Schiavi Mobile Homes, Inc. v. Gironda

463 A.2d 722, 36 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 1190, 1983 Me. LEXIS 766
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedJuly 29, 1983
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 463 A.2d 722 (Schiavi Mobile Homes, Inc. v. Gironda) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schiavi Mobile Homes, Inc. v. Gironda, 463 A.2d 722, 36 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 1190, 1983 Me. LEXIS 766 (Me. 1983).

Opinion

NICHOLS, Justice.

The principal issue in this appeal involves a retailer’s duty to mitigate damages following a customer’s breach of a contract for the purchase from the retailer of a mobile home.

On January 23, 1979, the Defendants, Frank Gironda, Jr., and Patricia Gironda, signed a contract with the Plaintiff, Schiavi Mobile Homes, Inc., for the purchase from that corporation of a yellow, two-bedroom mobile home for a total purchase price of $23,028.69. The Defendants paid a $1,000 deposit.

After undergoing difficulties — medical, financial and marital — the Defendants breached the purchase contract. In September 1979, Howard Palmer, an agent of Schiavi, contacted Frank Gironda, Sr., the father of Frank, Jr. Palmer asked if Frank, Jr., was still planning to purchase the mobile home. Frank Gironda, Sr., responded that because of his son’s problems and his son’s relocation to the West Coast, he did not know what he planned to do. Frank, Sr., then asked Palmer if he could purchase the home so his son would not lose his deposit. He expressed a willingness to mortgage his own home for this purpose. Palmer responded that this would not be necessary.

On November 7, 1979, the Plaintiff sold this mobile home to a third party for $22,-000, and then commenced this action in *724 Superior Court, Oxford County, seeking from the Defendants $4,800 in lost profits and interest expense allegedly incurred as a result of the Defendants’ breach. Following a jury-waived trial, the Superior Court awarded the Plaintiff judgment in the amount of $759.45. 1 Thereupon the Plaintiff appealed, asserting that it was entitled to recover lost profits and greater incidental damages. The Defendants cross-appealed, contending first, that the sale contract was unconscionable and invalid, and second, that the Superior Court erred in awarding any damages in light of the Plaintiff’s failure to mitigate. We deny the appeal and sustain the cross-appeal.

The determinative issue in this case concerns the retailer’s alleged failure to mitigate damages. At trial only one witness, Frank Gironda, Sr., was called. The father testified as to his conversation with Palmer, in which he expressed his willingness to purchase the mobile home. Although admitting that he did not at that time have ready cash sufficient to cover the cost of the home, he testified that he owned a $30,000 house free and clear and had been ready to mortgage it for that purpose. Questioned by the court as to his willingness to purchase the mobile home in place of his son, the witness testified that he told Palmer that he was willing to buy the mobile home if his son could not be found. He said, “That’s the way we operate in our family, Your Honor.”

The Plaintiff presented no evidence on the issue of mitigation. After argument by counsel, the Superior Court ruled from the bench that the Plaintiff had not failed to properly mitigate damages, because the offer by the Defendant’s father was conditional and vague. 2 In so ruling, the court misapplied the doctrine of mitigation.

It has long been the rule in this state that when a contract is breached, the nonbreach-ing party has an affirmative duty to take reasonable steps to mitigate his damages. As early as 1830 this Court declared that if a party “has it in his power to take measures, by which his loss may be less aggravated, this will be expected of him.” Miller v. Mariner's Church, 7 Me. 51, 55 (1830). Similarly, in Grindle v. Eastern Express Company we stated that:

[T]he law makes it incumbent upon a person for whose injury another is responsible, to use ordinary care and take all reasonable measures within his knowledge and power to avoid the loss and render the consequences as light as may be; and it will not permit him to recover for such losses as by such care and means might have been prevented.

67 Me. 317, 325 (1877). 3

The common law duty to mitigate damages survives Maine’s enactment of the Uniform Commercial Code in 1963. While the U.C.C. does not explicitly require the mitigation of damages, it does provide that “principles of law and equity” not displaced shall supplement the Code’s provisions. 11 M.R.S.A. § 1-103 (1964). The duty to mitigate is also implicit in the Code’s broad requirements of good faith, commercial rea *725 sonableness and fair dealing. See American National Bank and Trust Company of Chicago v. Weyerhaeuser Company, 692 F.2d 455, 468 (7th Cir.1982); 11 M.R.S.A. §§ 1-203, 2-103 (1964); see also 11 M.R. S.A. § 1-106, Comment 1 (1964) (“damages must be minimized”). 4

The touchstone of the duty to mitigate is reasonableness. The nonbreaching party need only take reasonable steps to minimize his losses; he is not required to unreasonably expose himself to risk, humiliation or expense. 5

In the instant case the Superior Court never focused directly on the reasonableness of the Plaintiff’s failure to pursue the offer of Frank Gironda, Sr., to purchase the mobile home in the place of his son. Instead the court solely concerned itself with the legal sufficiency of the father’s offer. This approach was fraught with error.

First, the father’s announced willingness to purchase the mobile home was conditioned only on his son not being found; that is, upon there being a breach of the son’s contractual obligation. That was the same contingency from which arose the Plaintiff’s duty to mitigate. As soon as that duty to mitigate arose, the Plaintiff had available to it a then unconditional willingness on the father’s part to buy the mobile home.

Second, the father asked the Plaintiff if he could purchase the mobile home in place of his son, and at the time he was ready, willing and able to make the purchase. We cannot agree with the Superior Court’s conclusion that the father’s offer was too vague to have constituted the foundation for a binding contract when accepted by the Plaintiff.

In any event, the duty to mitigate is more than just a duty to accept legally enforceable offers. Upon learning of the Defendants’ breach, the Plaintiff was obligated to take reasonable affirmative measures to keep its losses to a minimum. Palmer’s conversation with Frank Gironda, Sr., in September, 1979, revealed that he had a party willing to pay the full price of the mobile home. Regardless of whether the father actually made a valid “offer,” the retailer had a duty to pursue this opportunity to minimize the effects of the breach. Instead, the Plaintiff waited another two months and then sold the home for $1,028.-69 less than Frank Gironda, Sr., was willing to pay.

There is no evidence in the record that the Plaintiff’s failure to sell to its customer’s father rested on any legitimate ground.

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463 A.2d 722, 36 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 1190, 1983 Me. LEXIS 766, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schiavi-mobile-homes-inc-v-gironda-me-1983.