Williаm H. Cox sued the Western Gravel Road Company for work and labor done by him for the defendant, under a written contract, in the construction of a portion of her road.
The defendant pleaded a counter claim, alleging that by the contract betwеen the parties> the work was to have been completed within a specified time, and that the plaintiff failed
The defendant appeals and ^presents the sole question, whether the ruling was correct in striking out the item of damages above specified. The counsel for the appellant claim that the item of damages thus stricken out was legitimate and proper, and, therefore, should not have been stricken out; but they have cited no authorities upon the point.
The counsel for the appellee insist that the tolls which the road might have еarned, had it been completed at the time mentioned, are too uncertain, contingent, and speculative to form the basis of damages, and, therefore, that the item was correctly stricken out; and they cite the following authorities: Freeman v. Clute,
“To determine whether this rule was correctly applied by the referee, it is necessary to recur to the reason upon
“ On the other hand, in cases of illegal capture, or of the insurance of goods lost at sea, there can be no recovery for the probable loss of profits at the port of destination. The principal reason for the differеnce between these cases and that of the failure to transport goods'upon land is, that in the latter case the time when the goods should have been delivered, and consequently that when the market price is to be taken, can be ascertained with reasonable certainty; while in the former the fluctuation*of the markets and the contingencies affecting the length of the voyage render every calulation of profits speculative and unsafe.
“ There is also an additional reasоn, viz., the difficulty of
“Similar language is used in the cases of The Amiable Nancy,
“ From these authorities and principles it is clear that the defendants were not entitled to measure their damages by estimating what they might have earned by the use of the engine and their other machinery had the contract been complied with. Nearly every element entering into such a computation would have been of that uncertain character which has uniformly prevented a recovery for speculative profits.” The opinion concludes as follows:
“The proper rule for estimating this portion of the damages in the present case was, to ascertain what would have been the fair price to pay for the use of the engine and ma
In addition to the-above authorities cited by counsel for the appellee from the State of New York, we note the following from other states. In the -case of Waite v. Gilbert,
In the case of Rhodes v. Baird,
In the case of Davis v. Cincinnati, etc., Railroad Company, 1 Disney, 23, it was held that where the defendant failed to deliver, in a reasonable time, a boiler constructed for a sawmill, the profits that might have been realized, had the boiler reached its destination at the proper time, could not be recovered as damages. The court say: “ The profits which might have been made, if the mill had been completed at the time it would have been had the boiler been received,
In the case of Cooper v. Young,
In the case of Taylor v. Maguire,
In view of these authorities, we are of opinion that the loss of tolls was not a proper basis for estimating damages, and, consequently, that no error was committed in striking out the claim therefor.
The amount of tolls that would have been received could not have been asсertained with any degree of certainty, but must have been left to the merest conjecture. The amount would have depended upon the number of persons who might have travelled over it, the distance travelled by each, and the character of the vehicles and number of horses used, etc. All this is too vague and conjectural to form a proper basis for damages.
We need not indicate what would have been the proper measure of damages in such case, as the question is not before us. We are not advised what rule was adopted by the court as the proper measure, and must presume that the correct rule was adopted.
The judgment below is affirmed, with costs.
