Saxe v. . Penokee Lumber Co.

54 N.E. 14, 159 N.Y. 371, 13 E.H. Smith 371, 1899 N.Y. LEXIS 1010
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 6, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 54 N.E. 14 (Saxe v. . Penokee Lumber Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Saxe v. . Penokee Lumber Co., 54 N.E. 14, 159 N.Y. 371, 13 E.H. Smith 371, 1899 N.Y. LEXIS 1010 (N.Y. 1899).

Opinion

Parker, Ch. J.

The Appellate Division rested its reversal of the judgment entered upon the report of the referee upon exceptions taken to the refusal of the referee to permit two questions to be answered. Unless that court rightly determined that it was error not to allow the questions to be answered, its order of reversal is without support on this review. The findings of fact made by the referee are unreversed, and are controlling here, and fully support the judgment rendered. They show that the plaintiff and the defendant entered into a contract by which the defendant agreed to deliver to the-plaintiff 4,000,000 feet of lumber, known in the trade as No. 2-cutting up and better, and that the same was to be sawn from logs the defendant was then getting out in Ashland county, Wisconsin, and to be sawn at the mills of said defendant at. Morse Station, in dimensions as directed by the plaintiff, at. $28.50 per thousand feet; said deliveries to be F. O. B. in canal^boat at Tonawanda, and all completed before Oct. 1st,, *377 1890; that the defendant failed to keep and perform its contract in that it delivered only 2,791,100 feet, leaving undelivered 1,208,900 feet, and that the market value of the lumber that the defendant agreed to deliver to the plaintiff under the contract was, at the time and place of delivery, $32.50 per thousand feet, and judgment was rendered for the difference between the contract price and such market value. The findings contain other details, including a modification of the contract as to price by which it was reduced from $28.50 to $27.50 per thousand feet. But they are all set forth in the statement of facts, and in this connection the substance only of the controlling findings are presented ; they show, as we have seen, the making of a contract, its breach, and the damage to the plaintiff, measured by the difference between the contract price and the market value at the time and place of delivery. The only opportunity for legal controversy involved in this statement relates to the measure of damages, i. e., whether the referee was right in holding that the plaintiff was entitled to recover the difference between the contract price and the market value at the time and place of delivery. That such is the general rule both in England and in this country, is beyond question, and in this state the rule has been npt only recognized but asserted on a number of occasions by the courts. In Todd, v. Gamble (148 N. Y. 382) this court said: “ The general rule for the measure of damages, in the case of a breach by a vendee in the contract for the sale of an article of merchandise at a fixed price, is the difference between the' contract price and the market value of the article on the day and at the place of delivery;” citing Gregory v. McDowel (8 Wend. 435) ; Dey v. Dox (9 Wend. 129) ; Windmuller v. Pope (107 N. Y. 674) ; Wood’s Mayne on Damages (§ 200). The principle upon which it rests is that of an indemnification of the injured party for the injury which he has sustained, and, in ordinary cases, the value in the market on the day forms the readiest and most direct method of ascertaining the measure of this indemnity. If the article is bought and sold in the market, the market price shows what pecuniary sum it *378 would take to put the plaintiff in as good a position as if the contract had been performed. (Sedgwick on Damages* §§ 243, 244.) But when there is no such standard, the damages must be estimated from other means of valuation. In Parsons v. Sutton (66 N. Y. 92) the court laid down the general rule that “The ordinary rule of damage in such case is, as already stated, the difference between the contract price and the market price at the time and place of delivery. * * * But this is not the only measure of damage to be applied where the buyer sues the seller for a breach of contract of sale. The buyer may have suffered special damage by the breach, which is of such a character that under the rules of law he is entitled to recover it.” That was a case where the plaintiff claimed that the paper the defendant had promised to furnish him was to be used as the frontispiece for the July number of the Aldine. Paper of the kind and character of that ordered was not to be found in the market, and, therefore, the plaintiff was caused to suffer injury to its reputation and in subscriptions, in that it could not carry out the promise given to the public. The evidence did not show that similar paper was not to be found in the market, or that paper of the same quality could not have been obtained from other dealers. All the defendants did was to go to dealers and try^to buy paper like that which the defendants were to deliver. It did not appear that they could not have found paper which would have substantially answered the purpose. It was with reference to that general situation that the court, after asserting that special damages may be allowed when the general rule will not furnish a full indemnification, said: “ There is another pertinent rule of damages, that the party who suffers from a breach of contract must so act as to make his damages as small as he reasonably can.” A just rule, indeed, and applied wherever needful, but one wholly without practical application to a case where the subject-matter of the contract has a market value at the time and place of delivery. Yery rarely, indeed, can there come a case where the vendee suffers special damages if, at the time and place of delivery, there was a mar *379 ket value for the article purchased by him. A market value at a given place presupposes that merchandise of that character was at that time and place sold or offered for sale, and thus the opportunity is presented the vendee of buying the article in the open market to be used for the special purpose intended, and of recovering of the defendant the difference between such market value and the contract price. But he cannot neglect to buy when he has the opportunity in the market and then charge the defendant with the special damages resulting. Hor does the law require him to buy in order to secure the damages actually sustained by a breach of the contract. It would not advantage the defaulting party if he should do so; for, if he buys at the market value, the result to the other party is the same as if he simply proved the market value. So this general rule of damages has in practical effect come to be the only rule ; as the court said in Parsons v. Sutton {supra) : “ When the. buyer can go into market and buy the article which the seller has failed to deliver, this is the only rule, as it offers the buyer full indemnity.” Turning to the findings of the referee we read that the defendant stated to the plaintiff on “ Oct. 2nd, 1890, that the lumber it was then delivering to the plaintiff under the contract shows an average value of $32.50 per thousand feet,” and “ that in fact the market value of the lumber which the defendant agreed to deliver to the plaintiff under the contract was at Tonawanda in the fall of 1890 $32.50 per thousand feet.”

This brings us to the exceptions taken to the refusal of the referee to permit Crane, who was an officer and a large owner in the defendant and also half owner of A. M. Dodge & Company, to answer certain questions.

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Bluebook (online)
54 N.E. 14, 159 N.Y. 371, 13 E.H. Smith 371, 1899 N.Y. LEXIS 1010, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/saxe-v-penokee-lumber-co-ny-1899.