concurred, substantially, in this opinion. He remarked, that the plaintiffs, by paying the 5,000 dollars, have performed all that the contract required them to do, before the receiving of the flour. As the flour was not delivered, they were not hound, by the contract, to pay any more. The defendant, on the other hand, has wholly failed of performance, at the time stipulated. He is liable for the breach ; and it will be conceded, that if the plaintiffs had done nothing, they would be entitled to judgment, with nominal damages. Shall they not now recover what they have advanced upon the contract, previous to the breach ? This sum is the actual loss, which they have sustained, by the breach. Complete justice has been done; and no new trial ought to be granted.
Edmond, Smith, Beainabd and Petees, Js. were of the same opinion. *489Hosmeb, J.This is an action on an express contract, to recover damages for its non-performance. On the 20th day of February 1812, the defendant agreed to deliver to Norton ⅜* Bush, at New-Orleans, two thousand barrels of superfine flour, on or before the 1st day oí May then next. On their part, they contracted to pay 7 dollars per barrel. Of this sum 5,000 dollars were advanced, and the residue was payable at different periods, posterior to the time prefixed for the delivery of the flour. It was not delivered, and the jury have given their verdict for damages in the sum of 6,771 dollars. At the time when the flour should have been delivered, the price of that article, at New-Orleans, was 5 dollars, 50 cents, per barrel, and no mope. The court directed the jury, that “ if they found the issues joined in favour of the plaintiffs, they should find for them to recover of the defendant 5,000 dollars, being the amount of the sum advanced by the plaintiffs to the defendant, and the interest thereof from the time the same was so advanced.” For a supposed misdirection, the defendant now applies for a new trial.
Had the contract been rescinded, in an action for money had and received to recover the sum advanced, the charge to the jury would have been precisely correct. The agreement, however, was open ; the action is founded upon it, and damages áre demanded for the breach of it. So long as the agreement is open, it must be stated specially. Weston v. Downs, Doug. 23. Towers v. Barret, 1 Term Rep. 133. 1 Chitty, 341. and the consideration paid cannot be recovered. The case of Dutch v. Warren, 1 Stra. 406. cited in 2 Burr. 1011. does not contravene, but supports, the latter branch of the above proposition. Although an action for money had and received was sustained, (in my opinion, illegally,) while the agreement remained in full force $ yet the rule of damages, deliberately settled, was, hot the money advanced, but the damages in not transferring the stock, at the time prefixed. The sum paid by the plaintiff was 262L 10s. The stocks, however, having fallen before it was to have been transferred, the verdict, being the price of stock at the infraction of the contract, was for 1751. only.
The jury should have been directed to give the plaintiffs the damages sustained by the breach of the agreement, on the day when it should have been performed. In other words, the plaintiffs were entitled to the price of the flour estimated *490at 5 dollars, 50 cents, per barrel; and on this basis, connected with the other circumstances relative to the point of damages, the verdict should have been founded, The ruis laid down, is indispensable, to give efficacy to the implied con(jjtjon attendant on every express covenant. “If l fail in my part of the agreement, I shall pay the other party such damages as he has sustained by such my neglect or refusal.” 2 Black. Comm. 443. In conformity with this, it is said by Spencer, J. in Pitcher v. Livingston, 4 Johns. Rep. 15. that “ in actions for a breach of covenant, the damages are to be estimated according to the value of the thing when the covenant was broken.’* There have been many determinations for not transferring stock pursuant to contract § and the established rule of damages is, the price of it at the time of trial, or on the day when it should havé been transferred. Shepherd v. Johnson, & East, 211. M'Arthur v. Lord Seaforth, 2 Taunt. 257, In the case of Gray v. Portland Bank, 3 Mass. Rep. 390. it is said by the court, “ that the price of stock at the time it should be transferred or delivered» (and the same rule applies to other personal property,) shall be that by which the damages shall he assessed.”
He who controverts the principle advanced in the cases cited, must supply a better. If he would sustain the charge to the jury in this case, he must contend, that for breach of contract the sum to be recovered is, not the damages sustained by the non-performance, but the consideration Which the plaintiff may have advanced. A rule so unwarranted as this, so opposed to familiar practice, and numerous decisions, so arbitrary, bearing not at all on the contract of the parties, and mistaking the very ground of the complaint, cannot be supported.
It is contended, that the plaintiffs have not recovered ft greater sum than is due to them j and that justice does not require a new trial. To this proposition I cannot accede. If the benefit derivable to the plaintiffs from a compliance with the agreement, can be ascertained, we shall possess an infallible criterion of the damages sustained, Now' the facts stated, furnish unquestionable data, and reduce the enquiiy to a mere question of calculation. The damages sustained, were, the price of the flour when the contract was first broken | that is, the. sunt of 11,000 dollars. If the contract is to *491be considered as mutual and independent, the plaintiffs are entitled to that sum, and are bound to pay the defendant 14,000 dollars, the sum stipulated for the purchase. But, if the agreement is dependent on the prior performance of the contract by the defendant, there must be deducted from the above mentioned sum, the balance which would be payable to him on deli very of the flour, that is, 9,000 dollars. The effect of this would be precisely the same, as if the flour had been delivered, and the plaintiffs had performed the agreement on their part. ⅞uacunque via data, the verdict is not conformable to legal justice. This view of the subject makes it unnecessary to consider what was the precise character of the contract.
That the plaintiffs have sustained a considerable loss on the supposed legal result, is unquestionably manifest. A fallacy has existed in not ascribing it to the right cause. It did not arise from the non-performance of the defendant’s agreement. Before the period had arisen when the flour was to have been delivered, the loss had accrued by the fall of it in the market. It is equally obvious, that the defendant had derived a correspondent benefit. The verdict of the jury, in opposition to the contract of the parties, reverses their condition. It rescues the plaintiffs from their loss, and deprives the defendant of his gain. In effect, it arbitrarily subjects the defendant to a warranty, that flour shall not sink in price, and renders him the victim of the plaintiffs’ unfortunate speculation.
It has been contended, that in as much as the defendant did not fulfil his contract, he ought not to derive a profit from it. To this I reply, that the obligations of the parties depend exclusively upon their own voluntary agreement. There was a hazard accompanying the contract. If flour rose in the market, the defendant would become, proportionally, a loser; and if it fell, he would be a gainer. The event on which the result was suspended, was favoura-ble to him ; and of this he cannot be deprived, unless it is the duty of courts to make contracts, not to enforce them.
I am dear in my opinion, that a new trial ought to be granted.
Peters, J.The rule of damages prescribed by the court on llic circuit, seems to have done substantial justice between the *492parties; as itis admitted, that in an action for money had and received, the charge would have been precisely correct. And we are now called upon to deprive the plaintiffs of a righteous verdict,and to turn them round to another form of action wherein the damages must be the same, or to another trial wherein the damages will be greater, on a mere technical objection. If, however, the rule relied on he fixed and inflexible, this must be done; and instead of fiat justiiia, our maxim must be fat lex.,..mat caelum. But with due deference to the learned opinion, which we have just heard, the rule of damages, in cases of this sort is not so much like the laws of the Medes and Persians as it has been represented. Even in Gray v. The Portland Bank, 3 Mass. Rep. 390. though Sedgwick, J. said, that « the price of personal property, at the time when it should be delivered, shall be that by which damages shall be assessed yet Sewall, J, fortified this rule by the equitable circumstances of the case — “ that the plaintiff made no payment, and after tendering it, was not obliged to deposit his money, or hold it unemployed.” But this decision, though made by two able and learned judges, is not to be considered as authority in opposition to a recent and unanimous opinion of the court of King’s Bench; whose decisions are the best evidence of the common law. I allude to the case of Shepherd v. Johnson, 2 East, 211. Which was debt on bond, conditioned to replace stock on a given day ; and the question was, whether damages should be calculated at the price when the stock was to be delivered, or on the day of trial ? The learned judge who tried the cause, was of opinion, that as the agreement had been broken, and the stock never replaced, the plaintiff was entitled to recover the larger sum, (the value on the day of trial,) and the verdict was taken accordingly, with leave to the defendant to move the court to reduce the damages. But this opinion was sanctioned by the court. Grose, J. said, “ the true measure of damages, in all these cases, is that w hich will completely indemnify the plaintiff for the breach of the engagement. If the defendant neglect to replace the stock at the day appointed, and the stock afterwards rise in value, the plaintiff can only be indemnified by giving him the price of it at the time of trial. And it is no answer to say, that the defendant may be prejudiced by the plaintiff’s delaying to bring his action; for it is his own fault that he does not perform his engage-*493uient at the time.” The same measure of damages was adopted before Lord Eldon in Payne v. Burke, Mich. T. 1799. 2 East, 213. n.
But it is said, the rule of damages in assumpsit is not applicable to this case, because here is an express contract. But in Weaver v. Bentley, 1 Caines, 47. money advanced under a sealed contract, was recovered in assumpsit ; and the court said, “ We are of opinion he (the plaintiff) had his election, either to proceed on the covenant, and recover damages for the breach, or to disaffirm the contract, and resort to his assumpsit to recover back what he had paid.” And Livingston, J. who dissented merely with respect to the form of action, said, that covenant will lie on the instrument to recover back all that has been paid.
But what can the defendant gain by a new trial ? Docs he wish to be subjected to the value of the flour, when it should have been delivered, or at the time of the trial, at the hazard of recovering the sums stipulated, without any pretence of fulfilling the contract on his part ? Or, does he expect the court will aid him in his iniquity, by giving him 3,000 dollars of the money advanced for his breach of faith ? Though the flour might have been purchased at dS'exv-Orleans, at less than the stipulated price, non constat that it would have been an unprofitable cargo in some other market. And after the plaintiffs had advanced their money, and been at the hazard and expense of a voyage to Mew-Orleans to ship it home, or to some other market, is it to be endured that the defendant should pocket their money, and bid them defiance ? « Flour, gentlemen,” says this honest defendant, “ is plenty and cheap at Mew-Orleans. You may buy it, if you can find money and credit, there, and get your money back, in Connecticut, when you can.” I take it to be well settled, that « a new-trial ought to be granted to attain real justice, but not to gratify litigious passions upon every point of summum jus”— Farewell v. Chaffey & al. 1 Burr. 54.: That “ an application for a new trial is to the discretion of the court, who ought to exercise that discretion in such manner as will best answer the ends of justice;” and where “ complete and substantial justice has been done,” tiie court will not “ send the cause down to be re-tried on a technical objection in point of law”—Edmonson v. Machell, 2 Term Rep. 4.: That 4t though the ground of the verdict should be wrong, yet if it clearly appeared to the court now, that, upon the whole, no *494injustice bad been done to the defendant 5 or if it clearly appeared to the court now, that the plaintiffs, by another form of action, could recover all they have got by this verdict; the court ought not to grant a new trial.” Foxcroft & al. v. Devonshire & al. 2 Burr. 936.
Gould and Chapman, Js. gave no opinion, having formerly been of counsel in the cause.New trial not to be granted.