Thrift Oil & Gas Co. No. 2 v. Newton

227 S.W. 495, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 584
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 5, 1921
DocketNo. 1736.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 227 S.W. 495 (Thrift Oil & Gas Co. No. 2 v. Newton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thrift Oil & Gas Co. No. 2 v. Newton, 227 S.W. 495, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 584 (Tex. Ct. App. 1921).

Opinions

On December 10, 1918, the appellee, J. C. Newton, made application to the Thrift Oil Gas Company No. 2, an unincorporated joint-stock association, for the purchase of a share of the stock of said association, of the par value of $100, agreeing to pay therefor one $100 Liberty Bond of the Fourth Issue. The bond had been subscribed and fully paid for through the Security State Bank Trust Company of Lubbock, Tex., but at the time of the application had not been received by the said bank, it being expected that the bond would be in the hand about January 1, 1919. The oil and gas company accepted an order on the bank for the delivery of the bond to it when received by the bank. The bond was received some time in the early part of January, 1919, and mailed to the Thrift Oil Gas Company No. 2 on January 8, 1919, as had been directed by said company in its acceptance of the application and the order. The bond was returned by the association to the bank within about a week and was soon thereafter sold by the appellee at something less than par, from $96 to $97.50. On March 26, 1919, said Newton filed suit in the county court of Lubbock county for damages for the breach of said contract, alleging that the value of the stock at such time was $200. Said suit was later dismissed and this suit filed in the district court of Lubbock county, on the 13th day of May, 1919, in which it was alleged that the market and actual value of the share of stock in said association was at said time the sum of $2,000, and plaintiff prayed for damages on such basis. On the trial plaintiff offered evidence which the trial court held admissible, under an agreement hereinafter mentioned, to establish the value of the stock and from which it appeared that on April 30, 1919, the value of one share of said stock was $950 and on May 9, 1919, $1,550. The court instructed the jury to find for the plaintiff in the sum of $1,500 and rendered judgment on the verdict for such amount, and this appeal is from this judgment.

The judgment was based on the theory that plaintiff was entitled to recover damages measured by the highest value of the stock shown to have obtained between the date of the breach of the contract and the time of the trial, and the principal question in the *Page 496 case is as to whether this measure of damages is applicable in this instance. The Texas courts, at an early day, approved the rule that the vendee, on breach by the vendor of a contract for sale of personal property, where he had paid the purchase price in advance, might recover as damages the differance between the contract price and the highest value of the property between the date of breach and the trial, provided the suit was brought within a reasonable time; and this rule has been followed by later decisions. Randon v. Barton, 4 Tex. 290; Calvit v. McFadden, 13 Tex. 324; Heilbroner v. Douglass, 45 Tex. 402; S. A. A. P. Ry. Co. v. Wilson, 23 S.W. 282; Johnson v. Miller, 163 S.W. 593. The appellant contends that the rule should not be applied in this case because the reasons for the rule do not exist in a case where the consideration was returned to and accepted by the vendee. So far as we are informed, the very question presented by this contention has not been decided by the courts of this state or any of the other courts that adhere to this rule of damages, so it becomes necessary to consider the authorities which announce this principle at such length as may be necessary to determine the reasons upon which the rule is founded and whether they are so applicable to the facts of this case as would justify us in applying the rule here.

In Randon v. Barton, 4 Tex. 290, the question arose on a contract for the sale of land certificates, where the purchase price was paid in advance. The suit was for specific performance and damages in the alternative. The court, in the course of its reasoning in favor of rule of highest value, argues that the plaintiff would have a right to specific performance if the defendant were in position to deliver the certificates and that if the defendant, by his wrong, is not able to do this, such inability ought not to avail him, but that he should make such compensation as would completely indemnify the plaintiff by enabling him to go into the market at the time of the trial and purchase the certificates which defendant had agreed to sell him. In the course of the opinion the court quotes the following from an English decision [Shepherd v. Johnson, 2 East, 211]:

"The true measure of damages, in all these cases, is that which will completely indemnify the plaintiff for the breach of the engagement. * * * Suppose a bill were filed in equity for a specific performance of an agreement to replace stock on a given day, which had not been done at the time; would not a court of equity compel the party to replace it at the then price of stock, if the market had risen in the meantime ?"

In Calvit v. McFadden, 13 Tex. 324, the reason given for the court's adherence to the rule is that the vendee, by paying the purchase price in advance, has thereby diminished his ability to go into the market and procure the property in satisfaction of the contract. Both of the cases refer as authority to the case of Clark v. Pinney, 7 Cow. (N.Y.) 681, which is one of the earliest and the leading American case applying this rule of damages. This case relies on certain English cases for authority, in support of the rule. We do not have access to the English cases referred to, but must depend on the New York case for our knowledge of the facts and holdings therein. We will refer briefly to some of these. In the earliest case referred to, Shepherd v. Johnson, 2 East, 211, the action was on a bond for the replacement of stock which had been loaned by the plaintiff to the principal in the bond under agreement for return at a certain time, and it was held that the plaintiff was entitled to recover the value of the stock on the day of the trial. In the case of Gainsford v. Carroll, 2 Barn. Cres. 624, the suit was for a breach of a contract for the delivery of a quantity of bacon. The plaintiff had not paid the purchase price in advance but claimed, under the authority of the stock case already referred to, and other cases following, it as his measure of damages, the difference between the contract price and the price on the day of the trial. "But it was answered by the court that these cases did not apply. That in the case of a loan of stock the borrower holds in his hands the money of the lender and thereby prevents him from using it for the purpose of replacing the stock, but in the case of a purchaser of goods the vendee is in possession of his money and he has it in his power, as soon as the vendor has failed in the performance of his contract, to purchase other goods of a like quantity and description, and if he has sustained any loss by neglecting to do so, it is his own fault." This line of reasoning is taken by the New York court to be a recognition of the principle and an intimation that it would be applicable if the consideration for the bacon had been paid in advance. Said court, in discussing the case of Gray v. President Portland Bank,3 Mass. 364, 3 Am.Dec. 156, where no payment had been made for the stock contracted for and which contract was made the basis of the action, and distinguishing said case from those cases where payment was made in advance, says:

"In that case, Mr. Gray had not paid his money for the stock which the defendants refused to transfer to him.

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227 S.W. 495, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 584, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thrift-oil-gas-co-no-2-v-newton-texapp-1921.