42 Wis. 23 | Wis. | 1877
No question will be considered in this case except that which relates to the proper rule of damages. As bearing upon that question, the defendant, among other requests, asked the circuit court to charge that the plaintiff was only entitled to recover such damages as naturally and fairly resulted from the breach of the contract; that he could not re-
The question in regard to the damages which the plaintiff was entitled to recover, depends materially upon the inquiry whether the action is ex eontñ'act'ii, for a breach of the engagement, or ex delieto, for a violation of duty as a common carrier. The learned counsel for the plaintiff claims that the action is one sounding in tort; while on the other side it is insisted that the action is upon a special contract, which is set forth in the complaint, and that the rules of law applicable
From this reference to the allegations of the complaint, it seems obvious that it is in reality an action on contract, and must be treated as such. / It is manifest that the action is not sustainable for a breach of duty as carrier, because the defendant was under no obligation to carry the plaintiff or any other person on its road on that day. It does not run passenger trains on Sunday for the accommodation of the public, nor does it hold itself out to the world as ready to engage in the transportation of passengers on that day. If the plaintiff had
It will be seen that the circuit court was requested to charge that the plaintiff was only entitled to recover such damages as naturally and fairly resulted from the breach of contract, but could not recover damages for the disappointment of mind, sense of wrong, or injury to his feelings, by reason of such breach. This rule the learned circuit judge disaffirmed, holding that if the conduct of the company was willful and oppressive, then such injury to health, annoyance and vexation of mind, mental distress and sense of wrong, as were the immediate result of the misconduct and must reasonably have been expected to arise therefrom to the plaintiff, were proper
Chief Justice Cockbtxrk', after considering the question whether damages for the personal inconvenience which the husband and wife with their children were put to in having to go from the railway station to their home in the night, could be recovered in the action, and affirming that they might be, under the rule laid down in Hadley v. Baxendale, 9 Exch., 341, thus discusses the damages given by reason of the expense and sickness of the wife:
“With regard to the second head of damage, the case assumes a very different aspect. I see very great difficulty indeed in coming to any other conclusion than that the 201. is not recoverable; and when we are asked to lay down some principle as a guiding rule in all such cases, I quite agree with my brother Blackburn in the infinite difficulty there would be in attempting to lay down any principle or rule which shall cover all such cases; but I think that the nearest approach to anything like a fixed rule is this: That, to entitle*31 a person to damages by reason of a breach of contract, the injury for which compensation is ashed should be one that may be fairly taken to have been contemplated by the parties as the possible result of the breach of contract. Therefore you must have something immediately flowing out of the breach of contract complained of, something immediately connected with it, and not merely connected with it through a series of causes intervening between the immediate consequence of the breach of contract and the damage or injury complained of. * * * Therefore, as regards the damages awarded in respect of the wife’s cold, the rule must be made absolute to reduce the damages by that amount.”
BlackbuRN, J., was of the same opinion. He says: “ The contract was to supply a conveyance to Hampton Court, and it was not supplied. Where there is a contract to supply a thing, and it is not supplied, the damages are the difference between that which ought to have been supplied and that which you have to pay for, if it be equally good; or, if the thing is not obtainable, the damages would be the difference between the thing which you ought to have had and the best substitute you can get upon the occasion for the purpose. ' * * * Then comes the further question, whether the damages for the illness of the wife are recoverable; I think they are not, because they are too remote.”
Mellos, J.: “I am entirely of the same opinion. I quite agree with my brother Paeet that for the mere inconvenience, such as annoyance and loss of temper or vexation, or for being disappointed in a particular thing which you have set your mind upon, without real physical inconvenience resulting, you cannot recover damages. That is purely sentimental, and not a case where the word inconvenience, as I hero use it, would apply. * * * The damage which as a matter of law must be considered as the measure of damages, is such as arises naturally and directly from the breach of contract,
Aechibald, J.: “I concur in the observations which have been made by my lord and my learned brothers; and I would only add, without expressing anything in the form of q, rule, that, in case of breach of contract, the party breaking the contract must be held liable for the proximate and probable consequences of such breach, that is, such as might have been fairly in the contemplation of the parties at the time the contract was entered into. Therefore, as to the first head of damage, the inconvenience of walking to Hampton, I think there can be no doubt that it is such an inconvenience as the parties must have contemplated would arise from the breach of the contract; and that, as it appears to me, is an inconvenience capable of being estimated in a pecuniary way.” The learned judge held on the other question, that no damages could be recovered for injury to the wife resulting from being obliged to walk home; that such damages were too remote, and could not have been in the contemplation of the parties when they made the contract.
After this very satisfactory discussion of the question, further remarks would seem unnecessary in order to point out the error in the instruction which was given, that damages in this action were recoverable for annoyance and vexation of mind, mental distress and sense of wrong, caused by the failure of the defendant to perform its contract. Such things are not the subject of damages in actions of this kind. They are too remote, and cannot have been in contemplation of the parties when the contract was made. See Le Blanche v. London & Northwestern Railway Co., 24 Weekly Rep., 396, 808.
By the Oowrt.— The judgment of the circuit court is reversed, and a new trial ordered.