Bixby-Theisen Co. v. Evans

SAYRE, J.

There Avasno error in the court’s rulings on the pleadings. — Bixby v. Evans, 167 Ala. 431, 52 South. 843, 29 L. R. A. (N. S.) 194, 140 Am. St. Rep. 47.

The court overruled defendant’s motion to strike from, the complaint certain items of damages claimed. The rule here is not to predicate error of such rulings for the reason that the defendant may protect himself against injurious results, in case of error, by objections to the evidence, by exceptions to the court’s oral charge authorizing recovery, and by special charges.— Vandiver v. Waller, 143 Ala. 411, 39 South. 136; Southern Ry. Co. v. Coleman, 153 Ala. 266, 44 South. 837.

Appellee Avas permitted, over appellant’s objection, to adduce evidence of conversations betAveen himself and the president of the defendant company prior to the *577formal execution of tlie contract. So far as these rulings related to questions of time and place, without calling for the contents of those conversations, if erroneous, they were entirely lacking in prejudicial effect upon defendant’s case, and cannot avail for a reversal.

It was competent for the plaintiff to show that in the course of the negotiations leading’ up to the contract he had communicated to the representatives of the defendant information of the fact that he would be unable to get money elsewhere. Defendant’s notice of this special circumstance was a condition upon which plaintiff’s right to the recovery of substantial damages depended. — Bixby v. Evans, supra.

When this case was here on the first appeal, after stating in a general way the contract between the parties, and the breach alleged by plaintiff, we said that actual damages shown might be recovered, but that profits such as the plaintiff may have expected to realize from the operation of the mill in its improved form could not he recovered because remote and incapable of that clear and satisfactory proof which the law required to constitute recoverable damages. Perhaps it would, have been better to discriminate somewhat with reference to the different circumstances under which the profits claimed were to be earned, though nothing of that was intimated in the briefs which seemed then, as now, to treat them as all standing upon the same footing. Plaintiff agreed to saw all logs defendant might carry to the mill during five years at a price stipulated and to the full capacity of the mill, if this should be necessary, to give the defendant’s business a preference over that of other persons, and this agreement the defendant might, at its option, extend for a further period of five years. Defendant’s undertaking, on the other hand, was to furnish logs to be sawed by plaintiff and in .a quantity which *578would make the bill for sawing, at the rates specified, equal to the amount of money advanced by defendant; no more. As we read the contract defendant had the right to spread its compliance over the period of five years, at the end of which time the debt became due and payable. This agreement on the part of defendant provided the plaintiff with a means of paying the debt which was also secured by a mortgage on the mil] and the tract of land upon which it was located. As for those profits to be realized out of sawing logs in excess of the number sufficient to discharge the debt, and those which the plaintiff might have realized by the operation of the mill in its old form during the period necessary for its restoration with reasonable expedition after the contract was breached, it is clear that they are speculative and unrecoverable. No profits can be predicated upon the business to be furnished by defendant over and above the amount necessary to enable the plaintiff to repay his debt, for it cannot be known how many logs defendant would have carried to the mill, or whether he would have carried any. No doubt the parties contemplated that defendant would carry other logs, but the defendant might have refrained from doing so without breaching his engagement. Profits to be earned during the time required for the restoration of the mill, and which plaintiff might have earned but for the alleged breach, are likewise uncertain. But for the loss of the use of his mill during the time required for its restoration, the law provides a reasonably certain measure of damages in its rental value, to be estimated on the basis of the property’s former condition, provided that period was of such length that it could, reasonably be said that the mill had a rental value; otherwise, interest on the value of the mill. — Southern Railway v. Coleman, supra. As for those damages claimed in the way of profits lost, *579but Avhich be expected to earn by sawing enough logs to pay his debt, plaintiff hardly seems to be in much better case. The contract fixes the price plaintiff should receive, it is true, but the cost to him of sawing logs to be furnished by defendant, and to be spread at defendant’s option over a period of five years, is as uncertain as the other proverbial uncertainties of the saw-milling business. The conclusion that plaintiff should not be allowed to recover prospective profits as damages for defendant’s breach of its contract to furnish money, if there was a breach, because such damages were too remotely connected in the contemplation of the parties with the alleged breach, and because they are speculative, we think is required of us by considerations of justice that ought to obtain in such cases and by the authorities cited in the opinition on the former appeal.

But for actual losses, including herein the cost to the plaintiff of partially destroying the old dam preparatory to reconstruction, the cost of restoring it to its former condition after breach of the contract, and its rental value ad interim, that is, from the time its use Avas lost to plaintiff by reason of the improvement undertaken and until it could have been restored in the exercise of reasonable diligence after breach, and including also money expended on the faith of the contract as Avell as the value of labor, materials, and tools furnished by plaintiff and consumed in the proper prosecution of the work, and not otherwise figured into the damages assessed — for these things the plaintiff may have a recovery, if entitled to recover at all.

The contract provided that “the party of the first part (defendant) will advance to the party of the second part (plaintiff) a sum of money, but in no event to exceed $2,000 to be used by the party of the second *580part as follows: The party of the second part is to furnish all the labor and material to construct and put in complete a stone and concrete dam across Town creek at a point where a wooden dam is now situated, and he will purchase and install complete a turbine wheel and band saw mill, * * and the party of the second part for a valuable consideration guarantees that the sum of money to be advanced by the party of the first part will be sufficient for the purpose of the improvements herein specified, but in the event of such sum not being- sufficient, he is to complete the same at his own expense.” On the former appeal we said: “The contract speaks for itself, and conclusively, as to the expenditure by the plaintiff of money other than that to be advanced by defendant. It contemplated such expenditure only in the event that the sum agreed to be advanced was insufficient to complete the dam. Plaintiff was not, therefore, entitled to recover as special damages under the evidence sums so> expended.” This, for the reason that the contract on its face and without more must be construed as providing for the advancement of the total sum secured at one time. Now there are in the evidence contained in the record indications that the parties in executing the contract, as far as they went, agreed upon a method by which plaintiff made expenditures for labor for which he was reimbursed by defendant upon the presentation of pay rolls showing the expenditures. We hardly deemed it necessary heretofore to say that plaintiff could not have judgment for sums advanced by the defendant under these circumstances, but it seems proper now to say that if plaintiff expended under this arrangement any sums out of his own purse which defendant subsequently refused to reimburse, these may be recovered, provided, of course, plaintiff is entitled to recover at all.

*581Mucli is said about the water house. The contract provides for the construction of a dam and the purchase and installation of a turbine wheel and band saw mill. Nothing is said therein of the water house nor of the capacity of the wheel and band saw. There was evidence, properly admitted, to the effect that the water house constituted a part of the dam and that the parties mutually understood and intended that the wheel and band saw should be of a size and capacity which rendered a new water house necessary to the execution of the contract. If so, the water house and dam proper ought to have been placed upon the same footing in estimating plaintiff’s recoverable damages, and the trial court properly refused those requested charges which assumed that the water house was not a. part of the dam within the meaning of this last term as used in the contract.

There being nothing to the contrary in the language of- the contract, it was competent for the parties to so interpret it, in which event it was the duty of the court to enforce the contract according to the interpretation put upon it in practice by both parties. There was, on the other hand, evidence for the defendant which went to show an agreement that the water house was to remain undisturbed, and the court was requested by the defendant to instruct the jury that, if there was such an understanding or agreement, plaintiff was not entitled to recover money expended in tearing out the old water house or building the new. A charge to that effect should have been given.

Defendant pleaded, and brought evidence tending to show, that plaintiff first breached the contract by the misappropriation of funds advanced by defendant by diverting them to uses other than those contemplated and agreed upon in the contract. There were no special *582replications to these pleas. Charges hypothesizing proof of these facts and directing a finding for the defendant on such hypothesis should have been given.

We will not be understood as passing upon the legal sufficiency of those pleas which were ruled in favor of the appellant. Whatever may be said of those pleas, the issues should have been stated to the jury as they were formulated in the pleadings. Of some of the pleas it may perhaps be properly said that they were nothing-more than the general issue.

The trial court in some respects held to a theory of the law of the case different from that stated, and the judgment reached must be reversed.

Reversed and remanded.

All the Justices concur.