15 Ind. 109 | Ind. | 1860
The appellants brought suit upon the following writing:
“We have this day sold Laws dh Go. the lot of wool on the west side of our warehouse, &c., supposed to be from six to eight thousand pounds, washed wool, at forty-six cents per pound, sacked and delivered in our warehouse. Also, about five thousand pounds of tub and fleece washed, and unwashed, wool, sacked, and delivered at Attica, Ind., at forty-three cents per pound for washed, and one third less for unwashed wool; the bill of the Attica wool to be sent as soon as it is sacked, and Laws dk Go. to express amount immediately on receipt of bill, when we agree to have the wool shipped: should we fail to get the Attica wool, we do not hold ourselves responsible for the delivery: the wool in our house, to be paid for by 11th inst., and delivered by 20th inst.
September 3, 1857.” “ Barbee, Brown dk Go.”
The plaintiffs aver that they complied with every part of said contract, upon their part to be performed, except that they did not deliver the wool in their warehouse, but were ready to deliver the same, &c., and notified the defendants, who failed, &c.; and that on January 20, 1858, they notified defendants that they would hold the same in their warehouse, subject to the orders of defendants, upon compliance, &c., and payment of storage, for ten days longer; and unless said contract was complied with, &c., they would hold said wool ten days longer, to be sold at public or private sale, and if it sold for less, the said defendants to be responsible, &o.
The defendants answered: First, in denial: Second, that said wool, so sold, was to be washed wool, and was purchased as such; that it was not, but a considerable quantity was unwashed, wherefore they refused, &c.
A demurrer was overruled to the second paragraph of the answer and sustained to the third, which was amended and re-filed, and states: that the wool was sold as washed wool; that defendants did not examine it; that they relied upon the representations of plaintiffs, and then paid said plaintiffs five hundred dollars on said contract. That afterward they were ready to receive and pay for said wool according to contract, and sent their agent to examine, sack and receive the same; that they were ready and willing to receive the same according to contract, but that the same contained a quantity of unwashed wool which they refused to receive; and the plaintiffs thereupon refused to deliver the same; that the time was extended for ninety days; that defendants were then ready to receive and pay for the same, but that it contained a large quantity of unwashed wool, wherefore they refused : they claim a judgment for five hundred dollars. There was a demurrer overruled to this paragraph.
Questions are made upon these rulings.
As to the second paragraph of the answer, we are of opinion that it was not a sufficent answer, and, therefore, the judgment of the Court in overruling the demurrer thereto was erroneous. We see no error in the ruling on the demurrer to the third paragraph of the answer.
A reply in denial was filed: verdict for the defendants for five hundred and forty-one dollars. Motion for a new trial overruled. The evidence is voluminous, and much of it contradictory. ¥e are asked to reverse the judgment because it is not sustained by the evidence. Whilst we might be of opinion, that, if, as jurors, we had been called upon to weigh the evidence, we, perhaps, should have come to a different conclusion, yet, from our repeated decisions, we could not interfere with that arrived at by the jury in this case. But it is not necessary, and we, therefore, do not decide this point, as,
“• In this sale the plaintiffs were bound to act in good faith, as the agents of the defendants, and it is a question of fact, for the jury to determine, from the evidence, whether they, plaintiffs, sold this wool in good faith ; and if so, what did it bring at that sale. If this wool was not sold in good faith, but it was a mere sham sale, the plaintiffs can not succeed, in this suit, in recovering damages from the defendants, for not receiving and paying for the wool.”
There was evidence tending to prove that the sale at auction was not in good faith. Under the view which we take of the evidence, this erroneous instruction must reverse the case.
The instruction, in effect, said to the jury, that if they found the auction sale a sham, they could not then find at all for plaintiffs. It appears to us that the instruction should have been so shaped as to have informed them as to the bearing that fact should have had upon the measure of damages.
The judgment is reversed, with costs. Cause remanded, &c.