Appellees sued appellant for rescission of.a sales contract for a machine, also for expenses and other special damages alleged to have resulted to them from the failure of the machine to do the work it was sold for; appellant reconvened on the contract for the stipulated purchase price of the machine.
In the trial court appellees recovered on both claims, while appellant lost on its one; on appeal to this court, the denial of relief to appellant on its cross-action was affirmed, but, by a divided bench, appellees’ cause of action for rescission as well as for damages was rendered against them, without inquiring into the question of* whether or not any of the damage items were sustained by the evidence, one member holding them entitled to rescission and that the cause for damages should have been sent back for another hearing. See (Tex. Civ. App.) 281 S. W. 226-232, inclusive, for majority and minority opinions.
On writ of error, the Supreme Court, through the Commission of Appeals, affirmed the denial of relief to appellant on its cross-action, but reversed this court’s judgment in adversely rendering appellees’ cause of action for both rescission and damages, holding them entitled to the rescission decreed by the trial court as well as such damages as the evidence supported, and remanded *602the cause to this court solely for its consideration of appellant’s contention that the evidence was insufficient to support the damage claims recovered upon. See 288 S. W. 161.
We have accordingly gone into the matter upon this hearing, and conclude that appellant’s position must be sustained. Only two of the damage items claimed were passed upon by the jury, they finding that the $106.-64 and $657.85 amounts for labor in installing the machine and in attempts to make it work, respectively, were incurred for those purposes, as charged; the balance of the $2,-096.94 awarded, or $1,332.45, was upon additional findings by the trial court direct, which are neither particularized in its judgment nor elsewhere in the record. This court is therefore unable, unless possibly by speculation, to determine what others of the sums claimed are embraced within it, and for that reason, even though some of them may in fact be sustained by sufficient proof, cannot isolate and hold them properly recovered for, if any of them are found not to be.
Looking then, first, to the two items passed upon by the jury, and, second, to the additional ones declared upon in appellees’ pleadings, and which must form the basis for the court’s added finding of $1,332.45, this seems to us to be the state of the evidence:
(1) The $106.64 for labor in installing the machine was made up of two pay. roll totals of $41.64 and $65, respectively, the former covering preparatory work done during the week ending July 29, 1922, before the machine arrived on July 31, 1922, and the latter installation work proper during the week beginning July 31 and ending August 5, 1922; the $657.85 item for labor in ineffectual efforts to operate the machine represented the aggregate of the pay rolls from July 31 to September 9, 1922, and apparently not only included for a second time the $65 charge already so allowed under the preceding amount of $106.64, but also is not shown to have been all incurred for work upon this machine alone.
(2) Of the residue sought by appellee, $291.40 was for freight and $25 unloading charges on the madhine, $260 for injury to 6,500 feet of white oak lumber resulting from the effort to run the same through it, $581.81 for freight, unloading cost, and loss in sales’ price on one car of quarter-sawed white oak lumber returned to seller thereof on account of failure of the machine to make salable flooring out of it; the remaining $1,000 claimed, as best we .can decipher the allegations, seems to have been for special profits lost by reason of inability to make such flooring out of this last-mentioned timber.
The evidence indicates that the first two of these items were incurred as charged, and if they were included in the court’s findings under consideration, no reason appears for not holding them properly so; hut the $581.81 of like charges on "the car of white oak lumber — purchased more than 15 days after the contract in suit was executed —was not recoverable, in the absence of special circumstances showing that its purchase for use in the- machine was reasonably within the contemplation of the parties when contracting for the sale and purchase of the machine; no such proof was made, it .not appearing that appellant even then knew that such lumber would be needed or used. This consideration would likewise defeat the last made claim for $1,000 profits, which it was alleged would have been realized from the sale of this same material, if it had been made into merchantable flooring.
As concerns the $260 for injury to the 6,500 feet of lumber that did go through the machine, we are unable to determine from the piecemeal state of the record touching the matter just what elements entered into it; if appellees manufactured the lumber with this machine — after a fashion, at least — and sold the same at a loss of $40 per thousand under the market price for properly made flooring, their measure of damages would be the loss in value of the product as so turned out, but they could not in that event recover the cost of such manufacture, because that would be allowing them double damages; it does not sufficiently appear from the evidence .that the $260 did not include a part of such cost.
Pursuant to these conclusions, so much of the judgment as allowed appellees the $2,-096.94 damages has been reversed and the cause affecting such damages remanded, with instructions to the trial court to again try the issues concerning them; in all other respects, the judgment remains undisturbed.
Reversed and remanded, with instructions.