77 Pa. Super. 113 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1921
Opinion by
Four of the five assignments of error filed in this appeal do not conform to our rules. The first embraces more than one point, (Bule XIV); the second joins a remark of the judge made during the trial, to which no exception was taken, with a portion of the charge (Buies XIV and XV); the third does not contain a copy of the price lists or booklets the refusal of which as evidence is complained of, (Bule XVI); and the fifth does not set forth the motion for a new trial or the court’s action thereon, and is not self-sustaining: Vanderslice v. Donner, 26 Pa. Superior Ct. 319. The remaining assignment, the fourth, complains of the action of the court below in refusing to grant a new trial on the ground that the verdict was against the evidence, but the evidence is not printed in full in the appendix; it omits many of the exhibits offered at the trial and read to the jury. We certainly could not convict the court below of error in this regard unless all the evidence submitted to the jury was before us. The appeal might well
Bounomo, the legal plaintiff, a retail liquor dealer in Ashtabula, Ohio, on February 20, 1917, contracted with defendant for the purchase of twenty barrels of Kentucky whiskey. He paid $186.66 cash and gave fourteen notes for $40 each payable a month apart, the first one due March 20,1917. The defendant gave Bounomo four unsigned warehouse receipts each purporting to certify the receipt by it at its distillery bonded warehouse in Kentucky of five barrels of Old Hardie whiskey held for Bounomo’s account and subject to his order. The original certificates were presumably held by it as security for the notes. No whiskey was delivered to Bounomo at the time and the contract and certificates on their face provided that the whiskey should be shipped and title to the same should pass only upon compliance with the terms of contract and after payment of the notes in full, but Bounomo contended that the bargain with defendant’s agent was that the whiskey was to be delivered from time to time as ordered not exceeding the credit standing to his account and defendant seems to have acquiesced in that arrangement. When the first note came due defendant sent it for collection to the Ashtabula bank where it was payable, but Bounomo refused to pay it unless he received some whiskey and after two months’ negotiation, in the course of which defendant refused to cancel any part of the sale and blamed the delay in shipment on the railroad situation, defendant forwarded two barrels, with sight draft, covering the first note (due March 20th) and tax, attached to bill of lading which Bounomo on May 22d paid and lifted. The notes falling due April 20th and May 20th, respectively, were likewise forwarded by defendant to the bank for collection, and returned unpaid. Defendant thereupon on
When Bounomo failed to pay the first note, due March 20th, two courses were open to the defendant. It could rescind the contract, in which event it should notify Bounomo of its action and return his notes and any money in its hands belonging to him, or it could waive this right, (Shaw v. Turnpike Co., 2 P. & W. 454), affirm the contract and insist on the payment of the notes. It could not do both, nor having definitely chosen its course could it shift its position as might seem to its advantage, without fair notice to the other party to the contract: Forsyth v. North American Oil Co., 53 Pa. 168; Portland Ice Co. v. Connor, 24 Pa. Superior Ct.
Tbe defendant did not rescind tbe contract when Bounomo failed to pay the first note. On tbe contrary it accepted payment two months later and complied with bis demand for shipment of some of tbe whiskey, and in tbe meantime it forwarded tbe second and third notes for collection and refused to cancel any part of tbe sale. When these notes were not paid at maturity because no more whiskey was delivered, it returned them to tbe bank for presentation again and wrote Bounomo insisting upon their being paid, and when be wrote it of tbe coming election and of what be proposed to do if tbe town went dry it made no reply agreeing to such a cancellation by him of tbe contract and did not recall tbe notes which it bad employed tbe bank to collect for it. It must be remembered that during all this time tbe defendant bad in its possession money which would have to be returned to Bounomo, if tbe contract were can-celled, and that it was not being injured by waiving exact compliance with tbe terms of tbe contract and extending tbe payment of tbe notes. There is not one word in tbe testimony before us of notice from it to tbe plaintiff following these relaxations from tbe strict terms of tbe contract, of its intention to require a return to tbe terms in tbe future, before it attempted to cancel tbe contract for failure to pay tbe second and third notes; and even then it did not remit tbe balance in its bands nor return tbe outstanding and unpaid notes!. Tbe decision to stand on tbe strict terms of tbe contract seems to have come suddenly following a rise in tbe market price of whiskey and without warning to Bounomo who was insisting on the shipment of whiskey as be paid tbe notes. We are of opinion that tbe court would have been justified in charging tbe jury that tbe evidence, if believed by them, was sufficient to constitute a waiver by tbe defendant of exact compliance by Bounomo with tbe terms of tbe contract, and that notice of its intention to insist
We are of opinion that the plaintiff’s witnesses on the question of damages were qualified to testify on the market price of the whiskey at the time of the alleged breach of contract. Their credibility was for the jury. The verdict, while large, was not unsupported by evidence. The calculation submitted by defendant to prove its excessiveness is erroneous, for it in effect deducts the notes twice; the notes were included in the contract price of the whiskey which was subtracted from the market price at the date of breach in determining the damages suffered.
Not having the publications which were excluded by the court before us we are unable to state whether theyj were standard daily market quotations such as under certain circumstances are admissible in evidence or merely private price lists which are not admissible. The defendant did not limit its offer to any parts or items of these publications and as its witness Kramer testified fully on the subject and stated that he based his testimony on these publications, we cannot say that the defendant was injured by their exclusion.
The judgment is affirmed.