43 Misc. 648 | N.Y. App. Term. | 1904
The only litigated question in this case is the right of the defendant to an allowance by way of coun
It was admitted upon the trial that the custom, in the ¡New York market, among buyers and sellers of fruit is to sell fruit in bulk by sample boxes opened, the purchaser, opening a few boxes and then making his offer according to the sample. This was the course pursued by the defendant’s buyer. Both parties had been engaged in the business for many years and were aware' of such custom. The fruit was delivered to the defendant’s store the same day, and the next morning it was discovered that thirty-five boxes of the seventy-one contained “ shaddock,” which it was conceded upon the trial is not grape fruit, has no market value and is worthless. The defendant on the same day offered to return the shaddock to the plaintiff, but he absolutely
The claim of the plaintiff is that he never represented the boxes to contain grape fruit, and did not know whether the fruit was grape fruit, or not. Possibly he did not so state, in words, but the circumstances surrounding the transaction show conclusively that both parties regarded all of the boxes as containing grape fruit, and that it was grape fruit that was being sold and bought. The plaintiff makes no statement as to what actual knowledge he had as to the contents of the boxes, but he states that Lyons, the defendant’s buyer, told him (plaintiff) that he wanted grape fruit and that what he (plaintiff) sold to Lyons “was supposed to be grape fruit.” The plaintiff was present when Lyons opened the boxes regarded as samples. The rule of caveat emptor, invoked by the plaintiff, has no application here. The doctrine that a bargain and sale of a chattel of a particular description imports a contract or warranty that the article sold is of that description is sustained by a great weight of judicial authority. White v. Miller, 71 N. Y. 118, 129 ; Hawkins v. Pemberton, 51 id. 198. Had the defendant counterclaimed for damages by reason of the quality or. condition of the fruit bought by him, another situation would have presented itself. Suppose, upon opening the boxes, the defendant had discovered that thirty-five of them contained sand or waste paper, or were empty, could it be claimed that, having purchased according to the custom of the market, seventy-one boxes of fruit by sample, the plaintiff could recover for boxes containing nothing of value? Certainly not.
The claim of the plaintiff that the defendant’s failure to promptly return the fruit is fatal to his recovery is not borne out by the record. Whether or not such course was necessary under the circumstances of this case need not be determined, as the proof shows that, immediately upon discovering the worthless character of the fruit', the defendant did say to plaintiff, “ I have got some shaddock there and I am going to send it back.” I said, “ I won’t accept, it.” This was notice to the plaintiff that the return of such fruit would not be accepted and relieved him from any further offers in that direction. Moreover, the shaddock was conceded to be worthless and a return to plaintiff would have served no useful purpose, and subsequently an offer to return all the fruit was also rejected.
The defendant is not- chargeable with lack of due diligence in failing to examine all of the boxes at the time the sale was made. The plaintiff’s counsel proved, on cross-examination of the defendant’s buyer, that it was not the custom of the trade, in buying fruit in bulk, to open every box purchased, and that the buyer in this case would not have been allowed to do so.
Leveutritt and Greeubaum, TJ., concur.
Judgment reversed, new trial ordered, with costs to appellant to abide event.