Masterton & Smith v. Mayor of Brooklyn

7 Hill & Den. 61
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1845
StatusPublished

This text of 7 Hill & Den. 61 (Masterton & Smith v. Mayor of Brooklyn) 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
Masterton & Smith v. Mayor of Brooklyn, 7 Hill & Den. 61 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1845).

Opinion

Nelson, Ch. J.

The damages for the marble on hand, ready to be delivered, was not a matter in dispute on the argument. The true measure of allowance in respect to that item was conceded to be the difference between the contract price, and the market value of the article at the place of delivery. This loss the plaintiffs had actually sustained, regard being had to their rights as acquired under the contract.

The contest arises out of the claim for damages in respect to the remainder of the marble which the plaintiffs had agreed to furnish, but which they were prevented from furnishing by the suspension of the work in July, 1837. This portion was not ready to be delivered at the time the defendants broke up the contract, but the plaintiffs were then willing and offered to perform in all things on their part, and the case assumes that they were possessed of sufficient means and ability to have done so.

' The plaintiffs insist that the gains they would have realized, over and above all expenses, in case they had been allowed to perform the contract, enter into and properly constitute a part of the loss and damage occasioned by the breach: and they were accordingly permitted, in the course of the trial, to give evidence tending to show what amount of gains they would have realized if the contract had been carried into execution.

Oil the other hand, the defendants say that this claim exceeds the measure of damages allowed by the common law "for the breach of an executory contract. They insist that it is simply a claim for the profits anticipated from a supposed good bargain, and that these are too uncertain, speculative and remote to form the basis of a recoveiy.

It is not to be denied that there are profits or gains derivable from a contract which are uniformly rejected as too contingent and speculative in their nature, and too dependant upon the fluctuation of markets and the chances of business, to enter into a safe or reasonable estimate of damages. Thus, any sup[68]*68posed successful ’operation the party might have made, if he had not been prevented from realizing the proceeds of the contract at the time stipulated, is a consideration not to be taken into the estimate. Besides the uncertain and contingent issue of such an operation in itself considered, it has no legal or necessary connection with the stipulations between the parties, and cannot therefore be presumed to have entered into their consideration at the time of contracting. It has accordingly been held that the loss of any speculation or enterprize in which a party may have embarked, relying on the proceeds to be derived from' the fulfilment of an existing contract, constitutes no part of the damages to be recovered in case of breach. So a good bargain made by a vendor, in anticipation of the price of the article sold, or an advantageous contract of resale made by a vendee, confiding in the vendor’s promise to deliver the article, are considerations always excluded as too remote and contingent to affect the question of damages. (Clare v. Maynard, 6 Adol. & Ellis, 519, and Cox v. Walker, in the note to that case; Walker v. Moore, 10 Barn. & Cress. 416; Cary v. Gruman, 4 Hill, 627, 8; Chitty On Contr. 458, 870.)

The civil law is in accordance with this rule. “In general,” says Pothier, “the parties are deemed to have contemplated only the damages and; interest which the creditor might suffer from the nonperformance of the obligation,-in respect to the particular thing which is the object of it, and not such as may have been incidentally occasioned thereby in respect to his other affairs: the debtor is therefore not answerable for these; but only for such as are suffered with respect to the thing which is the object of the obligation, damni et interesse ipsam rem non habitant.” (1 Evans’ Poth. 91; and see Dom. B. 3, tit. 5, § 2, art. 3, 4, 5, 6.)

When the books and cases speak of the profits anticipated from a good bargain as matters too remote and uncertain to be taken into the account.in ascertaining the true measure of damages, they usually have reference to dependant and collateral engagements entered into on the faith and in expectation of .the performance of the principal contract The, performance or non[69]*69performance of the latter may and doubtless often does exert a material influence upon the collateral enterprises of the party; and the same may be said as to his general affairs and business transactions. But the influence is altogether too re-mete and subtile to be reached by legal proof or judicial investigation. And besides, the consequences, when injurious, are as often perhaps attributable to the indiscretion and fault of the party himself, as to the conduct of the delinquent contractor. His condition, in respect to the measure of damages, ought not to be worse for having failed in his engagement to a person whose affairs were embarrassed, than if it had been made with one in prosperous or affluent circumstances. (Dom. B. 3, tit. 5, § 2, art. 4.)

But profits or advantages which are the direct and immediate' fruits of the contract entered into between the parties, stand upon a different footing. These are part and parcel of the contract itself, entering into and constituting a portion of its very elements; something stipulated for, the right to the enjoyment of which is just as clear and plain as to the fulfilment of any other stipulation. They are presumed to have been taken into consideration and deliberated upon before the contract was made, and formed perhaps the only inducement to the arrangement. . The parties may indeed have entertained different opinions concerning the advantages of the bargain, each supposing and believing that he had the best of it; but this is mere matter of judgment going to the formation of the contract, for which each has shown himself willing to take the responsibility, and must therefore abide the hazard.

Such being the relative position of the contracting parties, it is difficult to comprehend why, in case one party has deprived the other of the gains or profits of the contract by refusing to perform it, this loss should not constitute a proper item in estimating the damages. To separate it from the general loss would seem to be doing violence to the intention and understanding of the parties, and severing the contract itself.

The civil law. writers plainly include the loss of profits, in .cases like the present, within the damages to which the com[70]*70plaining party is entitled. They hold that he is to be indemnified for “ the loss which the non performance of the obligation has occasioned him, and for the gain of which it has deprived him.” (1 Evans' Poth. 90; Dom. B. 3, tit. 5, § 2, art. 6, 12.) And upon looking into the common law authorities bearing upon the question, especially the later ones, they will be found to come nearly if not quite up to the rule of the civil law.

In Boorman v. Nash, (9 Barn. & Cress. 145,) it appeared that the' defendant contracted in November for a quantity of oil, one half to be delivered to him in February following, and the rest in March ; but he refused to receive any part of it. ,And the court held that the plaintiff was entitled to the diffeence between the contract price, and that which might have been obtained in market on the days when the contract ought to have been completed. (See M’Lean v. Dunn, 4

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Bluebook (online)
7 Hill & Den. 61, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/masterton-smith-v-mayor-of-brooklyn-nysupct-1845.