96 So. 133 | Ala. | 1923
This action of assumpsit, instituted by appellee, a wholesale merchant, against appellant, a retail merchant, was to recover for shoes sold, by sample, to defendant by plaintiff. The defendant set up payment of all he was due plaintiff; and also, through special plea C, that certain types of the shoes, the purchase price of which constituted the balance on the account, did not conform to the sample, and, because of breach of warranty of quality, were returned to plaintiff by defendant within a *263 reasonable time after defendant discovered that the shoes shipped were inferior in quality to the sample; and, eliminating from the account the purchase price of these returned shoes, the check sent discharged plaintiff's demand before this suit was commenced. Plaintiff's demurrer to plea C was overruled. Joining issue on the averments of plea C, plaintiff replied through special replications 2 and 3, to which defendant's demurrers were overruled. The major theory of these special replications to plea C, disclosed by recital of the facts, was that defendant received the shoes in question, delivered on order given plaintiff's salesman, and kept them without any complaint, until more than 60 days after the purchase price therefor was demandable on October 1, 1920, viz. December 11, 1920, which was many months after their delivery to defendant about June, 1920. The matter of avoidance set up in the special replications was well interposed to the defense asserted in plea C. This plea (C) is of the category of pleas setting up rescission of a contract of sale of goods by sample because of breach of warranty.
Whether plea C was sufficient against apt demurrer is not presented for review. Having purchased shoes of a certain quality, and having received the shoes in question, the defendant could not successfully effect the rescission asserted unless he moved to rescind within a reasonable time. It was his duty to examine or inspect the goods, to ascertain their quality, within a reasonable time after the delivery of the goods to him; and, if he forbore or neglected an inspection or examination of the goods — to the end of ascertaining their quality — beyond a reasonable time after their delivery, his right to rescind was lost. Magee v. Billingsley,
The evidence invited the application of the stated principle, and justified the general affirmative charge for the plaintiff upon the theory that defendant lost, by delay, any right to rescind he may have had if seasonably exercised.
This conclusion requires an affirmance unless prejudicial error otherwise affects the judgment. Plaintiff's demurrer was sustained to plea B, the material matter thereof being admissible under plea 1.
The fourth count referred, in the usual way, to a verified, itemized account as the basis of the action, filed therewith. Over defendant's objection that the affidavit to the account was defective if not entirely abortive, the court admitted the account in evidence. Whether erroneous or not, the admission of the account was without prejudice to defendant; he having testified in confirmation of the correctness of the charges and of the resultant balance claimed, and really contesting the issue of liability upon the sole ground asserted in plea C. Furthermore, other evidence established, without dispute, the amount of the balance claimed, unless, of course, the asserted act of rescission had affected the reduction of the amount of the balance to the extent of the agreed purchase price of the shoes in question.
The other subjects of assignments of error bore no such relation to the basis upon which the court's instruction of the jury was justified as to affect, in any way, the propriety of that action. Bienville Water Co. v. Mobile,
The judgment is affirmed.
Affirmed.
ANDERSON, C. J., and SOMERVILLE and THOMAS, JJ., concur.