(after stating the facts). Defendants ask for a reversal of the judgment because the court erred in the admission of evidence as to the plaintiff’s damages and because the court adopted the wrong theory as to the measure of damages. The particular instruction complained of ds instruction numbered 3, which reads as follows:
“If you should find that defendants sold plaintiff Klondyke strawberry plants, but delivered some other kind you should find for plaintiff. If lands set in these plants so bought and delivered were less valuable as a strawberry investment than if set to Klondyke plants, you should find for plaintiff the amount of such difference, considering the ordinary productive lifetime of the strawberry plant.”
This instruction must be construed with reference to the testimony upon which it was predicated, and, when so considered, it was erroneous and prejudicial to the rights of the defendant. It will be noted from the abstract of the testimony that the court tried the case on the theory that the measure of damages was the difference in value of the lease had it been set out in Klondyke plants, and what it was set out in the kind of plants actually grown on it. This was erroneous. It is true the measure of damages for the injury or destruction of trees on land is the difference in the market value of the land immediately before and immediately after the destruction of the trees. St. Louis, I. M. & S. Ry. Co. v. Ayres, 67 Ark. 371. The reason given is that it requires several years to replace trees, and that it can only be done at considerable expense. Neither is the measure of damages the same as that fixed by the court for the destruction of an annual crop, which is the actual value of the crop at the time of its destruction. Railway Company v. Yarbrough, 56 Ark. 612. Strawberry plants are what are commonly called perennial plants. They do not begin to bear until the second year after they are set out and require cultivation for the first year. Their life as a commercial, productive plant is variously estimated at from four to seven years by the witnesses. Some of them say they begin to decline rapidly in production after the third year. The plaintiff at the time he made the purchase of the strawberry plants informed the defendants of the particular kind he desired, of the locality and character of the soil where they were to be planted and of his purpose in setting them out. There was a warranty by the defendant that the plants were of the kind sold. In such cases the purchaser is entitled to recover from the seller damages for the breach of warranty. The general rule is that only such damages may be recovered as are direct and certain, or which are capable of being ascertained with a reasonable degree of certainty, and which result directly from the breach, and which may reasonably be regarded as within the contemplation of the parties at the time of the sale as the probable consequences of the breach. 35 Cyc. 405-6.
In the case of the Railway Company v. Jones, 59 Ark. 105, the court held:
“The damage to a meadow destroyed by fire is measured by the cost of reseeding it and its rental value from the time of its destruction until it is restored.”
As we have already seen, strawberries are not like cotton and com, which are planted, grown and harvested annually, nor are they like orchards, which are required to be set out and cultivated for several years before they bear fruit and which with proper care and cultivation last for a great number of years. Strawberry plants become productive the second year after they are set out and are only profitable commercially for a few years.
The evidence on the part of the plaintiff tended to show that it could not he ascertained that the plants set out were not of the Klondyke variety until after they bore fruit. Therefore, in the application of the principles above announced, we hold that the measure of damages in the instant case is the difference between the value of the crop of strawberries of the kind that was produced during the season of 1911 and the crop which would have been produced under ordinary circumstances if the plants had been Klondyke plants as represented, together with the cost of resetting the plants, the cost of recultivating and the cost of the new plants, the plaintiff having already paid for the plants which he set out. The testimony shows that the first year the plants are set out they require cultivation hut are not productive, and for this reason the plaintiff is entitled to the cost of recultivation, as stated above. See Depew v. Peck Hdw. Co., 105 N. Y. Supp. 390. In that case it was held that where seed, if true to name, would result in a perennial crop; that is, one lasting from year to year, the measure of damages is the fair value of the crop lost, or the crop which would have been produced under ordinary circumstances, if the seed had been as represented, together with the cost of reseeding, the cost of recultivation and the cost of new seed sown. To the same' effect see 30 Am. & Eng. Enc. of Law, 219.
It follows, therefore, that for the errors in giving-instruction numbered 3, quoted above, and in admitting improper evidence on the measure of damages, the judgment will he reversed, and the cause remanded for a new trial.