Western Alfalfa Milling Co. v. Worthington

223 P. 218 | Wyo. | 1924

Kimball, Justice.

The parties will be called plaintiff and defendant as in the district court where the plaintiff obtained a judgment on two causes of action each for damages for the breach of a written contract to sell alfalfa-hay of which the plaintiff was the owner and seller and the defendant the buyer. The trial was held without a jury, and the judgment was on a general finding.

The two contracts were substantially the same except for the description of the property sold. Each was dated July 17, 1920, and recited that plaintiff agreed to sell to defendant a stated, approximate quantity of hay raised on a described tract of land in Platte County, and that defendant promised to pay for the hay at the rate of $12 per ton. It *86was agreed that the hay should be choice in quality, and that it should be delivered in plaintiff’s field between August 1 and December 31, 1920. It was further provided “that should first party (defendant) be unable to receive said hay through destruction of the mill, or for other causes unfor-seen and unpreventable, shall absolve first party from obligation hereunder to second party (plaintiff).”

It was admitted that plaintiff raised and stacked on the land substantially the agreed quantity of hay, and that the defendant has never received or paid for any part of it.

The defendant raised no question as to the quality of the hay until after it had refused to accept delivery and the plaintiff had commenced this suit. It was alleged in the answer and the defendant undertook to prove on.the trial that the hay was not of “choice” quality as defined in the contract, but it is not contended here that the evidence was not sufficient to support a finding against the defendant on that issue.

There can be no doubt that the plaintiff made a sufficient delivery of the hay, and that it became the duty of the defendant to accept and pay therefor in accordance with the terms of the contract to sell. Uniform Sales Act, Secs. 41, 42, C. S. 1920, Secs. 4763, 4764. It is contended, however, that the refusal to accept and pay for the hay was justified because,] for causes unforseen and unpreventable, the defendant was unable to receive it.

The defendant was engaged in the manufacture and sale of a product, called alfalfa meal* made by grinding hay like that bought of plaintiff. Its mill and warehouse were located at Wheatland, in Platte County. The hay mentioned in the contracts was intended for use in that business. Beginning about September 15,1920, and continuing for some eight or nine months thereafter, the market for defendant’s product was seriously affected by the general business depression that visited the country during that time. Under the order or authority of the Interstate Commerce Commission freight rates were raised preventing the *87defendant, so it claimed, from placing its product on the eastern markets. Defendant’s customers, manufacturers of mixed food products, could not dispose of their goods, and orders for alfalfa meal, amounting to $121,000, previously placed with defendant, were cancelled. As the result of these conditions the defendant claimed that its warehouse became filled with hay for which there was no outlet. It was on this evidence that the defendant based its claim that it was excused from performance of the contracts. It was shown that the conditions of which the defendant complained affected the market for other commodities, particularly farm products, and probably accounted for the fact that the market value of hay, in January, 1921, was only $4 per ton.

It is to be gathered from the evidence that the defendant had made many similar contracts with hay raisers in that locality, and it was shown that the parties interested in those contracts, including the plaintiff and the defendant’s president, held a meeting some time about the latter part of February, 1921. The evidence as to the statements made by the defendant’s president at that meeting is conflicting. He testified that he stated that the company did not cancel or abrogate its contracts, but admits that he stated that the company could not take any more hay at that time and does not claim that he suggested any time when it would do so. The plaintiff testified that the defendant’s president said-that the company would not take the hay under the contracts unless the price were reduced, and that he also stated that the company might grind the hay for the owners and store it in another mill.

Unless the contracts show a different intention there can be no doubt that an unfavorable change in market conditions was a circumstance the risk of which should be fairly thrown on the defendant. Williston on Contracts, Sec. 1963. In the case at bar there is no question of impossibility of performance for any of the reasons for which per*88formance may be excused in the absence of an agreement to that effect.

The contracts provided that the defendant should be absolved from its obligations if it became unable to receive the hay through a destruction of the mill or for other causes unforseen and unpreventable. Can it be said that this provision shows an intention to guard against the difficulties encountered by defendant in marketing its product? We think it cannot. It seems to be well settled that in arriving at the intention of the parties as. expressed by a provision excusing performance of a contract on certain contingencies the rule of ejusdem generis may be applied. 13 C. J. 638. The specific contingency mentioned is the destruction of the mill, a physical casualty, and we think the general words following cannot be held to include a depression in business as the result of which the defendant found itself with more hay on hand than it could use. Indeed, it may be doubted whether the defendant’s case would have warranted a finding that it was.unable to receive the hay. Ordinarily, it would seem clear that the ability to receive a thing is very different from the ability to dispose of it .Although the defendant’s warehouse may have been full, there is nothing td show that it could not have obtained other storage room, or that it could not have kept the hay in the open. We are of the opinion that the district court was right in holding that defendant was not excused from keeping its promise to buy the hay.

The defendant argues that the time for the acceptance of the hay was not of the essence of the contract. That question we deem it rumeeessary to decide as we think it was immaterial under the pleadings and evidence. The answer admits that the defendant at all times refused to accept and pay for the hay. The evidence does not show a performance or an offer of performance by defendant within the contract time or within a reasonable time or at any time. There seems to be some contention that defendant offered to perform the contract on June 8, 1921, more than five months *89after the expiration of the time stipulated for acceptance of the hay, and about three months after this suit for damages was commenced. We think, however, that'the claimed offer at that time was in reality no offer at all. The only offer was to take the choice hay that plaintiff then had on hand, while asserting' that plaintiff had no hay of that quality.

It is conceded by the parties that the proper measure of damages, and the one applied by the court, is that stated in the third paragraph of section 64 of the Uniform Sales Act (C. S. See. 4786), namely, the difference between the contract price and the market price at the time when the goods ought to have been accepted. The defendant complains that the plaintiff did not prove the market value of the hay on December 31, the last date mentioned in the contract. There was evidence to prove the market value in January following. The time for acceptance of the hay did not expire until the midnight preceding January 1. The reason for the market value rule is that the seller, after the refusal of the buyer to accept the goods, may take them into the market and obtain the current price. Benjamin on Sales ( 6th Ed. by Ker) p. 930; Hugenot Mills v. Jempson, 68 S. C. 363, 47 S. E. 687, 102 Am. St. Rep. 673. The plaintiff could not sell until the date for acceptance had passed, and we think proof of the market value in January which, perforce, included the first day of that month was a sufficient basis for estimating damages under the rule stated.

The amended petition on which the case was tried did not contain an allegation that the hay had any market value and the defendant contends, therefore, that the court erred in receiving evidence of that -fact. The petition contained a general allegation of damages, and general damages only were allowed by the judgment. Where from the breach of a contract the law imputes certain damages as the natural, necessary and logical consequence, such damages are recoverable on a proper averment of the breach and a claim for damages generally. 17 C. J. 1001; 5 Enc. Pl. & Pr. 739; *90Henderson v. Coleman, 19 Wyo. 183, 217, 115 Pac. 439, 1136. This principle is applicable to actions for breach of a contract of sale, and in such cases the market value of the goods is not a fact essential to the cause of action, is only important in establishing the proper measure of damages, and need not be alleged in the petition except, perhaps, where, on defendant’s motion, it appears that he is entitled to that information to enable him to make his defense. 35 Cyc. 587; Durgea v. Rayner, 20 Misc. Rep. 544, 46 N. Y. Supp. 437; Robison v. Kram, 195 App. Div. 878, 187 N. Y. Supp. 631; Young v. Curtis Aeroplane Co., 184 App. Div. 709, 172 N. Y. Supp. 458; Robinson v. O’Bannon Co., 25 Ga. App. 738; 105 S. E. 255; Kirchman v. Tuffli etc. Co., 92 Ark. 111; 122 S. W. 239; Taylor v. Capp, 68 Ind. App. 593; 121 N. E. 37; Lillie v. Weyl, 45 Cal. App. 607, 188 Pac. 619.

There can be no doubt that the petition stated facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action for damages for nonacceptance of the goods under section 64, supra, of the Uniform Sales Act, and that it was not intended to state a cause of action for the price of the goods under the preceding section of that act. It is true that the damages for which plaintiff prayed were equal to the contract price of the hay, but as it is clear from the petition that there had been no acceptance of the hay, and that the plaintiff had elected to keep it as his own, the defendant was in no way deceived as to the nature of the action, and should not have been surprised when plaintiff offered evidence to prove the proper measure of damages.

The judgment of the district court will be affirmed.

Affirmed.

Potter, Ch. J., and Blume, J., concur.

NOTE — See 17 C. J. p. 1001; 35 Cyc. pp. 191, 256, 258, 587, 592.

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