Rumely Products Co. v. Moss
Rumely Products Co. v. Moss
Opinion of the Court
Appellee brought this suit against appellant for damages on account of false representations alleged to have been made by appellant in negotiating a sale of a thresher purchased by appellee for the purpose of threshing and preparing for market a crop of peas. In his petition the plaintiff alleged, in substance, that the defendant, at the time of the purchase of the machinery,, had notice of the fact that the plaintiff was buying it for the purpose of threshing a crop of peas to be grown for the market upon 55 acres of land. It was alleged that the plaintiff believed and reíied upon the representations made by the defendant’s agent to the-effect that the machinery sold and contracted for would properly thresh peas; that these representations, in point of fact, were untrue; and that the machinery would not thresh peas, and, as a result of its failure to do so, the plaintiff lost his entire crop of peas, etc. He filed a trial amendment, in which he alleged, in substance, that the machinery known as the pea attachment, and which the defendant contracted to deliver to him, was never in fact delivered until the-plaintiff’s entire crop of peas was destroyed.
The defendant’s answer contained a general demurrer, and admission of some and a denial of other facts alleged in the plaintiff’s petition. It admitted that it was a corporation; that it sold to the plaintiff a certain Gaar-Scott separator, with pea attachment. It denied making the representations set out in the plaintiff’s petition, and pleaded the terms of a written contract, and alleged that the only representations made by the defendant were contained in that contract, in a warranty clause therein, and averred that its liability was limited by the terms of the written contract, and that the plain *1086 tiff had not performed the obligations resting upon Mm under the contract, and therefore was not entitled to recover damages. It also denied that it had any notice of the fact that the plaintiff contemplated planting and raising 55 acres of peas, or any other quantity, to be sold upon the market, and was purchasing the machinery for the purpose of threshing any such quantity of peas.
The case was tried by the court without a jury, and judgment rendered for the plaintiff for $1,728; and the defendant has appealed.
The first and second assignments of error complain of the rulings of the trial court in admitting certain testimony. Under those assignments appellant submits this proposition:
“In an action for breach of warranty of machinery, where the written warranty provides the method for giving notice to the warrantor of defects in the machinery, the method so provided must be followed, and no other method will avail.”
In that proposition, and in many other assignments and propositions submitted in appellant’s brief, appellant treats the case as a suit upon a written warranty, and a sufficient answer is that the plaintiff does not base his suit upon a written warranty, but upon false representations by which he was induced to enter into the contract, and upon the further allegation that the defendant failed to deliver the machinery contracted for.
The other proposition submitted under the two assignments referred to is that secondary evidence is not admissible to prove the contents of a writing until a proper excuse is shown for failure to produce the writing itself. This relates to the action of the court in permitting the plaintiff to testify- that he had written a letter to the defendant, notifying it that the pea attachments had not been received, and that he would soon be ready to thresh his peas, and also that he requested J. F. Chenault to write to the company and request them to forward the pea attachment at once. The objections to the testimony, as disclosed by the assignments of error, were as to the letter written by the plaintiff, because the written contract required notice to be given by registered letter, which the witness stated was not done, and because it was not shown that the defendant had received the letter, and no predicate had been laid for the introduction of secondary evidence.
As to the letter written by J. F. Chenault, addressed to the defendant at Dallas, Tex., we think it is sufficient to say that the proof shows that, at the time that letter was written, Chenault was appellant’s agent, and it was received at Dallas, Tex., by appellant’s general manager.
What has already been said disposes of appellant’s fifth, sixth, seventh, eighth, and tenth assignments of error.
Appellant’s eleventh assignment complains of the action of the court in permitting the witness to testify as to the market value of the peas, concerning which we deem it sufficient to say, without setting out the testimony in full, that in our opinion the witness qualified himself to testify as to market value.
The fourteenth assignment is in the main a recapitulation of assignments and contentions already urged, and that assignment is overruled. ' /
“Where a plaintiff, by false representations, was induced to purchase machinery which was' sold on written contract containing certain warranties in a suit against the, seller for damages, the plaintiff is not restricted to an action on the written contract, but can base his suit on antecedent' fraud by which the contract was procured.”
In support of that contention Jones v. George, 61 Tex. 345, 48 Am. Rep. 280, Cobb v. O’Neal, 2 Sneed (Tenn.) 438, Blythe v. Speake, 23 Tex. 429, and 14 Cyc. 29 and 30, are cited. We sustain the contention urged on behalf of appellee, and hold that the measure of damages in this case is not limited to the remedies stipulated in the written contract ; and we also hold that if, at the time the contract of sale was made, the defendant had notice of the fact that the machinery contracted for was intended to be used for the purpose of threshing a crop of peas, which the plaintiff contemplated growing for the market, and that such machinery was necessary for that purpose, then, if the plaintiff is entitled to recover, the measure of his damage will be the market price of the peas and the expense he incurred in attempting to thresh them with the machinery that was furnished, less the expense he would have incurred in. threshing, preserving and marketing them, and less whatever amount, if any, he could have sold the unthreshed peas for, and whatever benefit, if any, he derived from the pea crop in the way of fertilization of his land. In Cobb v. O’Neal, supra, the court said:
“A purchaser of goods, who has been induced to make the purchase by false and fraudulent representations by the seller as to the quality of the property, may maintain an action of deceit, notwithstanding the contract contains a warranty, and it can make no difference that the warranty is in writing.”
It is a well-settled rule of law that one who breaches a contract must respond in damages for such injuries as should have been contemplated as a result of such breach. In Jones v. George, supra, the plaintiff purchased from the defendant, who was a druggist, a certain article supposed by each party to be Paris green, and it was known to the seller that it was being purchased for the purpose of using it upon a growing cotton crop, to kill certain insects which were about to destroy the purchaser’s crop of cotton. In that case there was no express warranty, but the court held that there was an implied warranty that the thing sold was Paris green; and it was there held that the liability of the seller was as broad under a breach of the contract as if he had expressly warranted the substance which he delivered to be Paris green; and if it was not that article, and as a result thereof the purchaser lost his cotton crop, the measure of damages would be the value of the crop as it stood just before it was destroyed by the worms, with the cost of the compound used, and the further cost of the preparation and application to the cotton, with interest on the money thus expended, with the qualification that no recovery could be had for any loss which the planter might have avoided with ordinary care and reasonable expense. In the celebrated ease of Hadley v. Baxendale, 9 Exch. 341, the rule as to measure of damages for breach of contract is t&us stated:
“We think the proper rule in-such a case as the present is this: Where two parties have made a contract, which one of them has broken, the damages which the other ought to receive, in respect to such breach of contract, should be either such as may fairly and substantially be considered as arising naturally— i. e., according to the usual course of things— from such a breach of contract-itself, or such as may reasonably be supposed to have been in the contemplation of both parties at the time they made the contract, as the probable result of the breach of it.”
In Jones v. George, supra, after quoting that rule, the Supreme Court said:
“This rule has been applied substantially in many cases by the courts of America, and in the case of Calvit v. McFadden, 13 Tex. 326, the spirit of the rule was thus announced by Wheeler, J.: ‘The difficulty, if not impossibility, of laying down any precise and definite rule of general application in respect to what may be recovered as consequential damages, is shown by Mr. Sedgwick in his review of the cases upon this subject in his treatise on the Measure of Damages. He quotes the language of the Supreme Court of Louisiana that “the damages which a party may recover on the breach of a contract are those which are incidental to and caused by the breach, and may reasonably be supposed to have entered into the contemplation of the parties at the time of the contract” (13 La. 404); and this, he concludes, is the clearest and most definite line that can be drawn in respect to such damages. * * * And to apply the rule of the Louisiana court, which seems free from objection, it must'have appeared also that the loss was incidental to and caused hv *1088 the breach, of the contract, and was such as may reasonably be supposed to have entered into the •contemplation of the parties contracting-.’ In •the last edition of Hr. Sedgwick’s work on the Heasure of Damages, 104, 122, he adopts the rule thus stated by the Douisiana court as ‘perhaps the clearest and most definite rule that can be framed in this perplexing matter.’ The rule in Louisiana seems to be established by the ■Code of that state (1 Sedgwick, 103; Williams v. Barton, 13 La. 410); and it and its modifications are taken from the Code Napoléon, 1149, 1150, which in turn are taken from Pothier on ■Obligations, Nos. 159, 160, who asserts that the rule is as old as the Roman law. We believe ■this to be a correct rule, and, tested by it, what ■is the liability of the appellee?”
The opinion then proceeds to cite and discuss quite a number of decisions, and concludes with announcing the rule applicable to that case as hereinbefore stated.
In I. & G. N. R. R. Co. v. Pape, 73 Tex. 501, 11 S. W. 526, the plaintiff sued for damages on account of injuries to a growing crop, brought about by an overflow, which overflow, he alleged, was caused by the negligent construction of a railway track. In that case, in considering the measure of damages, the court said:
“It seems to us that as a general rule the -most satisfactory means of arriving.at the value of a growing crop is to prove its probable yield under proper cultivation, the value of such yield when matured and ready for sale, and also the expense of such cultivation as well as the cost of its preparation and transportation to market. The difference between the value of the probable crop in the market and the expense of maturing, preparing, and placing it there, will in most cases give the value of the growing crops with as much certainty as can be attained by any other method. But proof of the additional amount of cotton which the plaintiff would have made but for - the overflow, and the value of such cotton when ready for market, without evidence as to the expense of cultivating, gathering, preparing it for, and placing it in market, did not show the value of the crop at the time of the injury, and hence did not afford the proper means of measuring the plaintiff’s damage.”
So we regard it as settled law in this state that the measure of damages, whether the action be founded upon a breach of contract, deceit, or other wrongful conduct, includes reasonable and fair compensation, not only for the injuries which necessarily and usually result from such wrongful conduct, but also for such consequential injuries as the person sought to be held liable should have contemplated as a probable or possible result of his wrongful conduct.
It is also contended by appellant that the fact that the peas were grown upon the plaintiff’s land and permitted to remain there and rot should be taken into consideration, upon the theory that the soil was thereby fertilized and benefited. If the defendant had complied with its contract, and the plaintiff had sold his peas upon the market, he would have still had whatever benefit had accrued to his land by reason of the fact that the crop of peas had been grown upon it; but he would not have had the benefit, if any, that resulted from their rotting in the field, and, to that extent only, can the question of fertilization of the soil be considered.
The case has not been so developed as to enable this court to estimate with any degree of certainty the excess of damages which might b.e cured by a remittitur, and therefore we have concluded that the judgment should be reversed, and the cause remanded for another trial; and it is so ordered.
Reversed and remanded.
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