Opinion
November Term, 1899.
Edwin Nottingham, for the appellant.
John C. Davies, Attorney-General, for the respondent.
The plaintiff's paper mill was fully equipped with workmen and appliances and was in profitable operation when the State wrongfully withheld the water operating it for a period of seventy-eight days. The claimant proved, I think, to a reasonable certainty that the act of the State reduced its production of paper by 302 tons; that its profit thereon would have been $8 per ton, and consequently its loss upon that item was $2,416. The claimant proved to a reasonable certainty that the wages of its workmen which it was obliged to pay when they could render no useful service were $715. The award was $1,692, but upon what basis it was computed the record does not show. The amount awarded, however, shows that the claimant's demand for loss of profits was in great part rejected.
We think the claimant was entitled to recover for loss of profits. The State was a wrongdoer, and, therefore, full compensation for the direct and directly consequential damages was the claimant's right. These include profits lost when they are ascertainable. ( Schile v. Brokhahus, 80 N.Y. 614; Snow v. Pulitzer, 142 id. 263; Lacour v. Mayor, 3 Duer, 406.) They are given in case of breach of contract when they are satisfactorily proved, are the direct result of the breach, and when they may be presumed to have been within the contemplation of the parties to the contract. ( Wakeman v. Wheeler Wilson Mfg. Co., 101 N.Y. 205.) But cases are frequent where they cannot be satisfactorily proved, or where they were the remote and not the immediate result of the breach, or where they were not within the contemplation of the parties to the contract. In any one of these three categories, lost profits are not recoverable. Some other measure of damages must be resorted to. ( Witherbee v. Meyer, 155 N.Y. 446.)
Whatever uncertainty may have existed before these cases, we think it is now settled law that in a case sounding in tort like this, if the plaintiff can prove that lost profits were the direct result of the wrong, and can show to a reasonable certainty what they amounted to, he is entitled to recover them. If the claimant's proof did not appear to a reasonably satisfactory as to the amount of the loss of profits, then the value of the use of the water to the claimant, situated as it was, could have been resorted to. ( Pollitt v. Long, 58 Barb. 20.) This would mean, what was the value of the use of the water to its mill, fully equipped with workmen, whose wages must be paid, and which was operating at a profit of eight dollars per ton upon its production of about five and one half tons per day, not the mere rental value of the real estate to a lessee who would hire his own workmen. The evidence of the claimant was that it was worth from thirty-six dollars to forty dollars per day; the State gave no evidence directly bearing upon the question.
Instead of 429 tons, the usual product of the mill in 78 days, the claimant made but 127 tons and this at an increased expenditure for coal. If the 127 tons represent 25 days' production at 5½ tons per day, there remain 55 days of loss, at at least $36 per day, equal to $1,980.
The damages were caused in 1892, and the claimant's demand has been delayed by the unsuccessful litigation of the State. ( Lakeside Paper Co. v. State, 15 App. Div. 169.) We think interest from the date of filing the claim might properly be added to the award, otherwise full compensation may not be awarded. ( Wilson v. City of Troy, 135 N.Y. 96.)
The judgment so far as appealed from is reversed and a new hearing granted, costs to abide the event.
All concurred, except PUTNAM, J., dissenting.
Award reversed and a new trial granted, costs to abide the event.