Handicapped Children’s Education Board of Sheboygan County v. Lukaszewski,
112 Wis. ed 197, Supreme court of Wisconsin, 1983
Callow, Justice.
This review arises out of an unpublished decision of the court of appeals which affirmed in part and reversed in part a judgment of the Ozaukee county circuit court, Judge Warren A. Grady.
In January of 1978 the Handicapped Children’s Education Board (hereafter referred to as the “Board”) hired Elaine Lukaszewski to serve as a speech and language therapist for the spring term. Lukaszewski was assigned to the Lightfoot School in Sheboygan Falls which was approximately 45 miles from her home in Mequon. Rather than move, she drove to work each day. During the1978 spring term, the Board offered Lukaszewski a contract to continue in her position at Lightfoot School for the 1978—1979 school year. The contract called for an annual salary of $10,760. Lukaszewski accepted.
In August of 1978, prior to the beginning of the school year, Lukaszewski was offered a position by the Wee Care Day Care Center which was located nor far from her home in Mequon. The job paid an annual salary of $13,000. After deciding to accept this offer, Lukaszewski notified Thomas Morrelle, the Board’s director of special education, that she intended to resign from her position at the Lightfoot School. Morrelle told her to submit a letter of resignation for consideration by the Board. She did so., and the matter was discussed at a meeting of the Board on August 21, 1978. The Board refused to release Lukaszewski from her contract. On August 24, 1978, the Board’s attorney sent a letter to Lukaszewski directing her to return to work. The attorney sent a second letter to the Wee Care Day Care Center stating that the Board would take legal action if the Center interfered with Lukaszewski’s performance of her contractual obligations at the Lightfoot School.
Lukaszewski left the Wee Care Day Care Center and returned to Lightfoot School for the 1978 fall term. She resent the actions of the Board, however, and retained misgivings about her job. On September8, 1978, she discussed her feeling with Morrelle. After this meeting Lukaszewski felt quite upset about the situation. She called her doctor to make an appointment for that afternoon and subsequently left the school.
Dr. Ashok Chatterjee examined Lukaszewski and found her blood pressure to be high. Lukaszewski asked Dr. Chatterjee to write a letter explaining his medical findings and the advice he had given her. In a letter dated September 11, 1978, Dr. Chatterjee indicated that Lukaszewski had a hypertension problem dating back to 1976 .He reported that on the day he examined Lukaszewski she appeared agitated, nervous, and had blood pressure readings up to 180/100.It was his opinion that, although she took medicine, her medical condition would not improve unless the situation which caused the problem was removed. He further opined that it would be dangerous for her to drive long distances in her agitated state.
Lukaszewski did not return to work after leaving on September 8, 1978. She submitted a letter of resignation dated September 13, 1978, in which she wrote:
“I enclose a copy of the doctor’s statement concerning my health. On the basis of it, I must resign. I am unwilling to jeopardize my health and I am also unwilling to become involved in an accident. For these reasons, I tender my resignation.”
A short time later Lukaszewski reapplied for and obtained employment at the Wee Care Day Care Center.
After Lukaszewski left, the Board immediately began looking for a replacement. Only one qualified person applied for the position. Although this applicant had less of an educational background than Lukaszewski, she had more teaching experience Under the salary schedule agreed upon by the Board and the teachers’ union, this applicant would have to be paid $1,026. more per year than Lukaszewski. Having no alternative, the Board hired the applicant at the higher salary.
In December of 1978 the Board initiated an action against Lukaszewski for breach of contract. The Board alleged that, as a result of the breach, it suffered damage in the amount of the additional compensation it was required to pay Lukaszewski’s replacement for the 1978—1979 school year($1,026.). A trial was held before the court. The trial court ruled that Lukaszewski had breached her contract and awarded the Board $1,249.14 in damages ($1,026. for breach of contract and $222.50 for costs)
Lukaszewski appealed. The court of appeals affirmed the trial court’s determination that Lukaszewski breached her contract. However, the appellate court reversed the trial court’s damage award, reasoning that, although the Board had to pay more for Lukaszewski’s replacement, by its own standards it obtained a proportionately more valuable teacher. Therefore, the court of appeals held that the Board suffered no damage from the breach. We granted the Board’s petition for review.
There are two issue presented on this review: (1) whether Lukaszewski breached her employment contract with the Board ;and(2) if she did breached her contract, whether the Board suffered recoverable damages therefrom.
A health danger will not excuse nonperformance of a contractual obligation when the danger is caused by the nonperforming party. Nor will a health condition or danger which was foreseeable when the contract was entered into justify its breach. It would be fundamentally unfair to allow a breaching party to escape liability because of a health danger which by his or her own fault has precluded performance. The trial courts findings are correct that (1) Lukaszewski’s medical condition resulted from the “stress she had created by an attempted repudiation of her contract,” and (2)that Lukaszewski resigned for reasons other than health. For this reason we affirm the holdings below that Lukaszewski breached her employment contract.
In the instant case it is undisputed that, as a result of the breach, the Board hired a replacement at a salary exceeding what it had agreed to pay Lukaszewski. There is no question that this additional cost ($1,026. ) necessarily flowed from the breach and was not within the contemplation of the parties when the contract was made. Lukaszewski argues and court of appeals held, however, that the Broad was not damaged by this expense. The amount a teacher is paid is determined by a salary schedule agreed upon by the teachers’ union and the Broad. The more education and experience a teacher has the greater her salary will be. Presumably, then, the amount of compensation a teacher receives reflects her value to the Broad. Lukaszewski argues that the Broad suffered no net loss because, while it had to pay more for the replacement, it received the services of a proportionately more valuable teacher. Accordingly, she maintains that the Broad is not entitled to damages because an award would place it in a better position than if the contract had been performed.
We disagree. Lukaszewski and the court of appeals improperly focus on the objective value of the services the Broad received rather than that for which it had bargained. Damages for breach of contract are measured by the expectations of the parties. The Broad expected to receive the services of a speech therapist with lukaszewski’s education and experience at the salary agree upon. It neither expected nor wanted a more experienced therapist who had to be paid an additional $1,026. per year. Lukaszewaki’s breach forced the Broad to hire the replacement and, in turn, to pay a higher salary. Therefore, the Broad lost the benefit of its bargain. Any additional value the Broad may have received from the replacement’s greater experience was imposed upon it and thus cannot be characterized as a benefit. We conclude that the Broad suffered damages for the loss of its bargain in the amount of additional compensation it was required to pay Lukaszewski’s replacement.
This is not to say that an employer who is injured by an employee’s breach of contract is free to hire the most qualified and expensive replacement and then recover the difference between the salary paid and the contract salary. An injured party must take all reasonable steps to mitigate damages. Therefore, the employer must attempt to obtain equivalent services at the lowest possible cost. In the instant case the Broad acted reasonably in hiring Lukaszewaki’s replacement even though she commanded a higher salary. Upon Lukaszewski’s breach, the Broad immediately took steps to locate a replacement. Only one qualified person applied for the position. Having no alternative, the Broad hired this applicant. Thus the Broad properly mitigated its damages by hiring the least expensive qualified replacement available.
We hold that the Board is entitled to have the benefit of its bargain restored. Therefore, we reverse that portion of the court of appeal’s decision which reversed the trial court’s damage award.
The decision of the court of appeals is affirmed in part and revered in part.
Questions:
1.Who sues whom for what in this case?
2.What is the decision of the trial court?
3.What is the decision of the court of appeals?
4.What are the reasons given by the court of appeals for its decision?
5.In the opinion of the present court, did the defendant breach the contract? Why or why not?
6.In the opinion of the present court, should the defendant pay damages to the plaintiff? Why or why not?
7.To what extent a health condition will justify repudiation of an employment contract?
8. What is the principle of damage computation as embodied in this opinion?
Acme Mill & Elevator Co.v.Johnson
141 Ky. 718(Court of appeals of Kentucky,1911)
On April 26,1909, Johnson contracted with Acme Mills & Elevator Company to sell 2,000 bushels of No,2 merchantable wheat, to Acme Mills at the price of $ 1.03 per bushel. At the time the wheat was still growing on his farm. The contract did not fix a date of delivery. It only provided that the wheat was to be delivered from thresher in 1909. However, Johnson decided against delivering the wheat to Acme because he had heard Acme was going out of business. On July 14, before he started harvesting his wheat, Johnson contracted with Liberty Mills for the sale of the same wheat at $1.16 per bushel, and he later used the sacks given to him by Acme to deliver wheat to Liberty Mills. Because Johnson failed to deliver the wheal to Acme Mills, the latter brought this action to recover damages in the sum of $240, plus $80 for the sacks.
Johnson admitted the breach of the contract. But he denied that Acme Mills was damaged, since by the time he finished threshing (July 29th), wheat was $1 per bushel in the market.
Evidence clearly established that Johnson did not finish the threshing until about July 29th. There was noting indicating that he had fraudulently delayed the threshing of the wheat for the purpose of permitting the market price of the wheat to go down. As a matter of fact, he had no reason to expect a decline of the price of wheat, since all signs in the market pointed to an advance rather than a decline in the price until July 24th.
The trial resulted in a judgment for Acme Mills in the sum of $80 for the sacks, and from that judgment Acme Mills appeals.
Clay, Commissioner
…In contracts for the delivery of personal property at a fixed time and at a designated place, the buyer is entitled to damages against the seller for a failure to comply and the measure of damages is the difference between the contract price and the market price of the property at the place and time of delivery. This principle is so well settled that it is no longer open to discussion. There is no reason why this rule should not apply to the facts of this case. …As the appellee finished threshing on July 29, and the wheat was to be delivered from thresher, and appellant was not to accept and pay for the wheat until the delivery. July 29th is the time for delivery which determines whether or not appellant was damaged. If appellant had sold his wheat on July 14,at $1.16 and the price on July 29th was $1.50, appellant would not be contending that the measure of his damages was the difference between the contract price and the price appellee received for it on July 14th, but would insist that he was entitled to the difference between the contract price and $1.50 per bushel. Besides, appellee was not required by his contract to deliver to appellant any particular wheat. Had he delivered other wheat of like quantity and quality, he would have complied with the contract. When he sold his wheat on July 14th , for a price in excess of the contract price, and, therefore, failed to deliver to appellant wheat of the quantity and quality contracted for, he took the chances of being punished in damages for the breach of the contract. …
Question:
1.Why does Acme Mills sue for $240? How does it arrive at this figure?
2.On what theory does Acme Mills sue Johnson?
3.Does Johnson have to pay damages for his breach of contract? Why or why not?
4.In this contract, which price is the basis for damage calculation? Why?