Peevyhouse v. Garland

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Peevyhouse v. Garland
Court Oklahoma Supreme Court
Citation 382 P.2d 109, cert. denied, 375 U.S. 906, 84 S.Ct. 196, 11 L.Ed.2d 145
Date decided May 28, 1963

Facts

  • In 1954, the Peevyhouse couple owned acres of land in Oklahoma containing rich coal deposits.
  • Mr. & Mrs. Peevyhouse = "Peevyhouse" = plaintiff
  • Garland Coal Mining Co. = "Garland" = defendant
  • Garland wanted to lease the Peevyhouse in order to mine the coal
  • Plaintiff contracted with defendant coal mining company to allow them to use Peevyhouse’s land (60 acres) in excavating a coal vein. The contract was for 5 years.
  • In the contract, Garland specifically agreed to perform certain restorative and remedial work at the end of the contract.
  • The work would involve moving many thousands of yards of dirt, a cost estimated to be about $29,000, while the improvement to the land was estimated at only $300.
  • Garland employed the strip mining technique. At the end of the 5 years, Garland refused to restore the land to its original condition.

Procedural History

  • Peevyhouse sued Garland for breach of contract.
  • Garland's expert testified that it restoration cost would be $29,000 while increasing the land value by only $300.
  • Verdict for plaintiffs in the amount of $5,000, only a fraction of the cost of performance.
  • The $5,000 the jury awarded Peevyhouse exceeded the cost of the farm in 1962.

Issues

  • Must the breaching party (Garland) pay the full cost of performance ($29,000), if that cost greatly exceeds the total economic value of full performance ($300)?
  • Whether the damages should be limited to
    • the difference in the value of the land or
    • to the cost of the remedial work defendant agreed to do.

Arguments

Garland argued that the court should limit damages to $300.

Holding

In a 5 to 4 decision: If the cost of performance is grossly dis-proportionate to the economic benefit, the defendant should only pay the economic benefit.

Judgment

for Peevyhouse for $300

Reasons

  • The cost of performance is the proper measure of damages if it does not involve unreasonable economic waste.
  • Where the defect in material or construction is incidental to the main purpose of the contract & one that cannot be remedied without an expenditure for re-construction disproportionate to the end to be attained, the value rule should be followed.
  • Sometimes, the full cost of performance is an economic waste!

Rule

Justice Jackson: The proper way to calculate damages is by looking at the relative economic benefit.

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