The complaint alleges that by certain agreements and conveyances therein set forth one Caleb B. Knevals had in 1871 become the trustee of the Primrose colliery, in Schuylkill county, Pa., with full control of its business, and the mining, transporting, and selling of its coal, until June 14, 1901. That on or about June 25, 1880, Knevals, as such trustee, entered into a written agreement with the firm of Caldwell, Weston & Co.,
In our opinion, the plaintiff was not entitled to recover any but nominal damages. The agreement of June 25, 1880, bound Knevals and the colliery only to sell the New York firm coal at a price to be agreed upon between the parties from month to month. The profits of the firm would manifestly be the difference between the price thus fixed, plus such expenses as they might be put to, and the price they might be able to obtain for the coal in the New York market. As the price to be paid the colliery was left wholly unsettled by the contract, and could be made certain only by further agreement of the parties from time to time, there is nothing, in the absence of such further agreement, with which to compare the market price at which coal, if shipped, could have been sold by the firm, and thus determine the profits which might have been lost by a refusal to sell at all. Not only is the contract uncertain as to the price to be paid by the firm, but it is not by its terms capable of being made certain either by reference to some umpire in case of a disagreement, or by providing that in the absence of an agreement it should be taken at the market price. Nor is there sufficient in the evidence to warrant a finding that the parties had practically so interpreted it as to dispense with the successive agreements as to price for which it provides. . No doubt, in figuring for a coming month, both sides naturally enough took the market price of coal in the preceding months as a basis; both also took into consideration the tendency of the market for the future; but the important fact as to practical interpretation is that they did in fact from time to time agree upon the price. Neither seems ever to have acted upon the assumption that such price was to be fixed otherwise than with the concurrence of bóth. Moreover, it is difficult to see how, under the contract, there could be, as the plaintiff contends, any “market price” for Primrose coal “at the colliery.” A market implies competition, and, if the entire output was to be turned over for 30 years exclusively to a single customer, it is quite apparent that unless some control over the price was reserved to the colliery it would be entirely at the mercy of the customer, who might fix the market at the mines by the price it was willing to pay. Nor is it to be supposed that the price to' be paid was the market price of coal of this kind in New York, less expenses of transportation and sale. In the absence of a selling commission, — and the contract provides for none,— this would leave no profit to the consignees. We find nothing in the case from which .a jury could determine what price the contract required plaintiff’s firm to pay during any month not covered by an agreement as to price, and without that element the damages resulting from a failure to sell them coal are not susceptible of adjustment.
“That on or about November 12,1881, the said last-mentioned contract [that of .Tune 25, 1880] was, at the request of Caleb B. Knevals, trustee, and with the consent of Weston Bros, and Watts, to whom.the said contract had been duly assigned by mesne assignments from Caldwell, Weston <& Co., modified by providing- that the said Weston Bros. & Watts should take the entire output of the Primrose colliery and sell the same at a certain commission upon .each ion, namely, at 15 cents a ton tor pea and lump coal, and 20 cents for all other sizes; and that under said contract, as modified, the said Caleb B. Knevals, trustee, and the said Weston Bros. & Watts continued to conduct the business aforesaid.”
There was in evidence a letter from Knevals proposing, — in fact, insisting upon, — - such a modification, and some proof tending to show that about the time of its dissolution the firm of Weston Bros. & Watts had rendered one or more statements of account on some such basis. Manifestly, if the agreement between the colliery and the Yew York house secured the latter a fixed sum on each ton of coal sold, the difficulty as to proof of damages in the case of its breach would be largely removed.
Motions to amend the pleadings upon the trial are within the discretion of the trial judge, who is more fully informed as to all the attendant circumstances, and can best determine whether amendment at that stage of the case would he consistent with the meting out of equal justice to both sides. Buch discretion is not-as a rule' the subject of review, but counsel for appellant correctly stales the exception to the rule, namely, that when the record plainly shows that the exercise of discretion was “wholly unreasonable” it will he reviewed on appeal or writ of error. But in the case at bar the refusal was very far from being “wholly unreasonable.” To have allowed fhe amendment would have been to substitute an entirely new cause of action in the place of the one sued upon. And this, too, in an action against guarantors, whose written contract of guaranty refers solely to the agreement originally declared upon, incorporating it into the; contract of guaranty with no modification in its terms, and who were brought into court to answer for default only as to the particular form of agreement to which their contract referred.
The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.