from the letter of plaintiffs (appellees) of date of July 2d, defendant’s reply thereto, accepting the order, of date July 5th, and plaintiffs’ acknowledgement of the same by letter of date July 8th. Kern, president and general manager of the defendant, testified in response to interrogatories in chief propounded to him by defendant that “there was no other trade ever made by the company to sell the plaintiffs a Shav engine, other than contained in the order or letter of July 2d, from Holmes Lumber Company, and our reply thereto, dated July 5th, and their acknowledgement of the same ■ dated July 8th.”
Aside from the introduction of the October document, there is nothing in the record to indicate any other basis of- defense, in respect of the terms of the contract, than that to which the quoted testimony of Kern tended. As before stated, the defense, in this connection,
The facts, as shoAvn by evidence for the plaintiffs, were these: That plaintiffs were the owners and operators of a large saAvmill plant in Bibb county, Ala.; that as a part of this enterprise the plaintiffs were constructing, and had in part completed, a tramway or raihvay from the mill towards the source of timber supply; that a locomotive was necessary to draw materials, etc., from the mill end of the Avay, as well as to bring timber over the way, as completed, to the mill; that one of plaintiffs, with a machinist, went to Atlanta, the place of defendant’s business, and there purchased a lo
In support of its plea 2 — a plea of recoupment and set-off based on the undue retention of, and damage to, a “dinkey” engine loaned plaintiffs in September, 1907, at their request, by defendant, for use pending the delivery of the Shay engine — defendant offered testimony tending to that end. Plaintiffs presented testimony
If the plaintiffs’ view of the contract was accepted by the jury, and if the absence of the engine caused the loss of the use of the entire plant by plaintiffs, they were entitled to compensation for the loss. Two methods for the ascertainment of the value of this loss have the sanction of the law: First, and primarily, the value of the hire or use of the plant so rendered idle, if the period of consequent idleness was for an appreciable length of time — that is, a period in which it could be reasonably said that the plant had a rental value; and, second, if the period or periods of idleness was or were so short or so intermittent as that the plant could have no rental value, then the interest on the value of the plant would be proper admeasurement of damages. These rules are appropriated, almost verbatim, from
By special charge 6, which was refused, the defendant sought to have the jury instructed that the plaintiffs could not recover as damages the rental value of the plant. This charge raised the inquiry whether, on the evidence, the plaintiffs had shown such a period or periods of idleness of their plant, in consequence of the absence of the engine, as to justify the admeasurement of their damages according to the first rule before stated. Unusual difficulty is encountered in the solution of this question. However, after thorough consideration, and this in the aiding light of able discus-sons of the inquiry, by the respective counsel, we feel impelled to hold that the evidence entirely fails to measure up to the standard in particular indicated. A number of witnesses were examined on the two issues, viz., the value of the plant, and the rental value of the plant. The value of the plant was testified to be from $15,000 up to $125,000. The rental value was said to be from $200 to $250 per day. In addition to these witnesses, others were examined on the vital question of the period or periods of idleness of the plant in consequence of the absence of the engine. J. F. Holmes, one of the plaintiffs, testified on the trial. His testi
It appears that testimony of the tenor quoted falls very far short of meeting the rule with respect to rental value. It could not be fairly inferable from such testimony that the plant was idle for any definite consecutive number of days. Indeed, the inference is entirely consistent with such evidence that the plant was idle only fractional parts of days during the period stated by Holmes. No witnesses undertook to say that a plant of this character had a. rental value for a fractional part of a day. Whether these spaces, in the three months mentioned, were intermittent, were fractional in respect to days, or were concurrent after two or more days of active operation, was left to free conjecture. We do not think such indefiniteness and uncertainty can afford a basis for the ascertainment of the rental value of an enterprise . of the kind here involved. This was unquestionably a large plant, and even if credibility be accorded the idea that such a plant could have had a rental value for one day at a time, there can be, we think, no rational doubt that such rental value finds no basis in point of fact in testimony to the effect only that the plant was idle “most” or “half” or “three-fourths” of given parts of months. That testimony may be entirely credited, and yet the idleness have prevailed in indefinite parts only of the time given. We therefore conclude that charge 6 was erroneously refused defendant.
Counsel' for appellant invoke the application of the principle that one against whom a contract to deliver chattels has been breached is bound to conserve his .loss by going into the market and securing the article so breached in delivery. — Ala. Iron Co. v. Hurley, 86 Ala. 217, 5 South. 418; 1 Suth. on Dam. (3d Ed:) §§ 45, 46. At least one reason forbids the application of that doctrine here, viz., the evidence does not show that a Shay engine of the type described was readily obtainable in the market on this occasion. Furthermore, it is by no means certain that, if the duty had primarily rested on plaintiff to secure another Shay engine, and thus conserve loss, the defendant did not by repeated assurances of early delivery of the Shay engine relieve the plaintiffs of the hypothesized duty.
For the error resulting from the refusal of charge 6, requested by defendant, the judgment is reversed, and the cause is remanded.
Reversed and remanded.