84 N.Y.S. 693 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1903
At the trial of this action the complaint was dismissed, substantially on the ground that the cause of action therein set forth was not proven. The plaintiffs, a corporation, sought to recover the purchase price of merchandise which it alleged it sold and delivered to the defendants. A contract between the parties was proven. It consisted of an order in writing given by the defendants to the plaintiffs, and which, among other things, contains the following: “Please board the ss. ‘Allianca,’ Pier 57 N. R. on or before October 6th, goods marked and numbered as follows.” The articles ordered are then set forth in a schedule. The plaintiffs accepted the order, packed the goods in boxes, and within the required time carried them to the steamship at Pier 57 North river, where acceptance was refused by the defendants through a Mr. Calvert, who directed the plaintiffs’ truckman to take them back, and declared that they would not be received. There was no actual delivery of the goods by a transfer of possession from the plaintiffs to the defendants or to the carrier. Under those circumstances the plaintiffs sued for goods sold and delivered. There can be no question that an actual delivery was not made. At the close of the trial, by consent of the parties, the case was taken away from the jury, and the issues were left to the determination of the court, counsel agreeing, as the record states, “that the only question for decision is whether, as matter of law, there was a delivery of the merchandise”; and “decision of such question was under like agreement left to the court, after each side had formally moved for a direction in their favor.” The court decided that, as matter of law, there was no delivery, and judgment was directed dismissing the complaint on the merits.
It is now contended by the plaintiffs that they are entitled to recover for goods sold and not in fact delivered; not upon the ground that there is in the proofs a good excuse shown for nondelivery, but upon the theory that there was in law a delivery sufficient to authorize a recovery under the allegations of the complaint. If the question were to be determined by a strict adherence to common-law rules of pleading, the complaint may have been properly dismissed. Where goods are sold and delivered, the mode of recovering the price at
The only difficulty in the present case consists in the fact that counsel on both sides left it to the court to determine whether, as matter of law, there was a delivery, and thus it seems that plaintiffs’ counsel was content to have the fate of the case depend upon the decision of that point alone. But the learned trial judge has considered the whole case, and has held that the complaint was not sufficient as one to recover the price of merchandise under an agreement of purchase and sale, and he says that, if the action had been brought in
The judgment should be reversed, and a new trial ordered, with costs to appellant to abide the event. All concur, except VAN BRUNT, P. J., who dissents.
VAN BRUNT, P. J. I think the judgment was "correct in view of the case now submitted to the Justice for decision. I dissent.