Standard Supply Co. v. Carter Harris

62 S.E. 150, 81 S.C. 181, 1908 S.C. LEXIS 241
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedAugust 13, 1908
Docket6994
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 62 S.E. 150 (Standard Supply Co. v. Carter Harris) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Standard Supply Co. v. Carter Harris, 62 S.E. 150, 81 S.C. 181, 1908 S.C. LEXIS 241 (S.C. 1908).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Woods.

The complaint alleges an indebtedness of the defendants to the plaintiff of three hundred and seventeen dollars and twenty cents, the price of a lot of roofing and a twelve by fourteen Clarke engine. The answer, as a counterclaim], sets up damages to the amount of nineteen hundred ninety-five dollars for breach of contract of sale. The appeal is from an order of the Circuit Judge overruling a demurrer to' the answer.

Shortly stated, the substantial allegations of the answer on which the counterclaim rests are: The defendants, merchants, doing a large credit business at Elliotts, S. C., installed 'a cotton ginnery, so that they might not only make a direct profit from- ginning cotton, but also facilitate their collections by having the first opportunity to purchase the cotton and cotton seed of their debtors. On 12th April, 1906, the plaintiffs, for value, contracted to deliver to defendants one twelve by fourteen Clarke engine on or before 1st August, 1906, intended to' furnish the power for defendants’ ginnery for the season of 1906. The ginning season begins about the middle of August. Though fully informed of the injury that would result to defendants’ business from a delay in the delivery of the engine, yet plaintiff did not deliver it until about 26th September, 1906.

The specifications of damage are thus set out in the answer; “The defendants were unable to' operate their said ginnery for more than forty days of the best part of the cotton ginning season of 1906, during which time a very large per cent, of the cotton crop was ginned; that the *183 money invested in their said cotton ginning plant was idle and unproductive during said time; that by reason of their inability to operate their said cotton ginnery they were caused to lose all of the large patronage and the profits of the same, which was previously theirs, which was assured them and which they would have gotten', during said time, part of which profits they have never recovered; that a considerable part of said patronage was persons who owed accounts to defendants, and they were deprived of the first opportunity, and in many cases of any opportunity, to buy the cotton of such debtors, which caused considerable injury to their collections; that by being thus thrown out of the first contract with a quantity of cotton and cotton seed which would have -come to their ginnery, as the same was prepared for market, they lost the purchase of the same and profits thereof; that the good-will of defendants’ cotton ginning business was greatly damaged and injured by reason of said delay, all to the hurt, damage and injury of the defendants in the sum of nineteen hundred 'and ninety-five dollars.”

The Circuit Judge was undoubtedly right in holding the allegations of the counterclaim stated a cause of action for the rental value of the ginnery plant, for the period that the plaintiff’s delay in the delivery of the engine kept it idle.

It is true, as plaintiff contends, defendants cannot recover remote, contingent or speculative damages, based on profits they hoped to make. Harwood ads. Tappan & Noble, 2 Speer, 551; Sitton v. McDonald, 26 S. C., 68; Mood v. Tel. Co., 40 S. C., 524, 19 S. E., 67; Colvin v. Oil Mill, 66 S. C., 61, 44 S. E., 380; Hays v. Tel. Co., 70 S. C., 16, 48 S. E., 608, 67 L. R. A., 481; Howard v. Stillwell Co., 139 U. S., 199, 35 L. Ed., 147. But if the defendant proves his allegations that the operation of the ginnery depended on plaintiff’s delivery of the engine at the time agreed on, that this was fully explained to plaintiff when the contract was made, and that the failure of the plaintiff to comply with *184 its contract prevented the operation of the ginnery, then there can not be a doubt of the liability oí the plaintiff for the 'direct damages which resulted from the ginnery plant being idle. These damages would be the value of the use of the plant for the period of inactivity due to plaintiff’s delay in delivering the engine. The general rule, well supported by authority and the fairest that could be adopted, is that damages for the wrongful deprivation of the use of specific property are to be measured by its rental value. Harwood ads. Tappan & Noble, Speer, 551; Martin v. Ry. Co., 70 S. C., 8, 48 S. E., 616; Cannon v. Hunt (Ga.), 38 S. E., 983; Griffin v. Colver (N. Y.), 69 Am. Dec., 718; Brownkell et al. v. Chapman (Ia.), 51 N. W., 249; Boyle v. Reeder, 23 N. C., 607; Williams v. Milling Co. (Ore.), 37 P., 49; Brown v. Foster, 51 Pa. St., 165; Central Trust Co. of N. Y. v. Arctic Ice Mach. Co., etc. (Md.), 26 Atl., 492; Wing et al. v. U. S. Fidelity & G. Co. (N. Y.), 150 Fed., 672; Hutchinson Mfg. Co. v. Pinch (Mich.), 30 Am. St., 463; Koof v. Tull, 70 Ill., 420; Livermore F. & M. Co. v. Union S. & C. Co. (Tenn.), 58 S. W., 270.

This rule rests- on the same reason as the rule that the measure of the vendee’s damage for complete breach of the contract for the delivery of goods is the difference between the contract price and -the market price. That reason is, that things are worth' what they will bring in the market, not what the party concerned may think they ought to bring. But when, in breach of contract for the sale of goods by a final refusal to deliver, there is no market value by which the damages may be definitely ascertained, it would be unjust and absurd’ to say the recovery must be limited to nominal damages. The damages then from the necessity of the case must be ascertained by inquiry into the value of the article to the injured party. A familiar application of this rule is the allowance to a passenger of the value to him of baggage lost by a carrier. Turner v. Ry. Co., 75 S. C., 58, 54 S. E., 825, 7 L. R. A. (N. S.), 188, n. Many other *185 conditions to which the rule is applicable appear in the cases cited in note to So. Exp. Co. v. Owens, 9 A. & E. Ann. Cas., 1148, and Todd v. Gamble (N. Y.), 52 L. R. A., 227. In Hydraulic, etc., Co. v. McHaffie, 4 Q. B. D., 670, the plaintiffs were under contract to deliver a certain machine by a certain time, and the defendants contracted with them: to malee a certain part of the machine, called a gun. Owing to the delay of the defendants in making the gun, the plaintiffs were unable to comply with their contract and the machine was left on their hands. It was held the plaintiffs were entitled to recover from defendants the loss of their profit on the machine and their expenditures uselessly incurred in making other parts of the machine.

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Bluebook (online)
62 S.E. 150, 81 S.C. 181, 1908 S.C. LEXIS 241, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/standard-supply-co-v-carter-harris-sc-1908.