Amerson v. F. C. X. Co-op. Service
Decision Date | 26 July 1955 |
Docket Number | No. 17041,17041 |
Citation | 227 S.C. 520,88 S.E.2d 605 |
Parties | Leonard AMERSON, Respondent, v. F. C. X. COOPERATIVE SERVICE, Inc., Appellant. |
Court | South Carolina Supreme Court |
Nash & Wilson, Sumter, for appellant.
Robert O. Purdy and Morris D. Mazursky, Sumter, for respondent.
This action was commenced to recover damages alleged to have resulted from the alleged breach of a contract between the respondent, a farmer, and the appellant, a farm machinery dealer, for the repair of a farm tractor. It is alleged in the complaint that respondent notified appellant at the time of making the contract that the use of the tractor was necessary for the preservation and cultivation of 113 acres of cotton then in the course of cultivation by respondent; that the appellant undertook to repair and return the tractor in one week (amended prior to trial to one day) without any examination to ascertain the repairs needed; that the appellant breached its contract in not repairing and returning the tractor promptly; that appellant loaned another tractor to respondent to be used in the interim, which it warranted to be in excellent working condition, but that the substitute tractor would not perform the necessary work of cultivating the crop; that respondent was forced to make the effort of cultivating the crop with two mules, and that by reason thereof the crop yielded only approximately one-fourth of the amount of cotton that would otherwise have been produced had respondent had the use of his tractor in good repair, which was not returned to respondent until approximately two months after delivery to appellant, and, when returned, it was improperly repaired, to respondent's damage. Appellant denied breach of the contract and filed a counterclaim against respondent for damages to the appellant's tractor loaned to respondent for use in cultivating his crop.
The case was tried before a jury, and resulted in a verdict for respondent in the amount of $4,000. Appellant made seasonable motions for nonsuit and directed verdict, for judgment notwithstanding the verdict, and for new trial, all of which were overruled.
Appellant's exceptions raise all of these issues, the solution of which depends upon the admissibility of the testimony on behalf of respondent as to his damages, to all of which seasonable objection was made by the attorneys for appellant on the ground that the evidence was speculative, remote and conjectural.
There was adequate testimony on the part of the respondent of notice to the appellant of the necessity for the immediate repair and return of the tractor for the cultivation of his crops, and that damages would ensue in the event there was delay in the performance of the contract. While the nature of the damages recoverable for the loss of growing crops and the rule with reference thereto is in some doubt and confusion under the previous decisions of this Court, it is a sound rule, as stated in 46 Am.Jur. 815, Section 687, that 'loss of or damage to crops is an element of damages for the breach of contract of sale of agricultural machinery or fertilizer which arises naturally from the breach, or such as may reasonably be supposed to have been in contemplation of the parties at the time the contract was entered into as a probable result of a breach of it.'
The failure to promptly repair machinery used in the cultivation of a crop, in accordance with agreement, would, in the opinion of this Court, entail the same result as the failure to deliver it in accordance with contract of sale. An interesting annotation on the subject will be found in 69 A.L.R. 748.
In the case of Horres v. Berkeley Chemical Co., 57 S.C. 189, 35 S.E. 500, 501, 52 L.R.A. 36, the plaintiff sought damages for destruction, by escape of sulphuric acid gas from the Chemical Company's plant, of growing crops of cucumbers and strawberries. In arriving at the damages plaintiff introduced testimony tending to show rental value of the lands upon which the crops were being grown; cost of manure applied thereto, and the cost of labor; also the net results in the sale and yield of cucumbers and strawberries, respectively, after they had matured, being the crops of persons other than plaintiff during the same year, and also the sale and yield of such crops during previous years, including those of plaintiff. The defendant objected to testimony as to yield and sales because plaintiff's crops were immature growing crops, in which cases the method of ascertaining damages was the rental value of the lands, cost of fertilizers, cost of seeds and cost of labor. The Circuit Judge admitted the testimony, and the Supreme Court, in reversing, held:
This rule was adhered to in the later case of Lampley v. Atlantic Coast Line R. Co., 63 S.C. 462, 41 S.E. 517, 519, for damage to crops by alleged negligent overflow of plaintiff's lands and crops by water obstructed by the defendant. In that case the judgment below was reversed because of the judge's charge to the effect that the jury might take into consideration what the crop would reasonably have made in determining the value of the crop at the time of the injury. The Supreme Court, citing Horres v. Berkeley Chemical Co., supra, said:
While neither of the foregoing cases appears to have been overruled, attention should be directed to the case of McCown-Clark Co. v. Muldrow, 116 S.C. 54, 106 S.E. 771, where the rule seems to have been modified. Plaintiff sold and delivered to defendant a quantity of fertilizers for delivery in March. The fertilizers were not delivered until June. Plaintiff sued on the account, and defendant, by answer, alleged failure to deliver in the contract time, and damages caused by the delay. The defendant offered to show the difference between the crops made on adjoining land of similar quality, worked in the same way, and with the same seasons on which the fertilizers were used in March, and the yield on his land on which the delayed fertilizers were used. This testimony was excluded upon the ground that the measure of damages was the difference between the contract price and the price at the time of delivery specified in the contract. Upon appeal by the defendant the judgment was reversed and a new trial ordered, the Court holding:
It would seem to follow from the foregoing that one who suffers damages to growing crops from the failure of another to comply with the contract, having direct relationship to the production of such crops, is entitled to show, as testimony of his damages, the difference between the crops made on adjoining lands of similar quality, worked in the same way, and with the same seasons as that of the person claiming damages, and if the testimony be sufficiently...
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