Clark & Clark v. Pinney

7 Cow. 681
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1827
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 7 Cow. 681 (Clark & Clark v. Pinney) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clark & Clark v. Pinney, 7 Cow. 681 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1827).

Opinion

Curia, per Sutherland, J.

Two questions arise upon the exceptions taken to the decisions and charge of the court:

1. As to the sufficiency of the tender proved; and 2. If the tender was not sufficient, as to the rule of damages.

The court decided that the plaintiff was entitled to recover the highest price which salt sold for at Salina, per barrel, between the time when the note became due, and the day of trial. The plaintiffs in error contend that- the damages are to be limited to the value of the salt at the time when the note fell due, with interest.

As to the tender. The court charged the -jury, that in order to make out a tender or payment of the salt, the defendants below were bound to prove that the barrels were of the dimensions and description described in the 3d section --of the act relating to the salt springs, (1 R. L. 249,) and that they contained five bushels each. That section provides, that all salt manufactured at those springs, which shall be put up in casks, shall be- packed in good casks, water tight, well hooped with twelve hoops, three on each head, and three on each bilge; which casks shall be thirty inches long, and the diameter of each head nineteen inches. There was no direct evidence as to the length of the barrels. In other respects, the weight of evidence, I think, showed them to be conformable to the statute; and the fair inference from all the testimony is, that they were of the proper length. They were shown to have had the requisite number of hoops, and the proper sized heads; to have been common sized barrels; and to have been good and tight. Some of the defendant’s witnesses, it is true, said they were not tight and in good boatable order; that the heads were warped. But they saw them several weeks after they were turned out to the plaintiffs below, and after they had been exposed to the weather; and the proba[686]*686bility from the evidence is, that they may have been injured subsequent to the tender or delivery. If the jury understood from the charge, that the defendants must give positive evidence that the barrels conformed in every respect to the requirements of the statute, and that they were not at liberty to infer such conformity from the testimony given in .the case, I should think the charge misled them: but the principle laid down by the court was, in the abstract, undoubtedly correct; that in a contract for the delivery of salt in barrels, such barrels as are directed by the statute to be used in packing salt, are intended; and I do not know that we are at liberty to say that the jury, under the circumstances of this case, were misled by it in this respect. But the statute says nothing about the number of bushels which the barrels must hold. The court, therefore, erred in charging the jury, that the barrels must contain five bushels each. As a matter of calculation from the size of the barrels prescribed in the act, it may be that they would contain five bushels: but the jury might *and probably did understand, that the fact must be proved. On the whole, I think the charge on this point, was not so explicit as it ought to have been; and that the jury may have been misled by it. The judgment ought, therefore,to be reversed bn that ground; and the question again submitted to a jury.

The question as to the rule of damages, however, is the most important.

The principle adopted by the court below is in conformity to the decision of this court in West v. Wentworth and Beach, (3 Cowen, 82.) But, as that case was slightly argued, and the question is one of very considerable interest, we permitted it again to be discussed; and are now prepared'to reconsider, and, so far as depends upon the judgment of this court, definitely settle it.

In the ordinary case of a contract for the sale or delivery of a personal chattel, where the price is not paid at the time of making the contract, but is to be paid upon the delivery of the article, the criterion by which to measure damages for the breach of the contract, is unquestionably [687]*687the price of the article at the time it was to be delivered. (Shepherd v. Hampton, 3 Wheat. 200; Douglass v. M'Allister, 3 Cranch, 298; 4 John. 15, per Spencer, J.; Leigh v. Patterson, 8 Taunt. 540; Gainsford v. Carroll, 2 B. & C. 624.) We are not aware that this principle has ever been contested. It certainly was not our intention to question it, in the judgment pronounced in West v. Wentworth and Beach.

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Bluebook (online)
7 Cow. 681, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clark-clark-v-pinney-nysupct-1827.