72 So. 889 | Miss. | 1916
delivered the opinion of the court.
This is an appeal from the judgment of the circuit court of Coahoma county, Miss., against appellant in favor of appellee, for the sum of one thousand six hundred seventy-four dollars and seventy cents and costs, awarded as damages on account of the failure of the appellant to deliver forty-seven bales of cotton shipped from the station of Merigold to Clarksdale, within a reasonable time. The appellee is a cotton buyer of limited means and credit, who had his office in Clarksdale, Miss., and had been engaged in the business about six years in that territory. It is shown by his evidence that some time prior to the 8th day of November, 1912, the appellee, L. Jacobson, had made a contract of sale for future delivery of one hundred bales of cotton of a stipulated grade and quality to Sudduth & Co. of Vicksburg, Miss., and on the 8th day of November, not then having in his possession the necessary number of bales of cotton to complete delivery under his contract, he proceeded to Merigold, and there, during the 8th and 9th day of November, 1912, succeeded in purchasing forty-seven bales of cotton from sundry persons and procured the same to be delivered to the appellant railroad company to be transported to Clarksdale, Miss., and there delivered to the People’s Compress. Appellee claims that he told the agent of the railroad company that the cotton had been purchased to make up the one hundred-bale lot which he had contracted to sell, and expressed his anxiety to have the cotton forwarded promptly to Clarksdale, and, the agent promised to forward it promptly. ■ A portion of the cotton (twelve bales) was forwarded to Clarksdale at once, but the remainder of the cotton was not sent forward for sev
It further appears that the appellee, as a cotton buyer, had a line of credit of about fifteen thousand dollars. He had on hand several lots of cotton, and especially a one hundred-bale lot uncompleted under a contract of sale already made to Sudduth & Co. of Vicksburg. Appellee, on the 9th day- of November, 1912, at Meri-gold, Miss., purchased severál lots of'cotton, aggregating forty-seven bales. This purchase exhausted his line of credit until he could move out some of the cotton already on hand. Upon the immediate reshipment of any of the cotton on hand, he could draw a draft on consignees and rehabilitate his line of credit to that extent. The forty-seven bales of cotton purchased at Merigold were designed to fill out the one hundred-bale shipment under contract, and if the cotton reached Clarksdale within- a reasonable time, appellee’s business would go smoothly on, but if unreasonably delayed, such delay would block up his business, tie up his bank account, and prevent him from exercising his calling until the shipment arrived and he could turn it over under the contract. This paralyzation of business not only extended to the forty-seven bales, but to all the cotton on hand, because of the fact that the forty-seven bales were intended to fill out the different other contracts so that the whole could' be moved and other cotton pur
With the above state of facts submitted to the jury, a verdict for one thousand six hundred seventy-four dollars and seventy cents was awarded against the appellant, from which it appeals here.
It appears from the record in this case that the verdict and judgment against the - appellant are based largely upon the claim of the appellee, Jacobson, that the unreasonable delay in delivering the forty-seven hales of cotton to him at Clarksdale rendered his financial condition such that he was unable to carry on his business until the delivery of this cotton was completed. In other words, the appellee contends that because he was limited in his finances and credit, the delay in the delivery of the cotton prevented him from doing business; that the negligence of the appellant railroad company was the proximate cause of this condition; and that the damage resulting to him growing out of this condition is chargeable to the appellant railroad company for its negligence in delaying the shipment of cotton. We do not think the damages awarded the appellee on account of the suspension of his business for twenty days for want of finances or credit were reasonably contemplated by the parties at the time of the acceptance of the shipment. But the appellee claims that he is entitled to one hundred dollars per day as profits
“I told him (the agent) from whom I bought the cotton, and I told him, I says, ‘I am loaded up with one hundred and fifty bales here in Clarksdale, and if I don’t get the forty-seven bales of cotton immediately, by Monday or Tuesday, you will block me off from doing any business; please ship that ahead immediately.’ He says, ‘I have got a car standing here, and that cotton will leave to-night; that was the 9th, Saturday night. ’ ’
It appears that the above constitutes the notice of the special conditions existing at the time of the acceptance of the shipment by the appellant railroad company.
We do not think that this is sufficient notice to the railroad to warrant the appellee’s recovering the special damages in this case. In order to recover the special damages claimed here, it ought to clearly and certainly appear that at the time of the making of the contract the railroad company had reasonable notice of the special circumstances, rendering such damages the natural and probable result of the delay in the delivery of the cotton. Hadley v. Baxendale, 9 Ex. 311; American Express Co. v. Jennings, 86 Miss. 329, 38 So. 374, 109 Am. St. Rep. 708. The claim by appellee that the railroad company, under the facts here, should pay him for becoming financially disabled to carry on his business is, to say the least of it, a very peculiar and unusual contention. We do not say that recovery cannot
The judgment of the lower court is reversed, and the cause remanded.
Reversed and remanded.