Davis v. Gee
This text of 238 S.W. 735 (Davis v. Gee) 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.
Opinion
The appellee filed this suit against the Director General for the breach of a contract to furnish on a fixed date a car into which some potatoes were to be loaded. A trial before a jury resulted in a judgment against the appellant for ,$248.04. The facts show that on June 13, 1918, the appellee, Gee, had an agreement with the local agent of the Milwaukee, Kansas & Texas Railway Company at Sulphur Springs for a ear to be delivered at that place on the 15th of June. Prior to the application for the ear, Gee had sold a carload of potatoes to M. H. Ponder, the local agent of Earl Bros, of Chicago. The contract with Ponder stipulated that the potatoes were to be delivered f. o. b. the-,cars at Sulphur Springs not later than June the 15th. After arranging for the car, Gee went' into the market and bought 27,560 pounds of potatoes. He began delivering them on the railway platform on the 13th, and 'completed the delivery on the 14th of June, expecting to load them the next day. The car did not come until the 19th following. By that time the potatoes had so deteriorated that Ponder refused to take them at the original price, which was $1.90 per hundred- pounds. He did, however, agree later ,to take them at SI per hundred pounds, which the testimony shows was their reasonable market value in their deteriorated condition.
“I told them (defendant’s agent) that I had those potatoes sold to be delivered not later than Saturday, and I did not want to go to buying them and putting them on the shed unless *736 I was positive X would get them out on Saturday. I had this conversation on Thursday of that week.”
That testimony was objected to upon the ground that evidence of notice to the defendant was not authorized under the pleadings, and any notice of Gee’s contract as to the time in which the potatoes were to be shipped was immaterial and irrelevant. The argument which follows that assignment of error is based upon the proposition that special damages for the breach .of a contract of this character are not recoverable without notice to the defendant of the special conditions, and that proof of notice is not admissible in the absence of an averment of that fact. Conceding the correctness of that proposition and that the pleadings of the appellee were defective in that respect, the question is: Was the testimony admitted productive of any injury? After a careful examination of the record, we have concluded that it was not. The appellee testified, without objection, that his damages resulting from the deterioration of the potatoes amounted to $248, within four cents of the judgment rendered. He also testified that the market value of good potatoes was $1.90 per hundred pounds, which was the same as the contract price with Ponder. There was, in fact, no apparent controversy in the testimony about the value of the potatoes, either before or after the injury. When considered in its entirety, the record shows that the appellee recovered only what the undisputed evidence shows was the common result to be expected from the failure' to have the car at the depot at the time agreed upon, even if there had been no contract with Ponder for the purchase of the potatoes.
The judgment will therefore be affirmed.
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238 S.W. 735, 1922 Tex. App. LEXIS 462, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davis-v-gee-texapp-1922.