33 Ga. 536 | Ga. | 1863
Lumpkin, C. J., delivering the opinion.
Mr. Brown, in his Commentaries upon the Common Law, remarks, that “ in written contracts, whether special or simple, giving rise respectively to actions of covenant and of assumpsit, it not unfrequently happens that the parties themselves assume to define tlie precise amount of liability which shall be incurred for breach of contract. If so, and it appears that the amount thus specified is really intended as liquidated (or ascertained) damages, the jury will be relieved from any inquiry touching the amount of compensation to be awarded to the plaintiff, but will, under the direction of the Judge, find the precise sum agreed upon and stipulated to be paid by the parties.” (Page 634.)
We apprehend this extract contains the law of this case, and that to the rule thus laid down there should be appended this qualification, to-wit: that in case of an unconscienable and oppressive bargain, the jury is sometimes allowed to disregard the precise terms of the agreement actually concluded, and to give fair and equitable damages.
Who can read the contract between Johnson and Howard and doubt what was the intention of the parties ? The property sold by the former to the latter was estimated, at a credit sale, to be worth $15,000; at a cash sale, $13,000. The one party sells and the other buys with this understanding. The purchaser fails to pay cash, as he agreed to do. Now if it be true that where a person makes a contract and breaks it he must pay the whole damage sustained, is it not right that Howard should pay the $2,000 ?
Again : if where a party sustains a loss by reason of a breach of contract he is, so far as money can do it, to be placed in the same situation with respect to damages as if
Is the sum of $2,000, the difference between cash and credit in the sale of property amounting to $15,000, so unconscienable and oppressive as to require the Courts to relieve against it ? It is not disputed, indeed the books are full of cases, that if the contract had been for $15,000, to be discharged upon the prompt payment of $13,000, that it would have been valid. Is there any difference in principle between that case and this ? Indeed, was not that substantially the contract between the parties ?
Believing, as we do, that the $2,000 was not a penalty, and having nothing of the semblance of usury, but that the sum agreed upon by the parties to compensate Johnson for his damages for want of prompt payment, and that said amount is not so unconscienable and unreasonable as to be relieved against by the Court, we reverse the Circuit Judge for rejecting the instrument sued on and awarding a non-suit.
Let the judgment be reversed.