Judgment affirmed, on the law and on the facts, with costs to the respondents. In connection with the sale of stock — which was essentially a sale of land being developed — the defendant warranted “ that [the] sewers had been fully paid for.” The breach of that warranty was fully established. The sewers had not been paid for. The sewer assessments which became a lien on the land in consequence thereof aggregated the sum of $163,415. The principal question to be decided is that of the amount of damage which the plaintiff is entitled to recover as the result of that breach. If this property had been warranted to be free and clear and if it were found to be encumbered by a mortgage, we would readily say that the plaintiff would be entitled to recover from the defendant the amount of that encumbrance, or at least its market value. Whether it retained the property or sold it it would be entitled to recover such sum. Nor does it make any difference if the property were subsequently sold at a profit. The purchaser would be entitled to receive what it paid for. I see no reason for a different measure of damages to be applied here. The assessment reflected the cost of the sewer installation. It was fixed in amount and it became an encumbrance on the property in such an amount. Nor is the relation of the amount of damages to the purchase price of any materiality. It is common knowledge that development costs of unimproved property very often equal and at times exceed the value of the land as undeveloped. However, that is quite immaterial because the agreed price reflected what the purchaser was willing to pay for the property with the sewers fully paid for. The plaintiff, however, has offered additional evidence, accepted by the court, whereby the loss could be established by other standards. For example, he proved that after the disclosure of the fact that the sewers had not been paid for there were refunds made by the defendants to prior purchasers in the same development to the extent of $500 per lot. Likewise, it was proved by a representative of the Veterans’ Administration that the Veterans’ Administration’s appraisal of each lot was diminished by the sum of $500 as a direct result of the unpaid sewer assessment. Furthermore, there was proof that the allocated cost of the installation of the sewers amounted to $805 per lot. There is, therefore, ample evidence in the record to establish a finding of a minimum loss of $119,375.23 resulting from the unpaid sewers and the other items of damage as reflected in the judgment of the court. The court could very well have found the loss to be the full amount of the sewer assessment. However, it chose to find a lesser amount based upon the alternative evidence of damage offered. If anything the defendants were benefited thereby. The plaintiff is entitled to what it contracted for and any profit which it made as the result of its operations should not inure to the benefit of the defendants who breached the •contract. Concur — Botein, P. J., Rabin and McNally, JJ.; Valente and Eager, JJ., dissent in the following memorandum: We dissent. The plaintiffs did establish a clear case entitling them to recover for breaches of warranties, but the record here is
