161 N.W. 813 | S.D. | 1917
Action to recover damages to which plaintiff claims to be entitled' owing- to failure of defendant as vendor to carry out a contract for the sale to- plaintiff of a stock of merchandise and the good will of a business. Trial to the court without a jury. Finding's, conclusions, and judgment for defendant. From the judgment and an order denying a new trial, this appeal was taken.
Plaintiff offered no proof upon which there could have been any finding of actual damages. The only question requiring our attention'relates to the correctness of the construction placed by the trial court upon the following paragraph found in the contract entered into by the parties hereto:
“As an evidence of good faith in the making of this agreement each of the parties hereto agrees upon the execution of this agreement to deposit in the hands of the Sioux Falls National Bank of the said city of Sioux Falls, one thousand and no^ioo dollars ($1,000.00) which, in the .event of the failure of either of. the parties hereto to perform by the 15th day of June, 1915, such parts of this agreement as are to be performed by him' by that date, shall be forfeited to the other party hereto.”
The court construed the same as providing for forfeitures, and therefore void. Sections 1274 and 1275, C. C., provide:
“Sec. 1274. Every contract, by which the amount of damages to be paid, or other compensation to "be made, for a breach of an obligation, is determined in anticipation thereof, is to that extent void, except as expressly provided 'by the next section.
“Sec. 1275. The parties to' a contract may agree therein upon an amount which shall be presumed to be the amount of damage sustained by a breach thereof, when, from the nature of the*450 case, it would be impracticable or extremely difficult to fix the actual damage.”
Certainly appellant could not be heard to say that this contract could be construed' as providing for liquidated damages in his favor, and at the same time providing for a penalty in case of breach of contract by him. It is perfectly clear, under the provisions of the whole contract, that the only damages that could have been suffered by the defendant, the vendor, in case plaintiff had failed to have carried out the contract by the time named, would have been either -the loss of the use of the purchase money until same was paid in case of mere delay in payment — damages which under the law are compensated in interest (8 R. C. L. “Damages,” § 122) ; or the damages suffered by a vendor in the loss of the sale of personal property — being the difference between the actual value and price agreed upon. In the contract before us the purchase price was to be fixed by appraisers. This price when so fixed would, for the purposes of such contract, have been the actual value. Therefore the vendor could not have suffered any damages by the vendee’s failure to carry out 'the' contract, other than the expenses he was to in having the appraisement made.
The judgment and order appealed from are affirmed.