Hadley v Baxendale
9 Exch. 341, 156 Eng.Rep. 145.
(Court of Exchequer, 1854)
At the trial before Crompton, J., at the last Gloucester Assizes, it
appeared that the plaintiffs carried on an extensive business as millers at Gloucester;
and that on the 11th on May, their mill was stopped by a breakage of the crank shaft by
which the mill was worked. The steam-engine was manufactured by Messrs. Joyce & Co.,
the engineers, at Greenwich, and it became necessary to send the shaft as a pattern for a
new one to Greenwich. The fracture was discovered on the 12th, and on the 13th the
plaintiffs sent one of their servants to the office of the defendants, who are the
well-known carriers trading under the name of Pickford & Co., for the purpose of
having the shaft carried to Greenwich. The plaintiffs' servant told the clerk that the
mill was stopped, and that the shaft must be sent immediately; and in answer to the
inquiry when the shaft would be taken, the answer was, that if it was sent up by twelve
o'clock any day, it would be delivered at Greenwich on the following day. On the following
day the shaft was taken by the defendants, before noon, for the purpose of being conveyed
to Greenwich, and the sum of 2l. 4s. was paid for its carriage for the whole distance; at
the same time the defendants' clerk was told that a special entry, if required, should be
made to hasten its delivery. The delivery of the shaft at Greenwich was delayed by some
neglect; and the consequence was, that the plaintiffs did not receive the new shaft for
several days after they would otherwise have done, and the working of their mill was
thereby delayed, and they thereby lost the profits they would otherwise have received.
On the part of the defendants, it was objected that these damages were
too remote, and that the defendants were not liable with respect to them. The learned
Judge left the case generally to the jury, who found a verdict with £25 damages beyond
the amount paid into Court.
Whateley, in last Michaelmas Term, obtained a rule nisi for a new
trial, on the ground of misdirection.
Alderson, B. We think that there ought to be a new trial in this case;
but, in so doing, we deem it to be expedient and necessary to state explicitly the rule
which the Judge, at the next trial, ought, in our opinion, to direct the jury to be
governed by when they estimate the damages.
It is, indeed, of the last importance that we should do this; for, if
the jury are left without any definite rule to guide them, it will, in such cases as
these, manifestly lead to the greatest injustice. The Courts have done this on several
occasions; and, in Blake v. Midland Railway Company, 18 Q.B. 93, the Court granted a new
trial on this very ground, that the rule had not been definitely laid down to the jury by
the learned Judge at Nisi Prius.
"There are certain established rules," this Court says, in
Alder v. Keighley, 15 M. & W. 117,"according to which the jury ought to
find." And the Court, in that case, adds: "and here there is a clear rule, that
the amount which would have been received if the contract had been kept, is the measure of
damages if the contract is broken."
Now we think the proper rule in such a case as the present is this:--
Where two parties have made a contract which one of them has broken, the damages which the
other party ought to receive in respect of such breach of contract should be such as may
fairly and reasonably be considered either arising naturally, i.e., according to the usual
course of things, from such breach of contract itself, or such as may reasonably be
supposed to have been in the contemplation of both parties, at the time they made the
contract, as the probable result of the breach of it. Now, if the special circumstances
under which the contract was actually made were communicated by the plaintiffs to the
defendants, and thus known to both parties, the damages resulting from the breach of such
a contract, which they would reasonably contemplate, would be the amount of injury which
would ordinarily follow from a breach of contract under these special circumstances so
known and communicated. But, on the other hand, if these special circumstances were wholly
unknown to the party breaking the contract, he, at the most, could only be supposed to
have had in his contemplation the amount of injury which would arise generally, and in the
great multitude of cases not affected by any special circumstances, from such a breach of
contract. For, had the special circumstances been known, the parties might have
specially provided for the breach of contract by special terms as to the damages in that
case; and of this advantage it would be very unjust to deprive them. Now the above
principles are those by which we think the jury ought to be guided in estimating the
damages arising out of any breach of contract. It is said, that other cases such as
breaches of contract in the nonpayment of money, or in the not making a good title of
land, are to be treated as exceptions from this, and as governed by a conventional rule.
But as, in such cases, both parties must be supposed to be cognizant of that well-known
rule, these cases may, we think, be more properly classed under the rule above enunciated
as to cases under known special circumstances, because there both parties may reasonably
be presumed to contemplate the estimation of the amount of damages according to the
conventional rule. Now, in the present case, if we are to apply the principles above laid
down, we find that the only circumstances here communicated by the plaintiffs to the
defendants at the time of the contract was made, were, that the article to be carried was
the broken shaft of a mill, and that the plaintiffs were the millers of the mill.
But how do these circumstances shew reasonably that the profits of the
mill must be stopped by an unreasonable delay in the delivery of the broken shaft by the
carrier to the third person? Suppose the plaintiffs had another shaft in their possession
put up or putting up at the time, and that they only wished to send back the broken shaft
to the engineer who made it; it is clear that this would be quite consistent with the
above circumstances, and yet the unreasonable delay in the delivery would have no effect
upon the intermediate profits of the mill. Or, again, suppose that, at the time of the
delivery to the carrier, the machinery of the mill had been in other respects defective,
then, also, the same results would follow. Here it is true that the shaft was actually
sent back to serve as a model for the new one, and that the want of a new one was the only
cause of the stoppage of the mill, and that the loss of profits really arose from not
sending down the new shaft in proper time, and that this arose from the delay in
delivering the broken one to serve as a model. But it is obvious that, in the great
multitude of cases of millers sending off broken shafts to third persons by a carrier
under ordinary circumstances, such consequences would not, in all probability, have
occurred; and these special circumstances were here never communicated by the plaintiffs
to the defendants. It follows therefore, that the loss of profits here cannot reasonably
be considered such a consequence of the breach of contract as could have been fairly and
reasonably contemplated by both the parties when they made this contract. For such loss
would neither have flowed naturally from the breach of this contract in the great
multitude of such cases occurring under ordinary circumstances, nor were the special
circumstances, which, perhaps, would have made it a reasonable and natural consequence of
such breach of contract, communicated to or known by the defendants. The Judge ought,
therefore, to have told the jury that upon the facts then before them they ought not to
take the loss of profits into consideration at all in estimating the damages. There must
therefore be a new trial in this case.
Rule absolute.