67 A.2d 818 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1949
Argued March 22, 1949. Comfort Springs Corporation, appellee, instituted this action in assumpsit against Allancraft Furniture Shop, Inc., appellant, to recover a balance due and owing for merchandise sold and delivered. The defense interposed was that the buyer had rescinded the contract because of a breach of warranty by the seller. At the conclusion of the testimony the court below directed the jury to return a verdict for the appellee in the sum of $1,284.44 on the ground that the buyer, as a matter of law, was guilty of unreasonable delay in attempting to rescind the contract. Appellant's motion for a new trial was overruled by the court en bane, judgment entered on the verdict and this appeal followed.
The sole question for our determination is whether the seller, by conducting certain negotiations to effect an amicable adjustment of the buyer's complaints, thereby extended the time within which the buyer could elect to rescind for an alleged breach of warranty before he was "deemed to have accepted the goods." We are all of one mind that no such extension was effected and that the court below did not err in so concluding as a matter of law. The judgment will be affirmed.
On December 21, 1946, appellant, in writing, ordered 25 crates or 400 sets of sofa beds from appellee and on January 8, 1947, 192 of these sets were shipped to the appellant and received by it on January 10, 1947. The beds were not crated but were bound together with bands or straps. Payment of the contract price was resisted on the ground the beds were not as warranted, namely, that the sets ". . . were constructed with basic wire, instead of tempered wire." Although appellant *305 concedes the alleged defects were immediately discoverable, the merchandise was not examined or inspected by it for at least one month after delivery. It was not until March 27, 1947, or approximately ten weeks after delivery that appellant attempted to rescind the contract of sale and to return the merchandise to the seller.
Section 69 of The Sales Act of 1915, P. L. 543, 69 PS 314, provides that where the goods have been delivered to the buyer he must notify the seller within a reasonable time of his election to rescind. Section 48 of The Sales Act, supra, 69 PS 258, provides in part that, "The buyer is deemed to have accepted the goods . . . when, after the lapse of a reasonable time, he retains the goods without intimating to the seller that he has rejected them."
Appellant does not challenge the foregoing rules and candidly concedes that if, in the instant case, the period of time within which appellant should have acted to rescind begins to run from the date of delivery (January 10, 1947) then ". . . the discovery of said alleged defects and conveying that information to the seller were not made within a reasonable time after delivery" and if that were the entire case then ". . . the trial judge's rulings would have been correct."
Appellant contends however that because certain negotiations were conducted by the parties allegedly looking to a compromise of their difficulties, that thereby computation of the ". . . `reasonable time' began not at delivery but at the termination of [these] negotiations." Appellant points to the fact that a salesman of the seller called on appellant at an indefinite time, which was more than thirty days after the delivery and before March 27, 1947, date of attempted rescission, discussed the complaints and offered a reduction in the contract price of one dollar per unit, or $192.00, and a supply of steel braces or supports for the sofas, which offer was refused by the appellant. There is not a scintilla of *306
evidence that this agent of appellee had any authority, actual or apparent, to modify or change the terms and conditions of the purchase order. Cf. Schroeder Bros. v. Sabelli,
As the testimony clearly discloses that the defects complained of were readily ascertainable by inspection (which factor distinguishes this case from those relied upon by the appellant: Industrial Rayon Corporation v. Caplan,
In Tinius Olsen Testing Machine Co. v. Wolf Co.,
We conclude therefore that the court below properly directed a verdict for the appellee. The assignments of error are without merit and are therefore overruled.
Judgment affirmed. *308