after stating the facts as above: The defendants have reserved several exceptions as to evidence and other matters affecting the merits of the case and the damages. The objections to evidence will be postponed for consideration until we have passed upon the other alleged errors, which we will discuss in the order of their assignment.
The court properly submitted to the jury the controverted question, whether the contract, which was made by Stemple for the plaintiffs, with Stokes for the Valley Lumber Company, had been accepted, and confirmed by the plaintiffs. What is the contract? is a question of fact for the jury
(Devries v. Haywood,
2. Several of the exceptions were taken to the judge’s recital of the different contentions in the case, as to the evidence. If they were not correctly stated, the judge should have been requested, in due time, to make the proper amendments. This was not done.
Matthews v. Myatt,
3. As to the embargo on shipments, this is no protection to the defendants, for they did not tender the lumber for shipment, and, besides, the plaintiffs proposed to get for them the necessary permits.
*413 The other parts of tbe charge were clearly right, and perfectly fair to both parties. There was ample evidence to support it, and defendants have no just ground for complaint.
Plaintiffs assert that defendants refused to ship the lumber, not for the reasons they gave, that they could not get the stock from which to make it, or that its shipment had been embargoed, but because the market price of lumber was rapidly rising, and they had found another customer with a better price, and that the defendants’ excuses were not frank and well founded. While this may or may not be so, and it was denied by the defendants, we are unable to declare that there was absolutely no evidence to sustain such a theory, and, therefore, we cannot say that the argument was so wholly unfounded that it should not have any weight with the jury, but should have been excluded from the consideration of the case.
4. As to damages. The sale of the lumber was made to the plaintiffs with full knowledge'on the part of the defendants as to the nature of their business, in other words, that plaintiffs were buying the lumber for resale, and defendants were specially informed of it, and the correspondence, and other evidence, show that plaintiffs had outstanding contracts with other parties for the purchase of the lumber at a higher price, which would bring a considerable profit to the plaintiffs. It was held, in
Johnson v. R. R.,
*414
Joyce on Damages, sec. 1956, thus states the rule: “Where the delivery of freight is negligently delayed by a carrier, there may be in an action for the breach of the contract recovery of such damages as are the natural and proximate result of its act, and for such as reasonably might have been expected to be within the contemplation of the parties at the time of entering into the contract, as the probable result •of a breach. "When the carrier has notice of the fact that a delay in the delivery of the goods will result in an unusual loss or some special damage to the shipper, there may be a recovery for the actual damages sustained, when the notice is of such a character that it will be presumed that the. carrier contracted with reference thereto.”
Lindley v. R. R.,
Justice Rodman
said, in
Lewis v. Rountree,
And again: “There can be no doubt that a vendee who takes a warranty and gives notice that he buys to sell again in another market, may include in his damages both the losses he actually sustained by reason of the breach, and also the profits he would have made upon resale, had the article been what it was warranted to be.”
In
Mace v. Ramsey, 74
N. C., 11, the charterer of a boat was held' entitled to recover the profit he would-have made, under the circumstances, which were in the contemplation of both parties. The rule of damages was held, in
Spiers v. Halstead,
We thus stated the general rule, in
Machine Co., v. Tobacco Co.,
There are no such uncertainties, in this case, that the failure of any one of them would subvert the whole computation as to damages. And, in this connection, we may say that the defendants’ contention that the deliveries were to be made at Newsom, N. C., is clearly unsound, as they were to be made in New York, according to shipping instructions, and it reasonably appears that the sales by the plaintiffs at that place were made according to market prices prevailing there. So that the case could be brought within fhe rule which the defendants rely on.
Berbarry v. Tombacher,
We are of the op inion that there was ample evidence, from which it could be inferred, that profit, which could be ascertained with sufficient certainty, would have been realized from a resale of the lumber, if the contract had been' performed by the defendants, and that those cases cited by them, where the profits were uncertain or speculative, do not apply to the evidence in this record, or to the facts deducible therefrom.
5. As to the questions of evidence. The letter, exhibit “E,” was competent, as it was a part of the correspondence between the parties. It came from the defendants, and contained their own declarations about the transaction. The book of sales, the entries in which were made under his supervision, was competent to refresh the memory of the witness, and to corroborate him
(Bowman v. Blankenship,
The other exceptions, not covered fully by what we have already said, are in themselves without any merit.
*417 We find no error in tbe record, after a most careful examination of it, and a full consideration of tbe material exceptions.
No error.
