Irving v. Ort

146 N.E.2d 107, 128 Ind. App. 225, 1957 Ind. App. LEXIS 113
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 21, 1957
Docket18,820
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 146 N.E.2d 107 (Irving v. Ort) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Irving v. Ort, 146 N.E.2d 107, 128 Ind. App. 225, 1957 Ind. App. LEXIS 113 (Ind. Ct. App. 1957).

Opinion

Kelley, J.

Appellees are the owners of farm land, approximately 96.67 acres, in Milan Township, Allen County, Indiana, upon which is located a gravel pit of some twenty acres. On the west side of said land, and extending, in an encircling fashion, around the north end of the land and dropping to the south along the east side of the land, flows the Maumee River. The pit extends lengthwise from west to east and its narrow portion extends widthwise from north to south. 16.4 acres of the land lies north of the pit and is *227 utilized as farm land. Between the west end of the pit and the river is a dike about 500 feet long, approximately 18 feet wide at the top and 80 feet wide at the base. It appears that the purpose of the dike was to protect appellees’ land from overflowing water of the river in, the event of high waters or a flood condition. The evidence discloses that the highest flood water line was in 1918 and that the present dike is about three and one-half feet higher than the record high mark at that point in the flood stage of 1913.

On January 1, 1947, the appellants were, and had been for many years prior thereto, engaged in the business of dipping sand and gravel and selling the same. On said date, the appellees, by written lease, granted appellants the exclusive right to remove sand and gravel from said pit for a five-year period from the said date of execution of the lease and appellants agreed to pay appellees seven (7) cents per ton for the sand and gravel removed therefrom. During the five-year term of the lease, appellants paid appellees $17,876.34 for approximately 261,000 tons of sand and gravel mined from the pit.

Upon or shortly prior to the expiration of the lease on December 31, 1951, appellants moved their equipment to a new location. Thereafter, appellees brought action by complaint against appellants, charging breach of the lease and praying damages therefor. Appropriate issues were made and the cause was submitted to the court for trial, without a jury. The court found for appellees and rendered judgment in their favor for $22,700.00.

That part of the lease which gives rise to the question deemed essential for our present determination is a sentence or clause contained in paragraph 5 thereof. Said paragraph 5 of said lease is as follows:

*228 “5. Said second parties shall have the right to remove the top dirt from said land and shall build a wall or embankment next to the river so that the river will not wash in on the farm land of said first party. Second parties shall plant shrubs and willows on west dike to keep it from washing and shall haul at least 200 loads of dirt each year and place same on narrowest places of west dike, keep all washouts filled and keep an open road around the pit all times. Said second party shall, when moving equipment to a new location, place all waste stone that isn’t sold on the west dyke. Said first party shall have the right to supervise the location where the top dirt is to be hauled and dumped. All dirt removed shall not be piled other than is agreeable to said first party at any time.”

The particular clause or sentence contained in said quoted paragraph which has occasioned the presented difficulty is this:

“Said second party (appellants) shall, when moving equipment to a new location, place all waste stone that isn’t sold on the west dyke.” (Our emphasis.)

Appellants concede that they did not place upon the west dike all the unsold waste stone mined during the term of said lease. To that extent they violated the last above quoted provision of the lease and became responsible to appellees for damages in at least a nominal amount. Appellants have challenged the court’s assessment of damages as being too large and this presents what we consider to be the potent charge of error.

The court adopted as the measure of damages “the reasonable cost of doing what defendants (appellants) promised to do.” It is thus apparent that the only alleged breach of the lease which the court considered as worthy of the allowance of damages was that appellants failed to put all the unsold waste stone on the west dike as they had agreed to do.

*229 In determining the recoverable damages in comparable actions, our Supreme Court, in Lowe v. Turpie (1896), 147 Ind. 652, 670, 44

N. E. 25, declared:

“It is the rule, settled beyond controversy, that the damages to be recovered must be the natural and proximate consequences of the breach of the contract; damages which are remote or speculative cannot be recovered. Fuller v. Curtis, 100 Ind. 237, 50 Am. Rep. 786; Cline v. Myers, 84 Ind. 304; Loker v. Damon, 34 Mass. 284; Prosser v. Jones, 41 Iowa 674; Wire v. Foster, 62 Iowa 114, 17 N. W. 174; Osborne v. Poket, 33 Minn. 10, 21 N. W. 752. Hadley v. Baxendale, 9 Exch. 341, the leading English, and one followed by the courts of this country, lays down the following rule concerning the measure of damages: ‘Where two parties have made a contract which one of them has broken, the damages which the other party ought to receive in respect of such breach of contract should be such as may fairly and reasonably be considered either arising naturally, i.e., according to the usual course of things, from such 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.’ ”

The evidence discloses that appellants left some of the unsold waste on the bank of the pit and some had been dumped or pushed into the pit and rested under the water. The court found that the appellants “left eighteen thousand (18,000) cubic yards of waste stone in the gravel pit and four hundred (400) cubic yards of waste stone on a pile on the south side of the gravel pit.” This finding is predicated upon the testimony of two witnesses for appellees.

One witness, A. K. Hofer, a professional Civil Engineer, stated, in material substance, that he calculated that there were eighteen thousand cubic yards of stone in the pit and a heap on the bank approximating four *230 to five hundred cubic yards; that he did not remove the stone from the water to measure it but took soundings; that he did not measure the center pile; that he did not know the contour of the land under it (the stone) ; that it would be impossible to measure the land under the stone from the surface without moving the stone; that his calculation is based on the assumption that the land under the stone is similar to the depth of the land adjoining the outside edge. That he estimated the cost of moving the stone from the bottom of the pit at about $1.25 a cubic yard and that on the bank at $.50 to $.60 a cubic yard, and that it would be necessary to dump it on the dike and level with a bulldozer.

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Bluebook (online)
146 N.E.2d 107, 128 Ind. App. 225, 1957 Ind. App. LEXIS 113, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/irving-v-ort-indctapp-1957.