Hind v. Overseas Agencies, Ltd.

208 P. 110, 189 Cal. 319, 1922 Cal. LEXIS 330
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 13, 1922
DocketS. F. No. 9607.
StatusPublished

This text of 208 P. 110 (Hind v. Overseas Agencies, Ltd.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hind v. Overseas Agencies, Ltd., 208 P. 110, 189 Cal. 319, 1922 Cal. LEXIS 330 (Cal. 1922).

Opinion

SLOANE, J.

By a contract in writing, of date May 20, 1919, the defendant agreed to sell, and plaintiffs agreed to buy, certain rice, described as “2,000 small bags No. 1 Siam Usual Rice, type S3 at $6.95 per hundred pounds gross, ex-dock San Francisco, in bond.”

The defendant breached the contract June 25th by refusing to deliver the rice and thereafter, within what the jury determined was a reasonable time, the plaintiffs proceeded to purchase a like quantity and quality of rice in *320 the open market to take the place of the rice contracted for with defendant, and gave notice to defendant that they were about to make such purchase and would hold the defendant responsible for any loss sustained in the transaction.

This substituted rice was purchased, 50 tons, or 1000 bags of 100 pounds each, on the 27th of June, 1919, at $11 per 100 pounds gross, and 50 tons, or 1000 bags, on the 7th of July, 1919, at $10.25 per 100 pounds gross.

Plaintiffs seek to recover in this action the sum of $7,350, the alleged excess which they were compelled to pay for the substituted rice.

It is a conceded fact in the case that the terms “ex-dock” and “in bond,” used in the original contract, meant that the stipulated price of $6.95 per hundred was for rice on the dock and subject to wharfage charges, and subject to tariff duty.

The cash payments to become due under this contract amounted to $13,900. What the amount of dockage and duty on the rice would be was not alleged in the complaint nor shown in evidence.

The $7,350 sued for, therefore, represents the difference between the cash items of $21,250 for the substituted rice, and $13,900, the original contract purchase price, without taking into account the liability to be assumed by plaintiffs for dock charges and duty.

The evidence, we think, is undisputed that the substituted purchase was made for rice f. o. b. San Francisco, which means free on board in San Francisco, and is claimed by defendant to be free from dock charges and duty. Assuming, for the time, that such is the proper interpretation of the evidence, the real issue presented is whether it was necessary for. plaintiffs, as a condition of ascertaining their damages resulting from this breach of contract, to allege and prove the amount they would have had to pay on the original contract for duty and dock charges in addition to the stipulated cash payment.

Judgment was for plaintiff in the trial court for the full demand of $7,350 and defendant appeals.

There is no dispute between the parties as to the law of damages applicable to such a case. Respondents say in their opening brief: “We agree with appellant’s counsel *321 that the damages in this case should he measured according to the principles laid down in sections 3308 and 3354, Civil Code, that is, the difference between the contract price, and the .market value of rice of like grade and quality as the rice called for by the contract, in San Francisco, within a reasonable time after June 25, 1919.”

Where the parties differ on this branch of the case is as to whether the charges to accrue as duty and dock-age were a part of the contract price to be pleaded and proved by plaintiff, or were expenses which they were relieved from, through the failure of the contract, to be pleaded and proved by defendant, in mitigation of damages.

Defendant did not itself plead these matters as an affirmative defense, but relies upon the failure of the plaintiffs to either plead or prove the necessary facts to show what the difference was between the contract price of the original purchase and the market value of the substituted rice.

It appears as conceded, that there was no rice of the quality involved to be purchased at or about the time of the breach of this contract “ex-dock San Francisco, in bond,” and, therefore, the plaintiffs were entitled to go into the market and substitute as nearly as they could the value of their original contract, but all they were entitled to recover in damages was enough to equalize the cost so that they would not be out of pocket by reason of having to buy elsewhere and under different conditions. They were not entitled to gain an advantage by reason of getting the substituted rice freed from liability for duty and dock charges.

For all that appears the difference in the price of this quality of rice “ex-dock San Francisco, in bond,” and as it was substituted, f. o. b. San Francisco, may have been largely accounted for by the saving made to plaintiffs in the substituted purchase by reason of buying free from duty and dock charges. The duty, at least, was a fixed charge which plaintiffs assumed and undertook to pay as part of the cost price under the contract.

As illustrated by appellant, if this contract had called for a stipulated cash price of $13,900, subject to lien of a chattel mortgage, and the substituted rice had been bought for $21,250, free of any lien, a measure of damage could *322 not have been established until there had been pleaded and proved the amount of the lien, and it had been deducted from the $21,250, to establish the difference between the contract price and the subsequent purchase.

AVhat the plaintiffs were entitled to under their contract was rice in bond at the dock. The equivalent thing which they were entitled to substitute was rice in bond at the dock at its then market value. It is an obvious proposition that the market value of rice subject “to duty and that on which the duty has been paid will not be the same.

The burden is clearly upon plaintiffs to affirmatively establish the difference between the cost price of the rice under the contract, and the market value of the rice purchased as its equivalent, and the tariff duty and dock charges are a necessary element in that difference if the substituted rice was not purchased “ex-dock” and “in bond. ’ ’

The ease of J. J. Moore & Co. v. J. S. Guerin Co., 165 Cal. 534 [132 Pac. 1038], cited by respondents, is not in conflict with this conclusion. In that case the contract was to deliver coal at the ship’s side at $8 a ton. On the breach of the contract by seller the buyer bought in the open market from local dealers at $12 a ton, which was the market price at that time. There was no coal to be had at the ship’s side, though the evidence was that when coal was so obtained it was usually sold at about 75 cents less per ton than at the yards. There was no evidence, however, that the coal was of any more value to the buyer from being purchased at the yards. If it could have been shown that by getting coal from the yards, rather than from the ship’s side, the buyer made a saving in transportation, for instance, the case would be in point, but so far as appears, delivery from the yards was no less expensive than from the ship.

Quite a different situation, too, is presented in Rosenberger v. Pacific Coast Ry. Co., 111 Cal. 313 [43 Pac. 963]. There the plaintiff sued for damages for wrongful discharge from an employment for a stated term. The measure of his damages under the recognized rule of law was his salary for the unexpired term.

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Related

Whitaker v. Dunlap-Morgan Co.
186 P. 181 (California Court of Appeal, 1919)
Humphry v. Farmers Union & Milling Co.
190 P. 489 (California Court of Appeal, 1920)
J. J. Moore & Co. v. J. S. Guerin & Co.
132 P. 1038 (California Supreme Court, 1913)
Rosenberger v. Pacific Coast Railway Co.
43 P. 963 (California Supreme Court, 1896)
Chandler Lumber Co. v. Radke
118 N.W. 185 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1908)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
208 P. 110, 189 Cal. 319, 1922 Cal. LEXIS 330, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hind-v-overseas-agencies-ltd-cal-1922.