81 N.Y. 341 | NY | 1880
The plaintiffs made an oral contract with the defendants, by which they agreed to sell to the defendants, at a price named, 699 boxes of glass, which were to be delivered together at one and the same time. They delivered a portion (365 boxes) of the glass, and the referee found that the defendants received and accepted the same, without objecting or intimating to the plaintiffs that it was received and accepted upon any conditions whatever; and without any notice that they would not thereby consent to become liable to pay for the glass so delivered and accepted, unless and until the residue should be delivered, and the defendants have not offered to return the same or any part thereof. He also found that the defendants thereby waived the condition that the whole quantity *344 of boxes should be delivered before they should become liable to pay for the part delivered, and only reserved the right and insisted, from time to time thereafter, that the residue should be delivered, or that the plaintiffs should pay the damages sustained by reason of the omission or neglect to deliver the same.
The question presented is whether the defendants are liable to pay for the boxes of glass actually received and retained by them, without the delivery of the remainder. The general rule in this State is that no action lies upon a special contract for the price agreed upon, until performance of such contract. This rule, however, has been somewhat qualified in its application, as will be seen by a reference to some of the reported cases.
In Smith v. Brady (
The cases which are relied upon to uphold the doctrine that an action will not lie for the price of goods sold, where there has been an acceptance of part, do not go to the extent claimed, and are not adverse to the doctrine of waiver, where a portion has been received and retained and the acts of the vendee evince an intention to waive a delivery of the whole at one and the same time. In Catlin v. Tobias (
In most of the cases cited it was contemplated that the performance was not to be done by a single act at one time, but by a succession of acts, and the intention evidently was that all of these should be completed as a condition precedent to a right of recovery. The principle established is that the parties must fulfill the terms of the contract. They have a right, however, to act outside of the contract by changing its terms and conditions, especially in reference to the time of delivery of the goods sold.
Assuming, then, that the defendants, after accepting and appropriating the glass received by them, had a right to demand a delivery of the residue, the question arises, whether they intended to insist that the remainder should be delivered before they paid or became liable to pay for the portion which had already been received and accepted. Although they received and accepted a portion of the boxes of glass, without actual knowledge that the balance would not be delivered, the evidence shows that they used the glass without any notice to the plaintiffs that they insisted upon a delivery of the remainder, or any reservation of the condition precedent. It is also proved that prior to the delivery of any portion of the glass, the defendants wrote to the plaintiffs to forward them at once a small portion, which was described, thus indicating that they did not intend to insist on the delivery of all at one and the same time, and that they were willing to accept a delivery in parcels, as might be convenient. Some days after the delivery of a portion of the glass to the defendants, they also wrote the plaintiffs that they wanted the order completed within a reasonable time, and would like to hear from them as soon as convenient. After this a correspondence ensued which shows that the parties understood the contract differently, the plaintiffs claiming that the sale was made subject to such stock as the plaintiffs had at the time of receiving the order, and the defendants that it was from the stock list furnished by the plaintiffs' *348 agent, and each insisting upon their own construction of the terms of the sale. On the 12th of December the plaintiffs wrote, notifying the defendants that they had glasses of sizes which would enable them to complete a delivery of the whole number of boxes originally ordered, and offered to do so upon the thirty boxes which had been shipped on the 16th of October previously, and accepted and received, being allowed as part execution of the contract; and the defendants wrote on the next day declining to receive the glass on the ground that the time for completing the contract had then long since expired. In no part of the correspondence did the defendants claim or take the position that they were not liable to pay for the boxes received, in case the remainder was not delivered. They insisted, until a final disagreement took place, that they were entitled to an amount which was named, and which they stated that they charged to the plaintiffs' account for discount on the list sold from, and the list last furnished, and for damages which they had sustained by reason of the non-delivery of the remainder, and not that they were not bound to pay for what had been delivered. They received part, negotiated for the residue not delivered, claiming damages in consequence thereof, and thus waived strict performance and admitted their liability for the price agreed upon, deducting the charge made for discount or damages. This position is inconsistent with the claim now made, that they were not liable at all.
In view of the facts, there was, we think, sufficient to warrant the finding of the referee, to the effect that the condition was waived. While the defendants had the right to recoup any damages sustained by a failure to deliver the glass as agreed upon, or to bring an action to recover the amount of the same, they cannot, under the pleadings in this action, prevent a recovery for the value of the glass actually delivered, as they have not set up any counter-claim, but simply based their defense on the non-performance of the contract.
The judgment should be affirmed.
All concur.
Judgment affirmed. *349