18 S.E. 167 | N.C. | 1893
The defendant set up a counterclaim for breach of contract on the part of the plaintiff to have certain ditches and canal on the land cleaned out.
Upon the trial the defendant proposed to ask of one witness what effect the failure to clean out the ditches and canal had upon the crop, and to what extent it was damaged thereby; and of another what was the difference in the yield of the land by reason of the failure to put the ditches and canal in order and the consequent flooding, and the yield if such ditches and canal had been put in order according to plaintiff's contract. The plaintiff objected to the question upon the ground that the measure of damages to which defendant was (50) entitled, if any, was not the difference between what he would have made had the ditches and canal been put in order and what he did actually raise, but what it would have cost the defendant to have them put in proper condition, according to the contract of plaintiff. The objections were sustained, and defendant excepted.
His Honor instructed the jury that if the plaintiff contracted with defendant to put the ditches in order, or to furnish money to have such work done, and he failed to do so, the measure of damages would be what it would have cost defendant to have the work done, and would not be the difference in value of the crop raised upon the land as it was, and the crop which would have been raised had such ditches and canal been put in order.
The jury, in their verdict, found that the plaintiff had failed to perform his contract in regard to the ditches and canal, and allowed defendant twenty-five dollars damages. From the refusal of this motion for a new trial, defendant appealed.
"Where one violates his contract, he is liable only for such damages as are caused by the breach, or such, as being incidental to the act of omission or commission, as a natural consequence thereof, may reasonably be presumed to have been in the contemplation of the parties when the contract was made. This rule of law is well settled, but the difficulty arises in making its application." Pearson, J., inAshe v. DeRossett,
In telling the jury that the difference was what it would have cost defendant himself to clean out the ditches, the court below erred. It is true the defendant might have put the ditches and canal in order, and if so he could have charged the lessor with the costs thereof. This would have been the better course; but perhaps he was not able. At any rate, he was not legally called upon to do this. It was the lessor who contracted to rent a drained farm, and the defendant's loss by having to work an undrained farm instead is the measure of damages.
Sledge v. Reid,
Error.
Cited: Herring v. Armwood,