120 Mo. App. 438 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1906

GOODE, J.

(after stating the facts).

1. We are called on to determine the rule by which plaintiff’s damages are to be ascertained. The case is that of a vendee of personal property who has refused to accept the goods bought, and as different rules for the measurement of damages are laid down in such cases according to the circumstances presented, it is essential to fix in mind the important facts of the present controversy. At the time of defendant’s refusal to accept any more ranges, plaintiff had on hand six hundred and three, of which about twenty-five were completed and ready for delivery and all the parts of the others were manufactured and ready to be put together. The undelivered ranges were not treated by plaintiff as the property of defendant or held for delivery to it on demand after its refusal to accept them; on the contrary, plaintiff sold some of them for $20 each, or thereabouts, and those on hand were being disposed of occasionally at the rate of one a week. At that rate of sale more than ten years would be consumed in disposing of the entire lot, and as plaintiff had invested *446in them about $6,000, it might prove detrimental to its business to keep that portion of its capital thus invested for so long a time. There was no evidence to show the ranges had a market value in St. Louis or elsewhere, if by market value is understood a current price fixed by sales of similar property as articles of commerce in the ordinary course of business. As stated, the ranges were of an unusual pattern and of lighter material than is commonly used in ranges, besides having label plates on them which, though the evidence shows they could be detached easily, may have hindered, in some measure, the sale of the articles and have lessened their value. Tliere was testimony that the ranges left on hand were of no value except for junk or scrap iron, but it cannot be doubted that some of the evidence tended to show they had a value as ranges above what they would yield for junk. It looks improbable that such articles, even if of an unusual pattern and weight, could not have been sold at some price as ranges; but what we hold is that the evidence raised an issue of fact as to this point. The foregoing are the material circumstances to be borne in mind in considering the question of how plaintiff’s damages are to be measured. The guiding principle of the law in cases arising on breaches of contracts for the sales of personal property, is to give the aggrieved party the benefit of his contract, by putting him in as favorable a condition as he would have enjoyed if the other party had performed, instead of violating, his agreement. In other words, to afford full indemnity for the breach. All other rules, including the one relating to the difference between the agreed and the market value of the thing sold, are but corollaries of this one, used to apply the principle of it to the different classes of cases which occur. Let us then ascertain what plaintiff would have obtained if the contract had been completed. As the ranges actually delivered were paid for, that part of the transaction may be disregarded. If the defendant *447had accepted the remainder, it would have received- the total contract price. Whatever defendant paid in advance on the undelivered ranges is to be deducted, of course, from the amount of its recovery. Some of the ranges were sold to another concern subsequent to defendant’s breach and the amount received for them, less the cost of disposing of them, is likewise to be deducted. There is also to be deducted the cost of assembling those which had not been put together, approximately $4.07 for each range, because plaintiff would have had to incur that expense before the ranges could have been delivered if defendant had gone on with its contract. There remains to be deducted the value of the ranges left on plaintiff’s hands, and the real question for decision is how this value is to be ascertained.

If the buyer of personalty refuses to accept the subject-matter of the bargain when tendered by the seller in proper condition and at the proper time and place, the law allows the seller several modes of redress. If the contract has been so far performed by the seller that the property is ready for delivery before he has notice or knowledge of the buyer’s intention to decline acceptance, he may treat tire property as belonging to the buyer, hold it subject to the latter’s order and recover the full agreed price; or he may sell it for the buyer’s account, taking the requisite steps to protect the latter’s interest and get the best price obtainable, and then recover the difference between the proceeds of the sale and the agreed price; or he may treat the sale as ended by the buyer’s default and the property as his (the seller’s) and recover the actual loss sustained, which is ordinarily the difference between the agreed price and the market price. [Dobbins v. Edmonds, 18 Mo. App. 307, 317; Kingsland v. Iron Co., 29 Mo. App. 526; Lumber Co. v. Chicago Lumber Co., 51 Mo. App. 555; Richey v. Tenbroek, 63 Mo. 563; Hayden v. Demetz, 53 N. Y. 426, 431.] Where specific articles are sold, and especially where *448they are manufactured pursuant to an order from the vendee, the title is regarded, usually, as having vested in the latter without delivery, so as to give the vendor the right, on refusal to accept, to recover the stipulated price. Under such circumstances the case presented is different from that of a sale of goods generally, like merchandise or corporate stocks currently dealt in, when it is contemplated that specific articles or stocks shall he subsequently selected and delivered pursuant to the contract. [Bethel St. Co. v. Brown, 57 Maine 9; Page v. Carpenter, 10 N. H. 77; Brookwalter v. Clark, 10 Fed. Rep. 793; Shawhan v. Van Nest, 25 Ohio St. 490; Mitchell v. LeClaire, 165 Mass 305.] The decisions holding vendees responsible for the full contract price in cases of specific articles manufactured for them, proceed on the assumption that they have acquired title to the property and that it is held subject to their order, or else that it is worthless in the hands of the vendors so that the latter cannot partly reimburse themselves for their loss by using or disposing of it. [Black River Lumber Co. v. Warner, 93 Mo. 374, 6 S. W. 210; Crown Vinegar & Spice Co. v. Whers, 69 Mo. App. 493; Brookwalter v. Clark, supra.] In the Missouri cases just cited, the property sold had been manufactured and was ready for delivery. The opinion in Lumber Co. v. Warner says that when the subject-matter of the contract is specific articles made for the vendee, and the vendor has completed his contract, it is just that the damages in case of refusal to accept the goods shall be their contract price; but that the vendor will hold the property for the vendee. In Mitchell v. LeClair, supra, the defendant had ordered sixty tubs of butter which plaintiff set apart for him, but he subsequently refused to take it. Referring to these facts, the court said that if the vendee in such case refused to take the goods and pay for them, the vendor might recover the price, if he kept the goods in readiness for delivery to the purchaser. It sometimes hap*449pens, as in the instance of a suit of clothes made for a person, or a portrait painted for him, that the thing sold is obviously worthless to any one else and then, we apprehend, the seller could recover the full price on the purchaser’s refusal to accept, without regard to whether the contract was still executory, .provided it had been performed to the extent of having the subject-matter of it ready for delivery. [Allen v. Jarvis, 20 Conn. 38.] This is not such a case; for it is apparent that the unaccepted ranges had a value either as scrap iron or as ranges; and, indeed, this proposition is conceded. We have said that plaintiff did not elect either to hold the ranges as defendant’s property to be delivered on demand, or sell them for defendant as its agent. On the contrary plaintiff treated the ranges as its own and proceeded to sell thém from time to time. In view of this fact, defendant is entitled to a deduction of the value of the ranges from the agreed price. The rule for ascertaining what that value is would be plain if the articles had a market value; for then plaintiff would be charged with the market valué and entitled to recover the difference between that and title agreed price. But we find no evidence that they had a market value fixed by current sales; as are the values of wheat, cattle, government bonds and other standard securities or articles of commerce which are the subject-matter of daily transactions; and that is the meaning commonly attached to the term “market value.” It follows that defendant’s instruction was rightly refused. [Jonas v. Noel, 98 Tenn. 440.] What the law intends to allow the seller is compensation for his actual loss. [Rand v. Railroad, 40 N. H. 79, 85; Gason v. Madigan, 13 Wis. 67, 72; Williams v. Jones, 1 Bush (Ky.) 621 627; Gordon v. Norris, 49 N. H. 376, 385; Culin v. Glass Works, 108 Pa. St. 220; Chamberlain v. Farr, 23 Vt. 265.] The difference between the market and the agreed value is adopted, when it can be, as the most accurate *450mode of ascertaining what damages ought- to he allowed. This is because the seller may forthwith reimburse himself by selling to some one else if the goods have a ready market. Now when there is no market value in that meaning of the term, the damages must be ascertained in some other mode. [1 Sedgwick, Damages, sec. 495; Woods’ Mayne, Damages, sec. 22; Todd v. Gamble, 148 N. Y. 382; Masterson v. Mayor, 7 Hill 61.] The reasonable value of the ranges in controversy at the time and place of delivery under the contract, should be ascertained by any testimony tending to throw light on the subject; such as sales actually made, the frequency of the sales, and the testimony of expert witnesses, who are familiar with the trade in ranges and the value of such commodities, as to the value of those in question for any use of which they are susceptible.

In the instruction on the measure of damages the court used the expression “reasonable selling value” to indicate the amount plaintiff was to be charged with on account of the undelivered ranges. This expression was not erroneous under the circumstances of the present case, there being no market value for the articles, and in view of the facts that they were manufactured to sell and not to keep or work into other products and were worthless to plaintiff for any purpose except to sell. Indeed, both parties agree that the amount to be deducted from plaintiff’s recovery is the exchangeable value of the ranges left on hand; but plaintiff contends that this is their reasonable selling value, whereas defendant says it is their market value. The two expressions are in some measure synonymous, but the usage of trade has affixed a technical meaning to market value. The selling value of an article is often equivalent to its actual value, and should be so regarded in the present case in order that plaintiff may be reimbursed fully. It may be, as plaintiff contends, that the ranges are worth nothing at all except as junk; and if this is true, plaintiff is *451only to be charged with their value for that purpose. But as intimated, the inference is fair that they would sell for more than the price of junk, either with the label plates attached, or without them and redressed. The evidence goes to show the labels are detachable without much labor. Testimony was competent on those issues and, indeed, some was received. But other testimony of the same character as that received, and tending to show what the ranges would bring with the label plates removed, was excluded by the court on plaintiff’s objection. Now without saying that plaintiff was bound to go to the trouble of removing the labels to reduce the damages defendant would have to pay, the jury might find that the ranges could have been disposed of to dealers at a price above what they were worth as junk, to be sold by the dealers at retail either redressed or as they were.

As to the ranges actually sold after defendant’s breach, the price obtained for them was the measure of their value. No notice was taken of these sales in instructing the jury, though the evidence is undisputed that they were made. It follows that if the jury found the ranges left on plaintiff’s hands were worthless except-as junk, they allowed defendant no more credit for those sold than what they would bring as junk; though in fact they brought more, and perhaps the full agreed price. In this respect the instruction on the measure of damages was inaccurate. We think it is subject to criticism for speaking of the property left on plaintiff’s hands as “material” out of which to complete the remaining ranges. This expression had some tendency to produce an impression, favorable to plaintiff’s contention that the undelivered ranges were worthless as such; whereas all their parts were finished and they needed only to be put together. The instruction inclined toward plaintiff’s theory on a disputed issue of fact. Not only had some of the completed ranges been sold, but *452some completed ones were still on hand at the time of the trial and these could hardly be designated as “materal on hand out of which to complete” the remaining ranges.

The judgment is reversed and the canse remanded.

All concur.
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