Rickey v. Tenbroeck

63 Mo. 563
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedOctober 15, 1876
StatusPublished
Cited by38 cases

This text of 63 Mo. 563 (Rickey v. Tenbroeck) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rickey v. Tenbroeck, 63 Mo. 563 (Mo. 1876).

Opinion

Norton, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This suit was brought in the circuit court of Cole county for the recovery of damages for an alleged breach of contract for the sale of fifty-two head of cattle. The petition alleges that plaintiffs, in May, 1873, sold defendants fifty-two head of beef cattle at four and a quarter cents per pound for fifty head, and four cents per pound for the other two head; that it was agreed that the two cattle should be delivered to defendants the following week after the sale, and the other fifty in lots of fifteen per week, beginning about the first of June ensuing, [566]*566until all were received. It is further alleged that plaintiffs delivered and defendants received, in pursuance of said contract, the two head, and refused to receive the remainder of the lot of cattle sold.

The answer of defendant denied the allegations of the petition and set up the statute of frauds in bar of plaintiffs’ right of recovery. Plaintiffs on a trial obtained judgment for $618, to reverse which the case is brought here by writ of error.

The evidence offered by plaintiffs tended to sustain the allegations of the petition as to the contract of sale of fifty-two beef cattle at the price stated thereon, the delivery to and acceptance by defendants of two of them, about one week after the sale was made, and the refusal of defendants to receive the remainder.

The contract was not reduced to writing, nor was anything paid by defendants at the time it was made, nor were any of the cattle received by defendants till about one week after the contract was made. The evidence further showed that after the refusal of defendants to receive fifty of the cattle, plaintiffs shipped part of them in July, 1873, to Chicago, and sold them in open market for 3\ cents per pound, and about the last of July or first of August shipped the remainder to St. Louis and sold them from lj to 2| cents per pound.

On the above state of facts the court, against the objection of defendants, gave the following, which was the only instruction given in the case: “If the jury believe from the evidence that plaintiffs and defendants entered into a contract whereby defendants were to receive of plaintiffs two head of cattle, at the farm of plaintiffs, at four cents .per pound, and to receive fifty other head at Judge Carrington’s under the same contract at four cents and a quarter per pound, and that in pursuance of said contract the plaintiffs delivered the two head of cattle to defendants, and were ready and willing to deliver the others, when defendants would receive them under said contract, and defendants declined to receive said fifty-two head of cattle; and that plaintiffs, afterwards made sale of them in open market in Chicago and St. Louis, and that the same were sold for a less sum than they had been sold to defendants, then the jury must find [567]*567for plaintiffs the amount of difference between what defendants agreed to pay plaintiffs therefor, and what they were actually sold for.”

In an action by vendor against vendee, for the non-acceptance of property sold or contracted for, the measure of damages is the amount of actual injury sustained by vendor in consequence of such non-acceptance, which is usually the difference between the price agreed to be paid and the value of the property. In order to give the vendor complete remedy he must recover the difference between the agreed ¡orice and that at which he could sell at the time when the vendee was bound to receive and pay for the thing bought. (Dana vs. Fielden, 2 Kern [N. Y.] 40; Haskell vs. McHenry, 4 Call., 411; Whitmore vs. Coates, 14 Mo. 9; Orr vs. Bigelow, 14 N. Y. 556; Ballentine vs. Balmer, 46 Penn. 177; 2 Pars. 484; Allen vs. Jarvis, 20 Conn. 38; Mulloy vs. Ford, 29 Barb. 454.) In Hilliard on 'Sales, 422, the rule of damages is stated to be the difference between the agreed price and the market value of the goods at the time of the breaeh, or the amount obtained on a re-sale. The authorities referred to as sustaining the right of vendor to recover the difference between the contract price and the amount obtained on a re-sale, proceeds upon the theory that a re-sale of the property on notice to the vendee is a proper method of ascertaining the market value, and that when this method is adopted the re-sale should be made at the time of the breach or within a reasonable time thereafter. (Crooks vs. Moore, 1 Sandf. 297.) How is this market value to be ascertained, and in what place is the sale to be made ? We think it is the market value at the place the property is to be delivered, and if resold the sale should be in that place, and may be at public auction, especially if notice be taken. (Van Horn vs. Rucker, 33 Mo. 392; Story Sales, 314; Sands vs. Taylor, 5 John. 395.)

The case of Chapman vs. Ingram, (30 Wis. 290,) to which we have been cited, was an action to recover damages against the defendants for refusing to receive and accept 79,000 feet of lumber which was to be delivered at a certain mill at Eau Claire. After defendants refused to receive the lumber i-t was run to [568]*568Lansing, Iowa, and sold, and plaintiff recovered in the court below the difference between the contract price and what it sold for at that place, after deducting the necessary expenses of running the lumber there. In reversing the judgment the court says: “The lumber was to be delivered at Eau Claire. Selling the lumber at any place is only a convenient method of ascertaining the difference between the contract price and value of the lumber where it ought to have been accepted, but it is not the only means. The plaintiff might show by other evidence what the lumber was worth at Eau Claire, without resorting to a sale even there to test its value, but to move the lumber away for two or three hundred miles, and charge defendant with the increased risk and expense of a re-sale in a foreign market, is imposing on defendant a loss which the law does not authorize.”

In the case at bar, according to the evidence, the breach of contract occurred about the 15th of June, 1873 ; the cattle were to be delivered at or near Jefferson City ; a part of them were shipped by plaintiffs about the middle of July to Chicago, a distant market in another State, and sold ; the remainder were shipped to St. Louis and sold; and they were shipped without notice to defendants.

Rickey, one of the plaintiffs, in his evidence states that at the time defendants refused to receive the cattle, they were dropping in the market, and had then declined one-half cent per pound ; “ that the difference between the price he sold them for and what defendants had agreed to pay, was sixteen dollars per head, after deducting expenses of shipping.”

The measure of damages, contained in the instructions given for plaintiff, required the jury, if they found for him, to assess his damages at the difference between what defendant was to pay for them, and what they actually sold for in Chicago and St. Louis, notwithstanding the evidence of one of the plaintiffs showed that at the time defendants refused to -receive the cattle and made a breach of his contract, they had declined but one-half cent per pound. The plaintiff’s evidence certainly fixes a more just rule of damages in this case, when he establishes the value of the cattle at the time the breach took place, than is laid down in the in[569]

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Bluebook (online)
63 Mo. 563, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rickey-v-tenbroeck-mo-1876.