23 Wis. 501 | Wis. | 1868
It is claimed that the court below erred in refusing to give the first and second instruction ashed by the defendant, and also in giving the third instruction ashed by the plaintiffs. Upon the evidence in the case we thinh the ruling of the court was correct in both particulars. The first and second instructions ashed by the defendant were as follows: “ 1. If the jury should find that the plaintiffs are entitled to damages in this case, the measure of their damages is not the price agreed to be paid for pressing and baling the hay, but only a just recompense for the actual injury they sustained, or in other words, only such damages as directly and necessarily resulted from the breach of .the contract. 2. In this case the measure of damages is the difference between the contract price and what it would have cost to complete the remainder of the work agreed upon.” The third instruction given on the part of the plaintiff was: “ If the jury find for the plaintiffs, then they must award as damages the whole contract price, or $3.50 per ton, for all the hay the defendant agreed, to furnish, less the $34.85 paid by defendant, and less what they may find from the testimony that the plaintiffs earned, or might have earned, in the same business during any time which the jury shall find the plaintiffs saved in consequence of the defendant’s non- ■ performance of the contract on his part.”
It appears from the evidence, that by the contract the
By the Court. — The judgment of the circuit court is therefore affirmed.