118 N.E. 210 | NY | 1917
The action is to recover the purchase price, at the rate of one dollar and sixty-two cents per barrel, of cement sold by the plaintiff to the defendant. *36 The trial justice directed a verdict based upon the purchase price of one dollar and forty-one cents per barrel. A question to be determined, under proper exceptions, is whether or not there was any evidence creating a question of fact to be submitted to and determined by the jury.
The evidence is free of contradiction. The undisputed facts, briefly and adequately stated, are: In May, 1909, the parties entered into a contract, which provided for the sale by the plaintiff to the defendant of one hundred and seventy-five thousand barrels of cement, to be totally ordered for shipment by the defendant before March 1, 1913, at the price of one dollar and forty-one cents per barrel. On March 1, 1913, there remained unordered for shipment thirty-six thousand barrels. Between March 1, 1913, and May 8, 1913, the defendant ordered of and received from the plaintiff nineteen hundred barrels. Throughout that period the market value was one dollar and sixty-two cents per barrel. The plaintiff by this action claims that the nineteen hundred barrels were not sold under the contract and should be paid for (except the first two shipments) at the market value; the defendant claims that the sale was within the contract and the plaintiff should be paid one dollar and forty-one cents per barrel.
The defendant rightly concedes that the defendant was bound by the contract to order for shipment before March 1, 1913, the total amount of one hundred and seventy-five thousand barrels and after that date the plaintiff was free to refuse to make any delivery under the contract. It asserted at the trial and asserts here that the stipulation of the contract thus binding it was, as a matter of law, waived by the acts of the plaintiff. Therein it errs. Under the evidence, whether or not there was a waiver on the part of the plaintiff was a question of fact determinable by the jury. *37
In reversing the judgment and granting a new trial, we may not with propriety attempt to define the effect due, in our opinion, to any part of the evidence. A waiver, not express, found in the acts, conduct or language of a party, is rarely established as a matter of law rather than as a matter of fact. This conclusion inheres in its nature and character. A waiver is an intentional abandonment or relinquishment of a known right or advantage which, but for such waiver, the party would have enjoyed. It is the voluntary act of the party and does not require or depend upon a new contract, new consideration or an estoppel. It cannot be recalled or expunged. (Hotchkiss v. City of Binghamton,
In the present case, whether or not the plaintiff waived the default of the defendant, was a question of fact. There was no express waiver. In the shipments by the plaintiff under defendant's orders of March fourteenth and twenty-eighth and the plaintiff's invoices of them, there was evidence that the plaintiff through and by means of them waived the default. The effect of the testimony of Mr. Corbett and the other evidence relating to those orders and invoices must be measured by the jury. In the acts, letters and invoices of the plaintiff subsequent to April third and in certain letters prior to March *39 first is evidence that there was not the waiver. The evidence throughout was of an inconclusive or equivocal nature and furnished only grounds of inference and deduction, which it is the appropriate province of a jury only to consider.
The judgment should be reversed and a new trial granted, with costs to abide the event.
HISCOCK, Ch. J., CUDDEBACK, CARDOZO, POUND, CRANE and ANDREWS, JJ., concur.
Judgment reversed, etc.