Kirby Lumber Co. v. C. R. Cummings & Co.

122 S.W. 273, 57 Tex. Civ. App. 291, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 63
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 27, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 122 S.W. 273 (Kirby Lumber Co. v. C. R. Cummings & Co.) 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
Kirby Lumber Co. v. C. R. Cummings & Co., 122 S.W. 273, 57 Tex. Civ. App. 291, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 63 (Tex. Ct. App. 1909).

Opinion

NEILL, Associate Justice.

This suit was brought by appellees to recover damages against appellant for the breach of certain alleged sales of lumber made by the latter to the former; the breach alleged being the company’s failure to deliver the lumber contracted for.

The defendant answered by general and special exceptions to plaintiff’s first amended original petition, on which the case was tried, a general denial, pleas of limitation and certain. other pleas in bar, which will hereafter be referred to.

The case was tried before a jury, whom, after the evidence was introduced, the court instructed as follows:

“The undisputed evidence shows that the 360,000 feet of lumber bought by the plaintiff of the defendants on the 23d of July, 1902, was ultimately delivered, and consequently you will not consider that matter at all in making up your verdict. _

_ “2. The evidence is also undisputed that all the orders, beginning near the foot of page two of the plaintiffs’ first amended original petition filed April 25, 1908, the first order being No. 517, continuing down to and on to page six, the last being order No. 551, were all given to the defendant Kirby Lumber Company by the plaintiffs and were by said company accepted for delivery in the quantities and at the prices "and at the times stated in the petition.

“3. The evidence is also undisputed that the Kirby Lumber Company would not have any connection with or sell to any person in Germany or beyond the seas, but that all the orders above cited were sold to and'charged to C. E. Cummings & Company, and that they were placed on the books of the Kirby Lumber Company as a charge against the said C. E. Cummings & Company, and it is further undisputed that the said Kirby Lumber Company knew when *293 the orders were given that the lumber was bought to be shipped abroad and sold in foreign markets.

“4. It is further undisputed that none of the lumber was delivered, and the only duty devolving upon you is to determine what loss Cummings & Company suffered by reason of such failure on the part of the Kirby Lumber Company to deliver the lumber. In arriving at this you will take the price at which the lumber was sold for delivery at Eotterdam or at Hamburg, as the case may be in each instance, and then ascertain what the lumber was worth in that market at the time it was to have been delivered and allow the plaintiffs as damages the difference between the two prices per thousand feet, and will find what that difference amounted to as to each shipment, and then add to the amount you so find to have been the loss or damages of the plaintiffs on each shipment, five percent on the amount which the whole shipment would have brought at the place of delivery at the time it was contracted to be delivered. You will pursue this method of calculation as to each shipment in regular sequence, and find the aggregate of such loss, if any, as you find there was, and then from that aggregate you will deduct the credit of $2,302.59, admitted to be due by the plaintiffs to the defendant upon some other account,' and add to the balance so remaining six percent interest per annum from June 1, 1903, to this date, and return your verdict for the plaintiffs for the sum resulting from this method of inquiry and calculation. You will then find for the plaintiffs the sum of $925.83 as the amount paid Langbehn & Company, but will allow no interest on that amount, and then by adding the sum of $925.83 to the aggregate so found as above stated, state the total due at this date, and return your verdict therefor.”

In response to the charge, the jury returned the following verdict: “We, the jury, find for the plaintiff, C. E. Cummings & Company, damages and interest as follows:

Order 517, damages ...........................$ 830.77
“ 521, “ 397.70
“ 524, “ 353.64
“ 531, “ 5,418.19
" 532, “ 524.19
“ 533, “ 102.90
“ 535, “ 1,806.06
“ 546, “ 573.17
“ 551, “ 303.56
$10,310.16
Interest 6% June 1, 1903, to date............$ 2,378.25
Claim of Langbehn & Co..................... 925.83
$13,614.24
Less amt. due Kirby Lumber Co............... 2,302.59
Total.......................,..$11,311.65.”

*294 Upon the verdict judgment was entered in favor of plaintiffs for the sum of $11,311.65, with interest from its date.

We find that the undisputed evidence establishes beyond question such matters of fact as the jury were charged by the court were incontrovertibly proved, and that it is reasonably sufficient to support the verdict as to the damages.

We deem it unnecessary to consider and discuss seriatim the numerous assignments presented in appellant’s brief, for many can be disposed of on principles of law applicable alike to them all.

Our conclusions of fact dispose of the assignments which attack the part of the charge which enumerates certain matters of fact proved by the undisputed evidence. For when the undisputed evidence established beyond controversy facts essential to plaintiff’s action or to the defense of his adversary, as to such matters there can be no issues of fact to submit to the jury’s finding; but they become matters of law for the. court to determine. Hence, under the undisputed evidence it was proper for the court to submit to the jury only the question as to the amount of damages plaintiffs had sustained by defendant’s breach of the contracts.

But it is complained that the charge gives to the jury the wrong measure of damages in a case like this, where the breach consists in the vendor’s failure to deliver to the vendee the goods contracted for. Ordinarily, if a contract for the sale of personalty, executory on the part of the vendor, is broken by' him, the' measure of damages is the market price of such property less the contract price: And the market price for this purpose must be determined as to the time and place of the delivery agreed upon. But if, at the time the contract is made, the vendor has notice or knowledge that the goods are being purchased for sale in a particular market, or to be supplied in pursuance of a particular contract, he may fairly and reasonably be deemed to have made his contract in contemplation of that purpose and to have assumed the risks thereby entailed, then if he breaks his contract, damages for loss caused thereby, if not uncertain and remote, may be recovered. 3 Page on Contracts, sec. 1589; Mechem on Sales, sec. 1763; Sutherland on Damages, sec. 52.

In this case the evidence conclusively shows that at the time the sales were made defendant knew that plaintiffs purchased the lumber for resale in a foreign market—at Rotterdam or at Hamburg.

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Bluebook (online)
122 S.W. 273, 57 Tex. Civ. App. 291, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 63, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kirby-lumber-co-v-c-r-cummings-co-texapp-1909.