delivered the opinion of the court.
This appeal is by plaintiff from a judgment in favor of defendant on its claim of offset for the sum- of $15,220.20. Plaintiff’s claim was for coal sold and delivered. The court found (and the finding is conceded to be correct) that there was due from defendant to plaintiff on that claim $36,963.68. The defense was a claim of offset, in that, as was alleged, plaintiff refused to accept screenings which it had purchased from defendant under the terms and provisions of two written contracts. The finding of the court was that there was due to defendant from plaintiff on the offset $52,184.08. Defendant (assigning cross errors) contends that it is entitled to recover in addition to that sum interest on that amount from April 20, 1925, until the date of judgment. The judgment represented the difference between the amounts found due to the parties under their respective claims, and that judgment plaintiff seeks to reverse by this appeal.
This cause of action is not a stranger in this court. It first reached us by appeal of defendant and is reported in
The cause was then tried by the court without a jury and there was a finding against defendant on its claim of offset and in favor of plaintiff for the full amount of its claim and judgment in its favor for the sum of $31,047.55. Defendant appealed to this court, where that judgment was affirmed. (
Defendant’s claim of offset was in substance that on April 4 and April 23, 1924, the parties entered into written contracts whereby defendant agreed to sell and plaintiff to buy certain coal screenings at prices named, but that plaintiff breached these contracts by refusing to accept the coal tendered by defendant. The defense interposed was that the coal tendered was not of the quality required. The facts which there appeared were that at the time these contracts were entered into the Black Servant Coal Co. operated a mine known as a stripping mine in Elkville, Jackson county, Illinois, and on March 26, 1924, entered into a written contract with the H. S. Odbert Coal Co. for the sale of a certain amount of this coal to be shipped from the mine at a price of $1.20 a ton for a period beginning April 1,1924, and ending March 31, 1925. On the same date the Odbert Coal Co. entered into a contract whereby it agreed to sell to defendant, the Great Lakes Coal & Coke Co. the same coal it had contracted to purchase from the Black Servant Coal Co. All this coal was of the kind known as screenings. On April 4, 1924, and April 23, 1924, defendant and plaintiff as a result of prior negotiations entered into contracts for the sale of certain amounts of this coal to plaintiff at the price of $1.50 a ton. These contracts were upon printed forms, and these last two contracts, unlike the contracts between the Black Servant Coal Co. and the Odbert Coal Co., contained no description of the specific quality of the coal to be delivered further than “Kind: Coal to be shipped from the stripping property of the Black Servant Co., located at or near Elk-ville, Jackson county, Illinois, on the Illinois Central Railroad.” The contracts also provided for the size of the screenings which should be delivered. The Western Electric Co. was a large customer of the plaintiff company, and the contracts provided that the coal sold to plaintiff should be consigned to that company. In July, 1924, after complaints by the Western Electric Co., which were communicated to the defendant and by it to its vendor, the Odbert Coal Co., plaintiff refused to receive further shipments of the screenings. Defendant made a claim against its vendor, the Odbert Coal Co., for damages on account of the defective quality of the screenings delivered to it which was settled March 24, 1925, when the Odbert Coal Co. paid $5,500 for a release.
The controlling question upon the prior appeal to this court was whether the trial court had erred in admitting parol evidence tending to show that defendant had warranted the quality of the screenings to be delivered to it, and that the sale had been made by sample, and that the screenings delivered did not comply with the quality as warranted or with the sample furnished. The trial court held that by making a claim against the Odbert Coal Co. and finally settling with it, defendant made an election of remedies which precluded it from recovering on its claim of offset.
This court held that the written contracts were incomplete and that the parol evidence and the evidence as to the claim made against a settlement by defendant with the Odbert Coal Co. was properly received, and it sustained the findings of the trial court. The Supreme Court was of a contrary opinion. It held that the trial court erred in receiving the parol evidence and stated:
“It is contended by plaintiff that as this cause was tried by the court without a jury, the court would be presumed to have disregarded all incompetent evidence and to have based its findings and judgment only upon the competent evidence, and that this court is bound by the findings of fact of the Appellate Court and can only here consider questions of law. Such findings of fact, however, can be inquired into in this court where there is no evidence in the case upon which to base the findings. (Toffenetti v. Mellor,
Plaintiff has also argued here at great length that the trial court erred in the matter of the assessment of defendant’s damages under its claim of set-off. Upon the authority of the leading case of Sisson v. Cleveland & T. R. Co.,
The trial court received in evidence the daily quotations from the Journal of Commerce, and evidence as to all the actual sales of coal screenings which had been made by the Black Servant mine during the period in question was also received. Defendant also offered and the court over objections received proof of similar market transactions in other screenings. Evidence was also received as to the manner in which the quotations and trade reports of the Journal of Commerce were made up, and there was evidence tending to show that the reports did not refer to sales of the same kind of coal screenings nor amounts similar to those involved in this suit. There was evidence tending not only to impeach the source from which these were derived, but also to show that these quotations were not usually relied upon or considered trustworthy by the trade. It is true, as plaintiff points out, that the opinion of the witnesses disclosed wide divergence as to the market price of these coal screenings at the time they should have been accepted, the different items of evidence indicating a variance of from $33,865.88 to $61,646.92. Plaintiff insists that under these circumstances this court should hold that it was the duty of the trial court to accept the prices as shown by the daily quotations in the Journal of Commerce. The price of a given article in a given market is most satisfactorily determined by what a buyer not compelled to buy would be willing to give and a seller not compelled to sell would be willing to take for a given article at a given time (Parson v. Buder,
The coal in question was purchased and delivery was to be made f. o. b. at the mines, and the trial judge who saw and heard the witnesses received evidence as to the price paid upon actual sales made at the Black Servant mine at the times in question. After listening to all the evidence and Aveighing it, the court decided that these actual sales, better than any other evidence, showed the true market value. We cannot say that his finding is manifestly wrong but are disposed to approve his conclusion.
Defendant, however, earnestly contends that it is entitled to recover interest at the rate of five per cent on the amount found to be due on its offset from April 20, 1925, when the contracts were breached, until the date of judgment, and that the judgment should be modified in this court so as to include such interest. If interest should have been allowed, this would be the proper practice. Dean & Sons, Ltd. v. W. B. Conkey Co.,
This contention requires a construction of section 2 of the Interest Act, Cahill’s St. ch. 74, H2 (SmithHurd’s Ill. Rev. Stats. 1931, ch. 74, p. 1754) which provides:
“Creditors shall be allowed to receive at the rate of five (5) per centum per annum for all moneys after they become due, on any bond, bill, promissory note or other instrument of writing; on money lent or advanced for the use of another; on money due on the settlement of account from the day of liquidating accounts between the parties and ascertaining the balance on money received to the use of another and retained without the owner’s knowledge, and on money withheld by an unreasonable and vexatious delay of payment. ’ ’
In the absence of an express agreement interest at common law is not recoverable, and it is not recoverable except when authorized by the statute. Sammis v. Clark,
There is a line of cases in the Supreme and Appellate Courts of this State, such as Norton Iron Works v. Wilson Steel Products Co.,
In Driggers v. Bell,
In Plumb v. Campbell,
In Murray v. Doud & Co.,
“If the ‘bought and sold notes’ constituted a written contract, as it was held in Memory v. Niepert, supra, they did, under our statute interest was recoverable. Morever, the recovery of interest in a case of this character is recognized and sustained in Driggers v. Bell,
In Laughlin v. Hopkinson,
“It is therefore apparent that the damages, if any, were not only unliquidated but were wholly incapable of being ascertained by computation.”
In Smith v. Gray,
In Duncan Lumber Co. v. Leonard Lumber Co.,
It is quite impossible, upon this record, to hold that the damages were liquidated or that the same could be ascertained by a simple and certain computation. As already indicated, defendant offered evidence tending to show seven different sums as the damages which it had sustained, and these ranged in amount from $33,865.88 to $61,646.92. The plaintiff offered evidence, which was received, tending to show that the amount of damages was only $10,730.40. Thus the parties submitted evidence tending to show eight different sums as indicating the damages sustained, and no two of these eight sums are alike. We cannot hold that such damages were liquidated or could be ascertained by an easy and certain computation.
The judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
Affirmed.
O’Connor, P. J., and McSurely, J., concur.
