Tidewater Oil Co. v. Spoerer

125 A. 601, 145 Md. 151, 1924 Md. LEXIS 64
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedFebruary 13, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 125 A. 601 (Tidewater Oil Co. v. Spoerer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tidewater Oil Co. v. Spoerer, 125 A. 601, 145 Md. 151, 1924 Md. LEXIS 64 (Md. 1924).

Opinion

Urner, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The declaration in this ease alleges that the plaintiff’s, on December 11, 1919, entered into a verbal contract with the duly authorized agents of the defendant corporation, whereby the defendant agreed to sell to the plaintiffs sixty-five carloads of oils, known as “Veedol” products, during 1920, at prices for which their expired contract in writing for a portion of the preceding year had provided, the shipments to be in monthly quantities to be designated by the plaintiffs according to the requirements of their business, and that the defendant, in violation of the agreement, has failed and refused to ship more than three of the sixty-five carloads contracted for, and that the plaintiffs, having expended large sums in advertising and procuring orders for “Veedol” products and being unable to fill the orders, and being deprived of the profits which would have resulted from the resale of the undelivered carloads, have sustained great loss and damage, for which compensation is claimed to the amount of $25,000.

The suit is resisted on the ground that the defendant never entered into the alleged verbal contract, and that, upon the plaintiffs’ own proof, it lacked the essential elements of mutuality and certainty. In connection with that defense a plea ■was filed which proposed to set-off against the plaintiffs’ claim their indebtedness to the defendant, admitted at the trial to be $4,529.18, on account of “Veedol” products ordered and delivered.

There was proof that the plaintiffs received four carloads of the oils from the defendant during the period of the alleged contract, and that under the terms of the prior agreement to which it was said to refer the plaintiffs would be entitled to a discount of twenty per cent., amounting to $434, on the average reselling price of each carload delivered and resold, as their “gross margin of profit.” This was the as *154 ■serted. loss which the plaintiffs sought to recover. The trial resulted in a verdict of $21,944.82 for the plaintiffs, which evidently and eoneededly was reached by the allowance of $434 of lost gross profit on each of sixty-one carloads of oil not delivered, making a total of $26,474 damages thus ascertained, and by the deduction from that amount of the defendant’s admitted counter-claim of $4,529.18.

The award of damages upon the basis of the twenty per cent, gross margin of profit on resales left out of consideration the fact, apparent from the undisputed proof, that in making the resales of the carloads not received the plaintiffs would have been subjected to considerable expense. Their gross profits would have been. reduced by commissions to salesmen and other charges. The amount or scale of those expenses is not shown by the evidence, but the fact that they would have been incurred is definitely proved. If the sixty-five carloads of oil which the plaintiffs claim to have purchased from the defendant had been regularly shipped and resold, their profits would have been substantially less than the amount of the twenty per cent, discount for which the contract is said to have made provision. The discount was simply an abatement of the purchase price. It was a deduction in favor of the plaintiffs, as distributors, from the list price which they, were primarily charged and for which they were to resell the oil. It Could only represent a profit to the extent to which' it exceeded the cost of making the resales. The damages recoverable for the breach of the contract should be measured by the “loss directly and naturally resulting, in the ordinary course of events,” from the breach (Uniform Sales Act, sec. 67; Code, art. 83, sec. 88), but the amount of that loss could not be justly estimated as equivalent to a nominal profit which the expense of the resales would inevitably and appreciably reduce.

In regard to the rule as to compensatory damages, it is said in 8 R. C. L. 434: “Since one who has been injured by the breach of a contract or the commission of a tort is entitled to just and adequate compensation for such injury and no more, it follows that his recovery must be limited to *155 -a fair compensation and indemnity for Ms injury and loss. And in no case should the injured party be placed in a better position than he would be in had the wrong not been done, or the contract not been broken.”

When this suit was brought, only a few’ months of the contract year had expired, and yet the plaintiffs were awarded as damages the full amount of the specified discount on the resale price of defaulted shipments for the entire year, notwithstanding the fact that they were relieved of the resale expenses which they would necessarily have incurred if the contract had been duly performed. The stipulated discount was, therefore, not the proper measure of the loss sustained by the plaintiffs as the result of the defendant’s failure to make the deliveries of oil to which they claim to have been entitled. Consequently, the damages awarded by the verdict were calculated upon an erroneous theory, and were in excess of any loss which the plaintiff's appear to have suffered. Whether that result was promoted by any of the rulings to which exceptions were reserved is a question yet to be considered.

In support of the defendant’s contention that there was no such contract as the declaration alleged, and that it was liable only with respect to individual orders specifically given and accepted, an instruction was requested to the effect that the plaintiffs could recover only such damages, if any, as the jury might find they suffered by reason of the failure or refusal of the defendant to deliver goods “on orders given by the plaintiffs and accepted by the defendant,” and that as against such damages could be set off such sum as the plaintiffs might be found to owe the defendant for goods sold and delivered to them and for which they had not paid. This prayer was refused as offered, but was granted after the court had stricken out the words “on orders given by the plaintiffs and accepted by the defendant,” the effect of this change being to authorize the jury to award the plaintiffs such damages as they might be found to have sustained by reason of the defendant’s failure to deliver goods to them, after deducting-the amount of the defendant’s counter-claim. As thus modi *156 fled, the instruction was converted from one purporting to define and restrict the right of recovery to one relating solely to the subject of damages. In submitting that question the altered instruction left the measure of damages wholly undefined. No reasonable complaint of that omission could be made by the defendant if its prayer had been so framed when offered. But it was changed to a damage prayer by an act of the court”to which the defendant objected. The omission of the instruction, after its modification, to define the measure of recoverable damages, is, therefore, a defect of which the defendant is entitled to complain, if there was any resulting injury to its interest. The instruction had a tendency to prejudice the defendant by expressly and generally permitting the recovery of damages without giving the jury any information as to the proper basis of their award. Bernstein v. Merkel, 126 Md. 459. There was no other instruction by which that fault was corrected. In the absence of such a direction, the jury felt at liberty to -base their verdict upoii the inaccurate measure of damages which they adopted.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Atkinson Warehousing & Distribution, Inc. v. Ecolab, Inc.
99 F. Supp. 2d 665 (D. Maryland, 2000)
Arthur Treacher's Fish & Chips of Fairfax, Inc. v. Chillum Terrace Ltd. Partnership
347 A.2d 568 (Court of Special Appeals of Maryland, 1975)
Scarlett v. Young
185 A. 129 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1936)
Woodcock v. Pope
140 A. 76 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1928)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
125 A. 601, 145 Md. 151, 1924 Md. LEXIS 64, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tidewater-oil-co-v-spoerer-md-1924.