Bankers' Trust Co. v. Schulze

220 S.W. 570, 1920 Tex. App. LEXIS 368
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 3, 1920
DocketNo. 7845.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 220 S.W. 570 (Bankers' Trust Co. v. Schulze) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bankers' Trust Co. v. Schulze, 220 S.W. 570, 1920 Tex. App. LEXIS 368 (Tex. Ct. App. 1920).

Opinion

DANE, J.

This suit was brought by appel-lee, B. P. Schulze, against appellant, Bankers’ Trust Company, to recover the sum of $2,-000, alleged to be the damage suffered by ap-pellee by reason of a breach on the part of appellant, of the following contract:

“The Bankers’ Trust Company, for -a consideration of one hundred and no/100 ($100.00) dollars, leases to B. P. Schulze, of Arcadia, Texas, the privilege of cutting hay off of what is known as Eureka Orchards tract, in the I. R. Lewis survey, in Galveston county, Texas, between this date and November 1st, 1918, said consideration of $100.00 to be paid by said Schulze to the Bankers’ Trust Company out of the proceeds of the sale of said hay, as follows:
“$75.00 from the first car of hay shipped, and $25.00 from the second car of hay shipped from said land, and a lion is retained by said Bankers’ Trust Company upon all the hay cut off of said tract until said $100.00 is paid.
“It is further understood that the $100.00. agreed upon is to be paid absolutely, and is not in any way affected by the amount of hay cut and sold off'of said tract.
“Signed this the 24th day of September, A. D. 1917. Bankers’ Trust Company,
“By N. E. Meador, V. P.
“B. P. Schulze.”

Appellee alleged that the tract of land leased contained 500 acres; that of said 500 acres there were 175 acres of good hay land; that after appellee had taken possession of the land and cut hay therefrom in the fall of 1917, appellant on or about the 15th day of February, 1918, ejected and excluded him from the land and placed one O. C. Rupe in possession thereof; that had appellee not been dispossessed of said land he would have cut two crops of hay therefrom during the year 1918, before the expiration of his lease, which would have amounted to 175 tons of hay of the value of $20 per ton, and which he could have sold so as to produce a net profit to him of $2,000, all of which he lost by reason of the breach of said contract by appellant. He also alleges full compliance of the contract on his part.

Appellant answered by general demurrer, general denial, and by specially pleading that the contract actually made and entered into between the parties only extended to the 1st day of November, 1917, and that the date “1918” was inserted in the contract through an oversight and a typographical error.

The cause was tried before a jury, to whom the following charge was submitted:

“Unless you believe from the evidence that the date of ‘November 1st, 1918,’ was inserted in the contract.instead of ‘November 1st, 1917,’ by mutual mistake, accident, or inadvertence, you will return a verdict for the plaintiff, and assess his damages at such a sum as will compensate him for the loss of the crop of hay that he would probably have gathered in 1918 had he not been prevented from doing so by the defendant. In such case the proper measure of damages would be the market value of the crop he would probably have gathered, at the market price at Arcadia at the time, after deducting therefrom the cost of gathering the hay and the preparation for marketing the same, together with the expense of marketing, as may be shown by the evidence.
“If you believe from the evidence that the date ‘November 1st, 1918,’ was inserted instead of ‘November 1st, 1917,’ by the mistake, accident, or inadvertence of both parties, you will return a verdict for the defendants.”

The verdict of the jury was as follows:

“We, the jury, find for plaintiff, and assess damages in his favor against the Bankers’ Trust Company in the sum of one thousand ($1,000.00) dollars.”

Judgment was rendered in accordance with the verdict.

[1] It is the contention of appellant, first, that the verdict of the jury and the judg *571 ment rendered thereon are without evidence to support them; and, to the contrary, the appellee’s own testimony was to the effect that after the breach of the contract he could have leased other lands for producing hay during the year 1918 at 25 cents per ton, thus showing that he could have greatly minimized his damage, and therefore he was not entitled to recover for the entire loss of profits he would have made by cutting hay from the leased land during that year; and, second, that in any event appellee could not recover for more than one-half of the damages sustained, because it was shown that his brother is entitled to one-half of such damages, if any.

The first contention is based upon the assumption that appellee’s suit was for special damages and not for general damages, and that in such case the lessee must show that he used reasonable diligence to secure other property of like kind so as to minimize the damages likely to result by reason of the breach of the contract; in other words, that a party injured by a breach of contract must make reasonable exertion to render the injury as light as possible, and that he cannot recover for any loss which he might have avoided with ordinary care and reasonable expense.

We cannot agree with this contention of appellant. The contract which was broken in this case was not one for personal services, nor one which the parties contemplated should be performed with any special means or instrumentalities. It was simply a contract by the terms of which appellant, for a consideration of $100, sold to appellee the privilege of cutting grass or hay then growing and that to be grown, on a certain 500 acres of land for the year 1918. The labor necessary to be performed in harvesting the hay might have been performed by him with his own instrumentalities and labor, or by any other means or agency to which he might have seen fit to intrust the performance of the same. There is nothing in the contract from which it can be assumed that the execution of the same required all or any great portion of appellee’s time or his personal attention, or that it was impracticable for him to be engaged in other business and the performance of other contracts contemporaneously with the performance of the contract in controversy. We do not think the rule invoked as to mitigation of damages by subsequent earnings and profits, or by profits which might have been earned by appellee, applies in this case. A distinction is recognized between a case of the character of the one now under consideration and contracts for personal services for a given term at specified wages, and other contracts, the performance of which contemplates the exclusive personal service of the one obligated to perform the same, or contracts which contemplate its performance by or with certain specified instrumentalities at the disposal of the performing contractor, such as employment of clerks, agents, laborers, or domestic servants for a definite period of time, and such employment of the exclusive services of a person and his instrument or instruments by or with which he must necessarily perform the contemplated work.

It has been’ uniformly held that the rule stated in 13 Cyc.

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Bluebook (online)
220 S.W. 570, 1920 Tex. App. LEXIS 368, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bankers-trust-co-v-schulze-texapp-1920.