98 N.J.L. 523 | N.J. | 1923
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This case was tried by the judge at the Union Circuit without a jury, resulting in a judgment for the plaintiff. The action was founded upon a contract made between the parties, dated April 4th, 1917. The plaintiff sued to recover damages for a refusal by the defendant to accept two cars of pig iron, containing seventy-eight tons, tendered on November 13th, 1917, and an additional three hundred and forty-seven tons included in the contract. -Written -find
It is the accepted law that the findings of the judge without a jury settles the facts. Kalbfleisch v. Standard Oil Co., 43 N. J. L. 259. It is liis province to settle the facts according to his views of the evidence. Mayor, &c., Jersey City v. Tollman, 60 Id. 339. Such findings of fact are not reviewable on error. It is only, where the facts found do not not support the conclusion, that the judgment can be disturbed on error. Mayor, &c., Jersey City v. Tollman, supra; Higgins v. Goerke Kirch Co., 92 Id. 424. All that can be reviewed is the sufficiency of the facts found to support the judgment. City of Elizabeth v. Hill, 39 Id. 557; Blackford v. Plainfield Gaslight Co., 43 Id. 440. We find in the record ample evidence to support the trial judge’s findings of 'fact. This, under the cases, disposes of all the grounds of appeal, alleging errors in fact.
The only point in the ease that calls for any discussion at all, and the only meritorious question involved is whether it was error for the trial court to find that the offer of deliveries of pig iron on November 13th, 1917, was within a reasonable time P The contract, as stated, is dated April 4th, 1917. No specific time for the deliveries is stated. The contract recites that the Bound Brook Stove Works, the plaintiff, had contracts for the purchase of pig iron five in number with various mills upon the terms and conditions therein stated; that the buyer, Herman Ellis, the defendant, desires to purchase the pig iron to be delivered pursuant to the said contracts, subject to the terms thereof, as to quality and deliveries, and as and when the pig iron is delivered under the contracts. The deliveries are subject to the con
The last delivery accepted was forty-nine tons, on October 29th, 1917, totaling one thousand three hundred and fourteen tons of pig iron delivered and accepted. On November 13th, 1917, the defendant refused to accept two cars containing seventy-eight tons of pig iron, thereby breaching the contract entitling the plaintiff to recover damages, as held by the trial court, and, also, a breach of the entire unfulfilled portion of the contract of three hundred and forty-seven additional tons of pig iron.
The uniform Sale of Goods act (4 Comp. Stat., p. 4657, ft 43) provides where by a contract “no time for sending them is fixed (i. e., the goods), the seller is bound to send them within a reasonable time.”
This question, under the circumstances of this case, was clearly one of the fact to be decided by the trial court. Atlantic Pebble Co. v. Lehigh Valley Railroad Co., 89 N. J. L. 336, 340; 13 C. J. 685, ¶ 782.
The finding of the trial court is supported by the evidence and is therefore not reviewable on appeal, being a question of fact under the circumstances of the ease.
The question of damages is argued by the defendant in the brief, but this, also, is a question of fact. There is evidence in the record by a witness, Frederick Spitalny (at p. 46), from which the trial court could fix, and did fix, the plaintiff’s damages at $1,526.79. It may also be added this is not specifically alleged as one of the grounds of appeal.
Finding no error in the record, the judgment of the Supreme Court is affirmed.
For affirmance — Ti-ie Chancellor, Chibe Justice, Teen-chard, Parker, Kalisch, Black, Katzenbach, White, Heppenheimbr, Gardner, Ackbrson, Yan Buskirk, JJ. 12.
For reversal — None.