Weyerhaeuser Co. v. Godwin Building Supply Co.

234 S.E.2d 605, 292 N.C. 557, 1977 N.C. LEXIS 1138
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedMay 10, 1977
Docket69
StatusPublished
Cited by47 cases

This text of 234 S.E.2d 605 (Weyerhaeuser Co. v. Godwin Building Supply Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Weyerhaeuser Co. v. Godwin Building Supply Co., 234 S.E.2d 605, 292 N.C. 557, 1977 N.C. LEXIS 1138 (N.C. 1977).

Opinion

EXUM, Justice.

We allowed this petition to determine whether a partial new trial on the issue of damages alone should be awarded in an action for breach of contract where the jury’s verdict provides no basis for ascertaining which of several theories of the breach supported its award of damages. We hold that in such a case where the measure of damages might vary according to the breach proven it is not proper to allow a partial new trial solely on the damages issue.

This case originated in an action by plaintiff Weyer-haeuser to recover payment for materials and services rendered to defendant Godwin Building Supply, Inc., (hereinafter “God-win”) pursuant to a written contract. Godwin counterclaimed for damages allegedly resulting from Weyerhaeuser’s breach of the contract. The jury found that both parties had breached the contract and awarded damages of $7,541.00 to plaintiff and $100,000.00 to defendant. Defendant did not perfect its appeal. Plaintiff’s appeal concerns only the counterclaim.

The evidence adduced at trial tended to show plaintiff contacted O. W. Godwin, Jr., president and executive manager *559 of Godwin in January 1968 for the purpose of interesting God-win in participating in the Weyerhaeuser Registered Homes Program. Negotiations resulted in the signing by both parties of a “Marketing Agreement” on May 9, 1968. Godwin proceeded to lease a site in Carpenter, North Carolina, to build a plant, equip it with machinery and materials, staff it and generally put it in readiness to begin the manufacture of components for Weyer-haeuser Registered Homes.

Not a single home was built pursuant to the agreement. Defendant’s testimony attributed this to Weyerhaeuser’s failure to find a primary investor to provide mortgage financing. There is abundant testimony that both parties anticipated that the financing of the homes would depend on Weyerhaeuser’s finding a primary investor for a 75 percent first mortgage. If agreeable to the first mortgagee, Weyerhaeuser would take a second mortgage of 15 percent. The primary investor would service both mortgages in return for a service fee paid by Weyerhaeuser. This procedure was apparently Weyerhaeuser’s general custom in financing Weyerhaeuser Registered Homes.

In this case, Godwin and others testified that he was told Weyerhaeuser would secure the first. mortgage commitments from Metropolitan Life Insurance Company. The commitments were to be provided through local correspondents, in this case Stockton White and Company for the Raleigh-Durham-Chapel Hill area and Branch Banking and Trust Company for the Wilson area. No commitments were ever provided, apparently because Metropolitan Life had withdrawn from the North Carolina market due to the effects of this state’s usury laws in an atmosphere of rising interest rates. The contract was terminated by Weyerhaeuser on October 21, 1969.

Only five issues were submitted and answered by the jury as follows:

“1. Did the plaintiff and the defendant enter into a contract as alleged in the complaint?
“Answer: Yes
“2. Did the defendant breach the contract by failing to make payments as required by the terms of said contract?
“Answer: Yes
*560 “3. What amount, if any, is the plaintiff entitled to recover of the defendant?
“Answer: $7,541.00
“4. Did the plaintiff breach the contract entered into by the plaintiff and the defendant?
“Answer: Yes
“5. What amount of damages, if any, is the defendant entitled to recover of the plaintiff?
“Answer: $100,000.00”

Judgment was entered on the verdict.

In his instructions on the fifth issue, the trial judge properly charged that “in no event may an award of damages be based on conjecture, speculation or guess.” After some elaboration on this point, however, he proceeded to give the following instruction:

“Now, recovery for the loss of future profits may be had where they are reasonably certain in character and are the proximate result of the breach of contract. The proof must pass beyond the realm of conjecture, speculation or opinion not founded on facts and must consist of actual facts which a reasonably, accurate conclusion regarding the cause and the amount of the loss can be logically and rationally determined.”

The Court of Appeals held this instruction to be error, requiring a partial new trial solely on the issue of damages on the counterclaim. We agree that the giving of the instruction was prejudicial error. The only evidence in the record even arguably pertinent to loss of future profits was testimony of two witnesses that W. T. Roetzer, an employee of Weyerhaeuser, had prepared an $800,000.00 projected budget for Godwin, showing a projected profit for the first year of $80,000.00. Instead, Mr. Godwin claimed the business actually suffered a net loss of $93,432.22 during the fiscal year ending April 30, 1969. This evidence provides no basis for an award of damages for lost profits, since any estimate of Godwin’s expected profits must on the evidence presented be based solely upon speculation.

This Court has held that such damages are allowed for breach of contract as “may reasonably be supposed to have been *561 in the contemplation of the parties when the contract was made,” Troitino v. Goodman, 225 N.C. 406, 412, 35 S.E. 2d 277, 281 (1945), or which “will compensate the injured party for the loss which fulfillment of the contract could have prevented or the breach of it has entailed,” Norwood v. Carter, 242 N.C. 152, 155, 87 S.E. 2d 2, 4 (1955). This measure has been held to include, in a proper case, damages for lost profits. Service Co. v. Sales Co., 259 N.C. 400, 131 S.E. 2d 9 (1963) ; Tillis v. Cotton Mills and Cotton Mills v. Tillis, 251 N.C. 359, 111 S.E. 2d 606 (1959).

Such damages, however, may not be awarded where the evidence permits no more than speculation. “Absolute certainty is not required but evidence of damages must be sufficiently specific and complete to permit the jury to arrive at a reasonable conclusion.” Service Co. v. Sales Co., supra at 417, 131 S.E. 2d at 22, quoting Tillis v. Cotton Mills, supra. The difficulty of showing, with any degree of reliability, either the probability of the occurrence of profits or their amount, has led to the observation that ordinarily “[i]n an action for damages for a breach of contract . . . the law will not permit mere profits, depending upon the chances of business and other contingent circumstances, and which are perhaps merely fanciful, to be considered by the jury as a part of the compensation.” Lawrence v. Stroupe, 263 N.C. 618, 622, 139 S.E. 2d 885, 887-88 (1965); Steffan v. Meiselman, 223 N.C. 154, 25 S.E. 2d 626 (1943).

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Bluebook (online)
234 S.E.2d 605, 292 N.C. 557, 1977 N.C. LEXIS 1138, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weyerhaeuser-co-v-godwin-building-supply-co-nc-1977.