99 Mass. 378 | Mass. | 1868
The question whether the oral contract for the sale of this cargo was upon the condition that it should be shipped in a vessel which could discharge at the defendants’ wharf should have been submitted to the jury, if it was material to the decision of the case, because the evidence upon it was conflicting. The further question, whether the lapse of time between the receipt of the bill of lading by the defendants and their sending it back to the plaintiffs, in connection with the other circumstances of the case; showed an intention on the part of the defendants to assume the ownership of the cargo, so that there was an acceptance of the bill of lading," and thereby an acceptance of the cargo, was also a question of fact upon which the verdict of a jury was necessary. Morton v. Tibbett, 15 Q. B 428. Bushel v. Wheeler, Ib. 442.
Under these circumstances, we know of no authority for the doctrine that the mere right to sue'can be transferred, without
Judgment for the defendants on the verdict.