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Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Gunter & Co. v. Lauritzen [1894] ScotLR 31_359 (10 January 1894)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1894/31SLR0359.html
Cite as: [1894] ScotLR 31_359, [1894] SLR 31_359

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SCOTTISH_SLR_Court_of_Session

Page: 359

Court of Session Outer House.

Wednesday, January 10, 1894.

[ Lord Stormonth Darling, for Lord Wellwood.

31 SLR 359

Gunter & Company

v.

Lauritzen.

Subject_1Sale
Subject_2Breach of Contract
Subject_3Damages
Subject_4Loss of Profit on Sub-sale — Purchaser's Duty to Replace Goods.
Facts:

A merchant in Denmark contracted to supply a cargo of Danish hay and straw to a merchant in this country, warranted to be in sound condition on delivery. At the time of the sale it was intimated to the seller that the goods were bought for the purpose of re-sale. On arrival in this country the cargo was rejected as disconform to warranty.

In an action by the purchaser against the seller for damages for breach of contract, it was admitted that the goods were properly rejected. The purchaser claimed as part of the damage the loss of profit on a sub-sale of the goods, and proved that at the time and place of delivery there was no market for goods of the same kind and quality as those contracted for; that they were not on public sale at the time, or quoted in any public market list open to his inspection. The seller averred in defence

Page: 360

to the purchaser's claim that goods to the amount required might have been obtained by the purchaser in three separate parcels in the hands of private sellers in this country.

Held that even on the assumption that the seller's averment was well founded, the purchaser was under no duty to take other than ordinary means to replace the goods, and was entitled to the whole profit he would have made on the sub-sale.

Headnote:

By a contract entered into in January and February 1893, J. Lauritzen, a merchant in Denmark, undertook to deliver at Aberdeen, to Gunter & Company, commission agents in London, a cargo of Danish hay and straw, warranted to be delivered in sound condition.

On the faith of their arrangement with Lauritzen, Gunter & Company resold the cargo at a profit of £29, 1s. 4d. to Davidson & Company, merchants in Dundee, and informed Lauritzen of the re-sale at the time when the contract with him was concluded.

The cargo, on arrival at Aberdeen, was found to be so heated and damaged as to be entirely unmerchantable, and consequently disconform to warranty. It was rejected by the sub-purchaser.

In this action Gunter & Company sued Lauritzen for the loss of profit on their sub-sale of the cargo to Davidson & Company.

The defender's averment, referred to in the Lord Ordinary's opinion, was as follows—“The pursuers, if they intended to make a claim against defender, ought to have gone into the market and bought hay and straw in implement of their alleged contract with Davidson & Company. They could at the time have bought in Scotland, and in particular at Leith or Grangemouth, Danish hay and straw, and shipped the same to Aberdeen or Dundee at a cost less than what they had agreed to pay defender.”

On this averment the defender pleaded—“The pursuers being bound and being able to purchase goods in the market to supply any purchasers from them, and the prices at which they could have so purchased being less than what they had agreed to pay defender, have sustained no loss for which they can hold defender liable.”

The following authorities were cited by the pursuer— Duff v. Iron & Steel Fencing Company, 19 R. 199, 29 S.L.R. 186; Hammond v. Bussey, L.R., 20 Q.B.D. 79; Hadley v. Baxendale, 9 Exch. 341.

The defender cited Grébert-Borgnis v. Nugent, L.R., 15 QBD 85; Elbinger Actien Gesellshafft v. Armstrong, L.R., 9 Q.B. 473; Thol v. Henderson, L.R., 8 Q.B.D. 457; Sedgwick on Damages (8th ed.), vol. i., p. 219, sec. 156, and p. 303, sec. 205; Scott v. Boston Company, 106 Mass. 468.

Judgment:

Lord Stormonth Darling—The defender, a merchant in Denmark, contracted to supply the pursuers with a cargo of Danish hay and straw to be delivered in Aberdeen. It was disclosed by the pursuer at the time the contract was entered into, that he was buying for the purpose of resale, and that a re-sale had in fact been completed. The sub-purchaser, a merchant in Aberdeen, had in his turn resold the cargo to various customers in that neighbourhood. When the cargo arrived the sub-purchaser inspected it and found it disconform to contract, and it is not disputed that it was so. The only defence which is now put forward is that contained at the end of the third answer for the defender, and in his second plea-in-law, to the effect that the pursuer could at the time of delivery have bought in Scotland, and particularly at Leith or Grangemouth, Danish hay and straw at a price less than he had agreed to pay the defender. I am of opinion that this defence is not made out. It is clear in the first place, on the principle of Hadley v. Baxendale ( 9 Ex. 341), that the damage which the defender was bound to make good in the event of his breaking the contract, was such as might be held to have been in contemplation of the parties at the time of making the contract, and in this case the damage contemplated was the loss of profit on the re-sale. The defender says that there is an equitable limitation to this rule to the effect that the purchaser, before he can recover such loss of profit, must show that he has taken every means to supply himself with similar goods, and unless he does so he is barred from recovering. That may be the equitable rule where the goods are of a kind currently bought and sold in the open market at the time and place of delivery. If the purchaser can go into the market and supply himself with goods of the same quality and at a price not greater than that in the contract, then he would suffer no damage, for he would be able to fulfil his contract with the sub-purchaser. But the goods in question were of a very special kind; they were specially consigned from a foreign country, and it is the result of the evidence, in my opinion, that at Aberdeen, which was the port of delivery, there was not a market for these goods at the time at all. The defender had led evidence to show, that by hunting all over the country, the pursuers might have found out that there were small parcels of Danish hay and straw at Leith and other places, which he might have picked up by private treaty; but none of these parcels were on public offer at the time, or quoted in any public market list which was open to the pursuers' inspection. In these circumstances I think there was no duty on the purchaser to make extraordinary exertions to supply himself with goods elsewhere. This is the ground on which I decide the case, but I am by no means satisfied on the proof that it could have been possible for the pursuer, even if it had been his duty, to obtain the goods at a cost less or no greater than the prices he had agreed to pay the defender. There is some evidence to show that he could have got these goods at a price very little greater than the contract price, but this evidence is offered ex post facto, and it

Page: 361

does not follow that if he had gone to the sellers at the time, and they had known he was under stress of having to fulfil a contract, they might not have demanded higher prices. The figures do not seem to sustain the defender's allegation in answer three or the plea-in-law to which I have referred; but if they did, I should still be of opinion that there was no such duty on the pursuer as that for which the defender contends.

Decree was accordingly granted for £29, 1s. 4d.

Counsel:

Counsel for the Pursuers— Shaw— Crabb Watt. Agents— Wishart & Macnaughton, W.S.

Counsel for the Defender— A. S. D. Thomson. Agents— Dowie & Scott, S.S.C.

1894


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