The plaintiff sued defendant to recover damages for failing to deliver two thousand bushels of wheat to plaintiff under a verbal agreement. The plaintiff had judgment, and the defendant has appealed. The principal error of which defendant complains is in respect to the action of the trial court in instructing the jury that if they believed from the evidence that about the first day of August, 1891, defendant entered into an agreement with the plaintiff by the terms of which agreement defendant sold to plaintiff one thousand bushels of wheat at seventy-four cents per bushel to be delivered on board the Chicago & Alton railroad cars at Mt. Leonard station, said wheat to be paid for on a basis of seventy-four cents for number 2 wheat, St. Louis weights and grades to govern, and that as a part of the consideration for said wheat plaintiff agreed to furnish defendant with sacks to-handle said wheat, and that plaintiff did as. a part performance of his agreement furnish defendant with said sacks within a reasonable time after requested so to do by defendant; and that defendant on or about the twenty-first day of August, 1891, refused to comply with his said agreement, and refused .to deliver said wheat, and did on or about, said date notify the plaintiff that he declined to deliver said wheat, then your finding must be for the plaintiff, and you will assess his damages at the difference between the price agreed to be paid by the contract and the market value of the wheat at Mt. Leonard on the day defendant refused to deliver the wheat to plaintiff, not exceeding in amount the sum of $200.
The abstracts are entirely barren of any evidence tending to show'that the plaintiff and defendant entered’ into an agreement, by the terms of which the defendant sold to plaintiff one thousand bushels of wheat at seventy-*390four cents per bushel. There was no evidence whatever to warrant the submission of the case to the jury upon such an hypothesis. Again the uncontradicted evidence shows that there was no market price for wheat at Mt. Leonard, the place where the defendant had agreed to make delivery under the terms of the sale. Such being the conceded fact, how could the court tell the jury, as it did, that if they found for plaintiff that they should “assess Ms damages at the difference between the price agreed to be paid by the contract and the market value of the' wheat at Mt. Leonard on the day defendant refused to deliver it.” It is quite true that the ordinary measure of damages is the difference between the contract price and the market price of the goods at the time and place where they should be delivered. Griffith v. Const. Co., 46 Mo. App. 539; White v. Saulsbury, 33 Mo. 150; Koeltz v. Bachman, 46 Mo. 320; Northup v. Cook, 39 Mo. 208; Rickey v. Tenbroek, 63 Mo. 563; Harrison Wire Co. v. Hardware Co., 97 Mo. 289. But where the goods have no market price at the place of delivery, the market price at the place to which they were to be sent, less the cost of transportation, is the measure of their value at the place of delivery. Sedgwick on Damages [8 Ed.] sec. 246; Benjamin on Sales [American notes by Bennett] 859, and cases there cited; Johnson v. Allen, 78 Ala. 387. There was no evidence whatever offered showing the costs of transportation of wheat per bushel from Mt. Leonard to St. Louis where it was to be sent. So that the rule declared by the court for the government of the jury in that regard was inapplicable under the facts which the evidence conduced to prove.
Again the undisputed evidence was that the defendant agreed to sell the plaintiff his crop of wheat. He did not agree to deliver a specific number of bushels, *391but only so many bushels of good, sound wheat as his crop would yield when subsequently threshed. If it graded number 2, then he was to receive seventy-five cents per bushel; if it should turn out, upon inspection, to be of a different grade, then no price was fixed. But this did not establish a price for the wheat if the grade was other than number 2. Now there was no evidence of the quality of defendant’s wheat. The plaintiff had never seen it. It was not shown what it graded, or would have graded, in the market. There was an utter absence of evidence touching its quantity. Tet the court by its instruction directed the jury to find the difference between what the plaintiff agreed to pay for it and its market value in St. Louis. It may not have graded in St. Louis number 2. It may have been of a much lower grade. The instruction assumed that the defendant’s wheat was number 2 in grade, when there was not a syllable of evidence tending to prove it. If it was number 3, then it would have been worth, as the plaintiff testified, from four to six cents less per bushel. This would have reduced the amount of the damages claimed that much. We must condemn this instruction as asserting a rule inapplicable to the facts which the evidence tended to prove. It should not have been given.
As the cause will be remanded it is proper to remark that the cause of action is not based upon a written contract, but, if it were, the written proposition or offer of the plaintiff already referred to would not be sufficient to withdraw the case from under the operation of the statute of frauds. It was signed by the plaintiff only, addressed to no one, and, besides, there is some doubt whether it was accepted by the defendant. It was not signed by the party sought to “be charged therewith,” nor is it sufficient in form or contents to meet the requirements of the statute. Browne on Statute *392of Frauds, secs. 345, 345a, 371, 371a, 372, 373. It has no place in the case that we discover. The plaintiff’s third instruction should, therefore, not have been given.
Of course the statute of frauds would apply if there is no part performance of the verbal agreement sued on shown in the evidence.
The judgment will be reversed and the cause remanded.
All concur.