20 Mo. App. 534 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1886
The first question for us to determinéis, is this an action to .recover direct or consequential damages on account of the defendants’ failure to perform their contract ?
The plaintiff having abandoned so much of his petition as referred to the brick wall of his house, this action S3 for damages caused by the defendants’ failure to build the stone foundation wall in accordance with the-terms of their contract. Whether for direct or consequential damages, must be determined from the petition.
If this is an action for the direct damages caused by
It is very evident that the petition is not framed with an idea to such direct-damages. There seems, from the petition, to have been a settlement between plaintiff and defendants, under the contract. That is, it seems that the house was completed by defendants, and accepted and paid for by the plaintiff. Thére is no allegation of want of notice or information by the plaintiff, at the time of payment, that the foundation wall was not such as called for by the contract. There is no averment in the petition as to the time at which plaintiff first learned that the foundation wall was not such as the contract required it to be. The petition does not allege that upon a discovery that the foundation wall was not such as it should have been, under the contract, the plaintiff proceeded to have it so made. But the petition does allege that the failure of defendants to construct the foundation wall as called for by the' contract, caused said foundation, and the walls of the house, to give away, the building to crack and settle, and the walls thereof to
It is true that the court, in the instructions given of its own motion, limited the plaintiff’s recovery to the-amount necessary to make the foundation wall “of the size, and as good as the contract required.” This is the true measure of damages in a case for the recovery of direct and not of consequential damages. The measure of damages as thus declared was too limited for a case like this. On account of this the defendants cannot complain, as they were not injured thereby. But this action, an action for consequential damages, was' not converted into an action for direct damages by said instruction declaring the measure of damages. The action remained such as the petition made it, and should have been tried as such.
The second instruction asked by the defendants should have been given. There was sufficient evidence in support of it. Abstractly considered that instruction states a correct proposition of law. If the damages, for the recovery of which the plaintiff seeks in this action.
For the refusal by the court of defendants’ second instruction the judgment must be reversed. The first instruction asked by the defendants, and refused by the court was substantially the same as the first instruction given by the court on its own motion. On account of said refusal the defendants cannot complain.
The judgment is reversed and the cause is remanded.