213 Mass. 172 | Mass. | 1912
This is an action of contract to recover for goods sold and delivered and for damages for breach of contract for the sale of goods. There was evidence tending to show that the plaintiff agreed, by a broker’s “sale note,” to make and deliver to the defendant fifteen hundred thousand yards of cotton cloth. The quality, weight, price, terms and rate of delivery were fixed, and the note further contained these provisions: “No marks of any kind on bales, except bale numbers. Arkwright will let you know what bale number to begin with.” The defendant gave to the plaintiff the bale number with which to begin numbering the bales. After about five hundred thousand yards were delivered according to the contract, which the defendant resold without examination, it began selling to the Merrimack Manufacturing Company. The cloth was rejected by it as not being of the required quality. Thereafter examinations were made, and negotiations were carried on between the defendant, the plaintiff and the Merrimack Manufacturing Company, to the end that the goods might be accepted under the contract between the defendant and theMerrimackManufacturing
The inquiry is whether this evidence was sufficient to show a delivery of the goods between April 1 and the time when the defendant cancelled the contract. This must be answered without reference to the sales act,
The sale note required a delivery by the plaintiff to a common carrier for shipment to the defendant. It is admitted that no such delivery was made. The first question is whether the defendant’s letter of April 1, which was received and accepted by the plaintiff, constituted a modification of the contract as to delivery. The contract between the plaintiff and the defendant was in no wise dependent upon the relations between the defendant and the Merrimack Manufacturing Company. A
The question remains whether there was sufficient evidence of a separation and an appropriation by the plaintiff of the goods to constitute a constructive delivery. The cloth seems to have been of a common grade well known in the general market, and such as the defendant also manufactured. It was not an unusual kind made upon special order. The manufacture was completed, and nothing remained in order to execute the contract on both sides, except for the buyer to take the goods and pay for them. A definite quantity of goods was to be shipped or ready for shipment each week. Under these circumstances as between the immediate parties nothing was necessary in order to pass title to the buyer
It follows that the defendant’s requests for rulings were refused rightly, and that there was no error in the charge.
Exceptions overruled.
See St. 1908, c. 237, § 19, Rule 4.