Schopflocher v. Zimmerman

Defendant agreed to sell and plaintiff to buy 200 cases of straw braid, delivery F.O.B. New York, shipment to be made from China during September, October and November, 1919. November passed, and shipment was not made. The market price of the commodity in New York was high during November and December and for some time thereafter. Following the early part of February, 1920, it fell. The record does not contain the evidence, but there is a summary of its effect. By concession it warranted the jury in finding that the goods, if shipped on November 30, 1919, by the usual means of transportation contemplated by the parties, would have arrived in New York city in the latter part of February or in March, 1920. The trial judge instructed the jury that the damages were to be computed according to the market prices prevailing when delivery was due. The result was a verdict for little more than a nominal amount. The plaintiff insists that damages should have been computed according to the prices prevailing when shipment should have been made.

By Personal Property Law ([Cons. Laws, ch. 41] § 148, subd. 3): "Where there is an available market for the goods in question, the measure of damages, in the absence of special circumstances showing proximate damages of a greater amount, is the difference between the contract price and the market or current price of the goods at the time or times when they ought to have been delivered, or, if no time was fixed, then at the time of the refusal to deliver." The plaintiff insists that the time when delivery ought to be made cannot be deemed to be fixed under a contract unless stated in so many words, though the time of shipment is prescribed and though data are supplied by which the period of transportation can be measured. We think this is too narrow a *Page 510 reading of the meaning of the statute. Id certum est quod certumreddi potest. The plaintiff's reading if it were to prevail, would apply to shipments from England as well as to those from China. It would apply to shipments by rail as well as to those by water. In that view, a contract involving carriage from New York to San Francisco, shipment to be made on a designated day, would leave the time of delivery indefinite, no matter how certain might be the duration of the transit. Cases may, indeed, be imagined where by reason of war or for other causes the transit cannot be measured within limits reasonably determinate. Such is not the case before us. Here, by concession, the verdict rendered by the jury is supported by the evidence. The precedents are meagre. Those that are closest in analogy are in accord with our conclusion (Melachrino v. Nickoll, 1920, 1 K.B. 693).

Situations, more or less cognate, have been considered in the briefs of counsel. They are mentioned only to exclude them. The question is not here as to the application of the statute to contracts calling for shipment and delivery within a reasonable time without other specification. When such a case arises, there will be need to determine the rule of computation. So also the question is not here whether the plaintiff would have been at liberty at the end of November, 1919, to make another or forward contract, and charge the defendant with the overplus of cost (cf. Williston Sales, §§ 587, 588, 599). Nothing of the kind was done.

The plaintiff has been awarded the value that would have come to him through the performance of the contract if performance had followed according to its terms. Upon the record before us, he is entitled to no more.

The judgment should be affirmed with costs.

HISCOCK, Ch. J., McLAUGHLIN, CRANE, ANDREWS and LEHMAN, JJ., concur; POUND, J., absent.

Judgment affirmed. *Page 511