Stanley Manly Boys' Clothes Inc. v. Hickey

259 S.W. 160, 113 Tex. 482, 1924 Tex. LEXIS 69
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 12, 1924
DocketNo. 3926.
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 259 S.W. 160 (Stanley Manly Boys' Clothes Inc. v. Hickey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stanley Manly Boys' Clothes Inc. v. Hickey, 259 S.W. 160, 113 Tex. 482, 1924 Tex. LEXIS 69 (Tex. 1924).

Opinion

Mr.. Judge POWELL

delivered the opinion of the commission of appeals, section B.

*483 This cause is before the Supreme Court upon the following certificate from the Honorable Court of Civil Appeals for the First District :

“The question hereinafter stated, which we deem it advisable to certify for your decision, arises upon a statement of the facts appearing from the record of this cause in this court, as follows:

“The appellant in this court, as plaintiff below, sued the appellee here, as defendant below, upon an account for goods and merchandise sold and delivered by it to appellee, in the amount of $364.50. The appellee, after admitting receipt of the goods in the amount so declared upon and the fact that they had not been paid for, by cross-action reconvened for damages alleging that appellant had, on May 23, 1919, contracted to sell appellee a bill of goods amounting in all to the sum of $1201.50, to be delivered to him on August 1, 1919, or within reasonable time thereafter, with the understanding that he was to pay for the same on November 1, 1919; that after having delivered to him the $364.50 worth of the goods, appellant breached the contract on September 15, 1919, and refused to deliver to appellee the remaining $837.00 worth of the clothing called for in the contract, unless he would then pay cash for this remaining balance and also pay for the $364.50 worth he had already received; that at that time he had been unable to meet either of these requirements, but could have paid for the entire bill on November 1, 1919,.as agreed; that the price of the goods on the open market was much higher on September 15th, than on May 23rd, and that he suffered special damages by the refusal of the appellant to deliver to him the balance of $837.00 worth of the goods as stipulated.

“The fact issues embodying these answering averments of appellee in cross-action, under testimony by himself to the effect that ‘At the time plaintiff breached the contract, I had a stock of merchandise in my store which was worth about $12,000.00, and I had a tract of land left by my father that was worth about $5,000.00; I did not have the money to pay for the goods already delivered, neither did I have the money to pay for the undelivered clothing, and I did not try to borrow the money,’ were submitted to a jury and answered favorably to him; the trial court, in response to the verdict, entered judgment in set-off in his behalf for damages for the failure of the appellant to deliver the balance due of the goods as per contract, on the basis of the difference in market value of such balance of the goods on May 23, 1919, the date of the contract, and on September 15, 1919, the date of the breach by appellant.

“In these circumstances we propound the following question:

“Under the facts so alleged and testified to by the appellee, all of which must in the state of the evidence be taken in this court as true, was he entitled, as the measure of his damages, on account of appellant’s breach of its contract with him to deliver the balance of the *484 goods called for, to recover the difference between the contract price of the undelivered portion of the goods he bought, and their value at the time of the seller’s breach of the agreement to deliver them to him? In this connection, we call attention to the case of Hickey v. Perkins Dry Goods Company, 229 S. W., 951, decided by this court.”

In an action involving a cross-action for damages of the kind we have here, it is well settled that:

“Where a party is entitled to the benefit of a contract and can save himself from a loss arising from a breach of it at a trifling expense or with reasonable exertions, it is his duty to do it, and he can charge the delinquent with such damages only as with reasonable endeavors and expense he could not prevent. Wicker v. Hoppock, 6 Wall., 94 (73 U. S., 18 L. Ed., 752); Miller v. Mariner’s Church, 7 Greenl. (Me.), 56; Russell v. Butterfield, 21 Wend., 304; Ketchell v. Burns, 24 Wend., 457; U. S. v. Burnham, 1 Mason, 57; Taylor v. Read, 4 Paige, 571.” Warren v. Stoddart, 105 U. S., 224, 26 Law Ed., 1117.”

In line with this principle, it was the duty of Hickey to go upon the open market and buy these goods if he could do so. The jury and trial court awarded him as damages the additional amount these goods would have cost him in the open market over and above his contract price thereon with appellant. It is practically the universal rule that such a measure of damages is correct. For instance, in the ease of Deere v. Lewis, 51 Ill., 254, the Supreme Court of that State says:

“The rule adopted by this court, proceeds upon the ground that, if the vendor fails to deliver, the vendee can go into the market and purchase the same goods or chattels to supply his demands, and if he has to pay a higher price, he is injured to that extent by the breach of the contract, and may compel the vendor to make it good, by a recovery of that sum as damages.”

But, appellant contends that appellee was not entitled to this measure of damages because it was willing, after breaching its contract to sell Hickey on credit, to sell him the goods at contract price for cash; that it was the duty of Hickey, in order to mitigate the company’s damages arising from its breach of its own contract, to buy from it for cash; and, if he did not have the cash, he must borrow it if possible.

The Court of Civil Appeals, in its certificate herein, refers to its own former decision in the case of Hickey v. Perkins Dry Goods Company, 229 S. W., 951. In that ease, Chief Justice Pleasants held that the vendee must buy for cash from the vendor who had breached his original contract with that very vendee, if such vendee had the cash available for such purchase at the time; that, his measure of damages would then be interest on this cash from its premature payment to the time it was to be paid under the terms of the original contract. The Court of Civil Appeals, in making'that decision, relied largely *485 upon the opinion of Justice Lurton, then on the Circuit Court of Appeals, in the case of Lawrence v. Porter, 11 C. C. A., 27, 63 Fed., 62, 26 L. R. A., 167. Judge Burton’s opinion supports Judge Pleas-ants’, as do the authorities cited. But, Judge Lurton, in his case, as well as Judge Pleasants, in his case, expressly declined to pass upon the duty of the vendee to buy for cash when he has no cash and can obtain it, if at all, only by borrowing it. The New York court also expressly declined to pass upon such a question.

In the case at bar, Hickey testified that he had no cash to buy these goods for cash from appellant; that he did not try to borrow the money. The jury found his statements to be true. Therefore, the appellant in this case is asking the courts to go farther than Judge Lurton or any of the other judges in the cases cited by Judge Pleas-ants, in the opinion aforesaid, have gone.

For this reason, it does not become necessary for us to pass upon the correctness of the rule announced by Judge Pleasants in the case of Hickey v. Perkins Dry Goods. Company, supra. We do not do so. That case did not reach the Supreme Court. But, we will say that we entertain very grave doubt as to its correctness.

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Bluebook (online)
259 S.W. 160, 113 Tex. 482, 1924 Tex. LEXIS 69, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stanley-manly-boys-clothes-inc-v-hickey-tex-1924.