229 Pa. 236 | Pa. | 1910
Opinion by
This action was brought by the city of York against the York Railways Company, successor to the Colonial Street Railway Company, and the Fidelity & Deposit Company of Maryland, to recover $25,000 liquidated damages, under a contract evidenced by an ordinance of councils granting a franchise to construct and operate a railway upon certain of the highways and bridges of the city of York, an acceptance of the ordinance, and a bond given under its provisions with the last-named defendant as surety. The court below instructed a verdict in favor of the plaintiff for the full amount of the bond with interest, and the defendants have appealed.
The ordinance was passed finally by councils March 2, 1906, approved by the mayor March 20, 1906, accepted by the railway company March 27, 1906, the bond given and accepted on March 30, 1906, and work commenced April 1, 1906. The breach relied upon was the failure to complete and put the whole line in actual operation within three years from the last date as required by the terms of the ordinance.
The only sections of the ordinance essential to our present consideration are the ninth and thirteenth, and the material parts of these are: "Sec. 9. The company in good faith shall commence the construction of its line prior to April 1, 1906, and shall complete the construction of its line upon all the streets and between all the points above mentioned and put same in actual operation within three years from said date and on its failure so to commence, or having commenced, on its failure to complete its line, its right to occupy the portion of any street or streets on which its line shall not have been completed at the time fixed for the completion of the same, shall terminate and end, except as hereinafter provided, unless the completion of the construction of its said line of railway at the existing City grades for said streets, avenues, bridges or highways at the time of the construction shall be delayed or rendered impossible by proceedings
The condition of the bond is: “If the above bounden, the Colonial Street Railway Company, shall faithfully comply with all the provisions of a certain ordinance .... entitled ‘An Ordinance granting to the Colonial Street Railway Company, its successors and assigns, the right to' construct, operate and maintain its line or lines of street railway over, and along certain streets, bridges, avenues and highways in the City of York, under certain conditions and restrictions/ approved by the mayor of the said City of York on March 20, 1906, and shall indemnify the City of York of and from all loss and damage accruing to it in any way by reason of the passage of the above-recited ordinance, then this obligation to be
The defendants contend that the court below erred in treating the sum of the bond as liquidated damages. They argue (a) the presumption to be that a lump sum named by the parties to a contract is a penalty rather than liquidated damages; and (b) where an agreement contains several matters of different degrees of importance and yet the sum named is payable for the breach of any, even the least, it is to be construed as a penalty and not as liquidated damages. Neither of these principles governs the present case.
(a) “The question whether the amount stated in a conditional bond or contract is to be taken as a penalty or a liquidation of damages arising from a breach of the condition, is to be determined by the. intention of the parties, drawn from the words of the whole contract, examined in the light of its subject-matter, and its surroundings; and in this examination we must consider the relation which the sum stipulated bears to the extent of the injury which may be caused by the several breaches provided against, the ease or difficulty of measuring a breach in damages, and such other matters as are legally or necessarily inherent in the transaction:” March v. Allabough, 103 Pa. 335. “The difficulty of measuring the damages which would result from a breach of contract is always an important element, even a controlling one, in determining whether the intention of the parties was to fix a sum certain as the just amount to be recovered instead of leaving the question to the uncertain estimate of the jury. Generally where the covenant is for the performance or non-performance of a single act or of several acts, damages for the breach of which cannot be measured by any fixed standard, the sum named if reasonable in amount will be considered as liquidated damages:” Emery v. Boyle, 200 Pa. 249. “It is competent for the parties by mutual agreement to settle the amount of the damages that are in their nature uncertain
(b) Although the second principle relied upon by the defendants has met with recognition in Pennsylvania (March v. Allabough, supra), there is nothing in it which forbids an express contractual stipulation that the whole sum named to stand as security generally, shall be collectible as liquidated damages for a particular, designated breach; provided the contemplated breach is of such a nature that the damages flowing from it would obviously be impossible or most difficult to ascertain by reference to any exact pecuniary standard of measurement, as in the present case.
1. The quo warranto proceedings had been instituted at least one day prior to the approval of the ordinance by the mayor and eight days prior to its acceptance by the railway company, and the work on the line was commenced after their inception; hence it cannot with any show of reason be contended that the contracting parties considered the mere pendency of these proceedings as delaying or rendering impossible the completion of the line as required by the ordinance. They were instituted March 19, 1906, and withdrawn October 8, 1906, and there wa,s no proper offer to show that there had been any actual stoppage of the work by reason of their pendency during this short period. If the railway company desired to plead an excuse for its failure to complete and operate its line within the time limit, the burden was upon it to show that the matter relied upon actually caused or contributed to its failure. A temporary delay,- from no matter what source, would not serve to relieve the company from its contractual obligations, if as a matter of fact it did not cause or contribute to the ultimate failure to comply with the or
2. Counsel for the defendant railway offered to show that in December, 1907, the mayor and highway committee of the city of York compelled it to take up a curve connecting a line which it had constructed on West King street with a line on Richland avenue, and ordered it to remove its track from the former street, “this for the purpose of showing that the plaintiff itself hindered, delayed, and prevented the defendant from constructing its line of railway in accordance with the terms of the ordinance.” The overruling of this offer is assigned for error. We find no express provision in the ordinance for a curve to connect the lines in question, so it is not clear how any action of the city in relation to that curve could be viewed as a prevention or delay of the work of construction required by the ordinance. However, if the company had the right to lay the curve, neither the mayor nor the highway committee could change the terms of the ordinance, and the mere receipt by the company of a direction from them to do a thing contrary to the terms of the ordinance would not justify any delay on its part in the work of construction; and, again, there is nothing in the offer to show that the delay caused by taking up the curve was more than temporary. As to the notice to remove the track on King street, there is nothing in the offer to prove that the company was required to or ever did take it up; the offer was merely to show that the company was directed so to do. We see no merit in this assignment.
3. The defendant company constructed a double track line on one of the streets covered by the ordinance in May, 1909, and it offered to show that under the direction of the highway committee of the city it had paved this street at an expense of $1,000, and that in June, 1909, it paid to the city three per cent of the gross earnings made upon this piece of track, “for the purpose of showing that the city is estopped by both of these facts
While we do not agree in every instance with the reasons given by the trial judge in making his rulings upon the evidence, we fail to find any reversible error upon the record. The assignments of error are all overruled and the judgment is affirmed.