5 Lans. 243 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1871
This is an appeal from a judgment entered in favor of defendants, on the report of a referee.
The action is to recover the price of a quantity of lumber, alleged in the complaint to have been sold and delivered by plaintiffs to the defendants.
The defence is a denial of the complaint. The facts, as
A memorandum of the order, as agreed to, was made by the plaintiffs, but was not signed by the defendants, or by any one in their behalf. No particular lumber was selected or set apart to fill, the order, nor was any part of it then in condition to be accepted or delivered.
The defendants told the plaintiffs that one Percival, a forwarder at Whitehall, would send a boat to take the lumber, when notified that it was ready to be delivered.
Subsequently, and on the fifteenth of September, the lumber having been prepared and dressed according to the arrangement before stated, was piled upon the dock of the plaintiffs, and was in all respects ready for delivery by plaintiffs, according to the verbal agreement between them and the defendants.
The plaintiffs, on the same day, gave notice to Percival that the lumber was ready for delivery, and requested him to send a boat and take it away.
Percival had not, in fact, been notified by defendants, or otherwise, of the arrangement that he was to ship the lumber, and paid no attention to the notice given him by plaintiffs.
The next day, which was Sunday, the lumber, yet remain
The lumber ordered, as aforesaid, was to be taken from the lots examined by defendants, and the lumber dressed and piled on plaintiffs’ dock was, in fact, all taken from said lumber shown and looked at, as aforesaid.
After said verbal order or bargain, said defendants went into the lumber yard with plaintiffs’ foreman, and pointed out to him some of the piles from which they desired said lumber should be manufactured. Also, after said verbal bargain or order, the defendants directed plaintiffs to put the lumber so bargained for, as aforesaid, when it was ready, on their, plaintiffs’, dock, and to notify said Percival when this was done, and told them that, when this was done, said Percival, who was also a lumber dealer, would take up a boat and ship said lumber, and make out the load from his yard. Upon these facts the referee decided, as matters of law, that the contract was void in law, and that judgment should be rendered for the defendants.
To the said conclusions of law, and each of them, the plaintiffs duly excepted.
The plaintiffs’ counsel insists that the conclusion of the referee, that the contract was void by the statute of frauds, was erroneous, upon two grounds:
1st. That the contract was a mixed one, for the sale of goods and for work, and, therefore, not within the statute; and,
2d. That there was a sufficient acceptance and receipt of the lumber by defendants to take the case out of the operation of the statute.
As was said by the court, in Courtright v. Stewart (19 Barb., 456), “it is not easy to prescribe a test by which to determine, in every case, whether a contract is for the sale of goods, and, therefore, within the statute of frauds, or for work, labor and materials, and so not within the statute.” The most accurate criterion was stated, in that ease, to be, to
This test, it seems to me, is manifestly a correct one when it is practicable to apply it, for very clearly if the work and labor is done for the vendor, then the contract is not one of hiring by the vendee, and the case is not thus taken out of the statute.
In the case at bar the contract was, I think, one of sale, and not one of hiring. The plaintiffs were lumber dealers, and also had a planing mill, where they dressed and cut lumber into different sizes for sale. Defendants, as the plaintiff W. H. Cooke stated in his testimony, “ wanted to buy some dressed lumber,” and were shown by the plaintiffs through their yard, where they had lumber of the quality but not of the sizes, nor dressed, as defendants wanted it. “ Part of it was surfaced,” as the witness Cooke said, “ and part of it in the rough.” The kind, it seems, which defendants wanted were dressed clapboards, matched ceiling, and surfaced pine. These are all such lumber as is kept by dealers for sale, and plaintiffs, as Cooke testified, “ had previously sold defendants the same kind of lumber,” and when plaintiffs took defendants’ order and agreed to furnish them such lumber it was in substance as well as in form only an agreement to sell them the lumber specified at certain prices. The work to be done upon the lumber was not work which defendants had hired plaintiffs to do for them, but it was manifestly work which plaintiffs were to do for themselves, in putting their lumber in condition for sale to defendants. Defendants did not hire plaintiffs to slit and plane the lumber. They agreed for the lumber in such condition, and though, it was to be lumber from certain piles in plaintiffs’ yard, yet it was no less a purchasing of lumber, and not a hiring of plaintiffs to manufac turc it. There is a marked distinction between such a trans
This construction of the contract in question does not conflict with the case of Sewall v. Fitch (8 Cow., 215), which is regarded as a leading case, for there the nails contracted for were not in existence. They had to be made. And so in the other cases cited by plaintiffs’ counsel, as in Groves v. Bucks (3 Maule & Selw., 78) the oak pins were not yet made. In Mead v. Case (33 Barb., 202), the monument sold at the time of the sale had as such no existence. In Stephens v. Santee (51 Barb., 532), the contract was specifically for work and labor to be performed by the plaintiff for the defendant, and it was true also that the railroad ties to be furnished had at the time of the verbal agreement no existence. They were to be made. And so in Webster v. Zieilly (52 Barb., 482), the subject-matter of the contract was one of employment by the defendant of the plaintiff, in the language of the court, “ to take the job and incur the expense of purchasing hop roots for defendant, with a fixed compensation,” and on this ground it was held that the contract was not within the statute.
The transaction in question in the case at bar was a sale of lumber, and not a,contract of hiring, and being by paroi, and no part of the price being paid, was, unless there was a sufficient acceptance and receipt by defendants, within the statute.
The next inquiry is, was there a sufficient acceptance and
The position of appellants’ counsel is, that the placing of the lumber when ready for delivery on the dock and notifying Percival to come and take it away, in pursuance'of the direction of the defendants, amounted to such acceptance and receipt of it as satisfied the statute.
Even if this was such a delivery as would have transferred the property to the purchaser under the common-law rule, it cannot be said to be an acceptance of it by the defendants. For can this, with what the defendants had done prior to the act of piling, measuring, and notifying Percival, be deemed, as plaintiff’s counsel claims it was, an acceptance of the lumber by defendants, as a fulfilment by plaintiffs .of the contract.
In this case, there could have been no acceptance by defendants before the lumber was prepared for delivery. It was not before that, as the referee finds, “ in a condition to be delivered or accepted.” The defendants had not by them-’ selves, or their agent, done any act in respect to it, and without some act amounting to an acceptance there could be none. In Rodgers v. Phillips (40 N. Y. R., 519), the defendants in Eew York gave verbal orders for 175 or 200 tons of coal, and directed that it be delivered “ on board at Richmond, near Philadelphia, in the customary manner.” Eo particular barge or boat was designated. The coal was delivered by plaintiff on board a coal barge at Richmond, and a bill of lading taken by which it was to be transported to Eew York, and delivered to defendants there, pursuant to defendants’ directions. And yet this was held no acceptance under the statute of frauds. The court say: “ Up to the time when the coal was lost by the sinking of the vessel having it on board, no act was performed l>y the defendants
The rule stated by Story in his Treatise on Sales, to the effect that “ there must be not only such an actual delivery by the seller as to destroy all further claim of lien, or stoppage in transitu on his part, but also such an actual acceptance by the buyer as to disable him from objecting to the quantity or quality of the goods,” was approved by the court in the following words:
“ This broad and explicit exposition of the acceptance necessary to give validity to the contract, and stand in place of a writing, is founded upon numerous English cases on the construction of the statute in England, from which ours is copied,” citing a number of English cases. (See Rodgers v. Phillips, supra, pp. 530 and 531.)
Although it may be said, perhaps that the rule from Story was not adopted in its full extent in that case, yet it is stated therein, that the rule is unquestioned that to take a ease out of the statute, there must be something more than such a delivery as would change the title, and place the goods at the risk of the buyer, if the contract was in writing.
In Shindler v. Houston (1 Corns., 269), the court, in effect, adopt the rule above stated from Story. Judge Weight says: “ The best considered cases hold that there must be a vesting of the possession of the goods in the vendee, as absolute owner, discharged of all lien for the price on the part of the vendor, and an ultimate acceptance and receiving of the property by the vendee, so unequivocal that he shall have precluded himself from taking any objection to the quantum or quality of the goods sold.” And again: “ I think I may affirm with safety, that the doctrine is now clearly settled,
In the case at bar, it cannot be pretended that anything was done by the parties coming up to this requirement.
The result of the views above expressed is that the judgment is right, and must be affirmed with costs.
Judgment affirmed.