155 N.Y. 446 | NY | 1898
The only question presented on this review is whether the referee adopted a correct rule of damages. The plaintiffs were awarded damages in the sum of $3,119.50, *449 because of the defendant's failure to perform, as he had obligated himself to do, the agreement of his predecessor in title to furnish sufficient water power to run and operate the shafting, gearing, millstones, machines and machinery contained in a certain grist mill, then the property of the Whitehall Water Power Company. The amount of water power actually afforded to the plaintiffs was twelve horse, whereas, according to the testimony of a professional engineer and millwright, from 35 to 38 horse power was required to run the mill in a proper and efficient manner. Evidence indicating that it was the plaintiffs' hope to be able to show gains prevented and losses sustained was offered, but in spite of the skill which the learned counsel for the plaintiffs displayed in marshaling the few facts within his reach, the result was most inconclusive and unsatisfactory. So much so, that it may safely be said that this case furnishes still another illustration of the wisdom which led to the adoption of the general rule that in cases of this character the measure of damages is the difference between the rental value of the mill and machinery with the power contracted for, and its rental value with the power actually furnished.
The respondents urge that Wakeman v. W. W. ManufacturingCompany (
The general rule is, of course, as stated by the learned counsel for the respondents, that the party injured is entitled to recover all of his damages, including gains prevented as well as losses sustained, but this rule is subject always to two conditions:
First, that the damages shall be such as must have been fairly within the contemplation of the parties to the contract at the time it was made; and,
Second, they must be certain, not only in their nature, but *450 as respects the cause from which they proceed, for the law wisely adopts that mode of estimating damages which is most definite and certain.
In Freeman v. Clute (3 Barb. 424) there was a contract to construct a steam engine, to be used in the process of manufacturing oil. The engine was not delivered within the time agreed upon, and damages were claimed for delay in furnishing it. The injured party urged that in arriving at the amount of damages there should be ascertained the amount of business which could have been done by the aid of the engine and the profits that would have accrued therefrom, but the court held that this was not a proper measure of damages; that compensation should be allowed for the loss of the use of plaintiffs' mill and their machinery, which was afterwards interpreted to mean the fair rent or hire of the mill and machinery.
In Griffin v. Colver (
Pennypacker v. Jones (106 Pa. St. 237) was a case where the plaintiffs, who owned and operated a flour mill in Philadelphia, entered into a contract with the defendants, by the terms of which the defendants were to place in their mill, within the specified time, machinery of a certain capacity to make flour of a high grade. The machines when finished were found not to make a high grade of flour, and to be incapable of producing the stipulated number of barrels per day. In an action for damages by the plaintiffs for breach of contract, it was held that loss of possible profits which might have been made, if the mill had been run properly, was not a proper subject of damages, for the reason that such damages were too remote and speculative. Mr. Justice GREEN, in delivering the opinion of the court, said: "But when a machinist furnishes machinery to a millowner, it is no part of his engagement that a profitable business shall be carried on with the machinery furnished. Of course, if it is defective, he is responsible for the damage resulting directly from such defect; but that is a very different thing from the uncertain, remote and speculative profits which may or may not be made in the business to be done."
Cassidy v. Le Fevre (
This court further on, after commenting upon the absence of evidence, from which the referee could have determined the difference in the rental value of defendant's mill and machinery, with or without the steam engine and boilers, said: "Had there been such evidence, the ruling of the referee that the plaintiff was not liable to defendants for damages for the loss of the use of the engine, boilers and other machinery, would have been erroneous. But the ruling and decision was based upon the evidence, and the claim as made, and was in conformity to the decision of the courts of this state, and well-settled rules as to the measure of damages in like cases."
In Manhattan Stamping Works v. Koehler (45 Hun, 150) the defendants leased a manufactory to the plaintiff with all steam power needed by the plaintiff in its business. The steam power furnished was inadequate. The court held, Presiding Justice VAN BRUNT writing the opinion, that the plaintiff *453 was not entitled to recover damages for the destruction of material by reason of the unevenness of the power, nor for profits which might have resulted had the power furnished been as agreed, but that a recovery for the ordinary rent or hire of the machinery during the time of this deficiency of power, could have been recovered had the complaint made claim for damages on that ground.
In Rochester L. Company v. Stiles P.P. Company (
The grounds upon which is founded the general rule of excluding profits in estimating damages, are (1) that in the greater number of cases such profits are too dependent upon numerous and changing contingencies to constitute a definite and trustworthy measure of damages; (2) because such loss of profits is ordinarily remote and not the direct and immediate result of a non-fulfillment of the contract; (3) the engagement to pay such loss of profits, in cases of default in performance, does not form a part of the contract nor can it be said, from its nature and terms, that it was within the contemplation of the parties. Cases arise, however, in which loss of profits is said to be clearly within the contemplation of the parties, although not provided by the terms of the contract, and where such profits are not open to the objection of uncertainty or remoteness. An instance of the latter kind is where *454 the contract is entered into for the purpose, in part at least, of enabling the party to fulfill a collateral agreement from which profits would arise, of the existence of which he informed the other party prior to the making of the contract. In such cases the loss of profits from the collateral agreement is clearly within the contemplation of the parties, and is not remote or speculative.
No such agreement existed in this case. There was, indeed, present no fact to take it outside the general rule which declares that the measure of damages in such cases is the difference between the rental value of the mill and water power as furnished and the mill and water power as it would have been had the contract been performed. The case of Wakeman v. W. W. Manfg. Co. (supra) is relied upon by the respondents' counsel to support this judgment.
Wakeman's case was one in which the rule controlling this case could not have been made applicable — a rule established in cases of this character, because the damages measured by it are not only within the contemplation of the parties, but are more definite and certain than would be possible by any other method of ascertaining damages. Wakeman and the W. W. Manufacturing Company entered into a contract, by which the defendant agreed that if the plaintiffs should succeed in selling fifty of the defendant's sewing machines to one firm or party in Mexico, during a trip of their agent about to be made, for every fifty machines so sold they should have the sole agency for the selling of said machines in that locality, and the defendant agreed to furnish the machines. Plaintiffs' agent made two sales of fifty machines to persons in different localities in Mexico under an agreement that the purchaser should be the sole agent for the sale of machines in that locality. One of the orders the defendant filled, the other it refused, and refused to fill other orders from the plaintiffs or their agents and repudiated the contract. The defendant insisted that the only damages that the plaintiffs could recover were for a refusal to fill the orders actually given. Of course argument was not needful to make it appear that the loss of *455 profits on fifty machines actually sold would in no wise compensate plaintiffs for the breach of the contract. In that situation the plaintiffs undertook to show that they were prevented from making profits which were within the contemplation of the parties at the time they made the agreement, and, as tending in that direction, they offered to prove upon the trial that, subsequent to the repudiation of the agreement, the defendant established agencies in Mexico and a number of machines were sold through them. This evidence was excluded, and for that error the judgment was reversed, the court holding that prospective profits, so far as they could be properly proven, and which would certainly have been realized but for defendant's default, are allowable as damages although the amount is uncertain, and that the evidence offered by the plaintiffs, which the court excluded, tended in that direction.
But the Wakeman case was in no wise intended to encroach upon the rule of damages applicable to cases of this character, by which is afforded a more certain and definite method of admeasuring the damages. It belongs to a different class, to which the rule of this case cannot be made applicable, and the doctrine of it must be limited in its application to cases that come fairly within it.
The judgment should be reversed and a new trial granted, with costs to abide the event.
All concur.
Judgment reversed, etc.