142 Ky. 219 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1911
Opinion op the Court by
'Reversing.
The Courtney Shoe Company is a wholesale house doing business in St. Louis, Missouri; E. W. Curd & Son are merchants doing business at Cave City, Kentucky. On August 22, 1909, Curd & Son gave W. B. Yater, a traveling salesman of the Courtney Shoe Company, two orders, one for stock shoes amounting to $49.15, the other for sample shoes amounting to $1,772.35, both to he shipped as soon as it could. The order though made on the 22d was dated the 21st, as the 22d was Sunday. It was mailed to the house by the drummer, reaching the house ,on August 23d; the house then wrote Curd & Son the following card:
“St. Louis, Mo., August 23, 1909. Dear Sirs: — Your order of August 21, ’09, to our Mr. Yater is at hand and will receive our prompt and careful attention. Thanking you for same, and hoping to merit your future favors, we are, yours truly, The Courtney Shoe Co.”
On August 31, the Courtney Shoe Company wrote Curd & Son a letter in which they rejected the order for sample shoes amounting to $1,772.35, telling him that the drummer had no authority to sell the samples, and that they could not accept the order. The stock shoes to the amount of $49.15 were shipped, and Curd & Son refusing to pay for them, .the Courtney Shoe Company brought this suit to recover the price. Curd & Son pleaded as a counterclaim the failure of the plaintiffs to fill the order for the sample shoes, alleging that the order was accepted by the house, and' that it had thereafter refused to fill .the order to their damage in.the sum of $1,083.20. Issue was joined on the counterclaim, and on a trial of the case before a jury, there was a verdict for the defendants on the counter claim, fixing the damages at $250. The court entered judgment on the verdict, and the plaintiff appeals.
The proof for. the plaintiff .showed that when the drummer’s order . reached the house, the card above ^quoted was- mailed to. the .customer t,o acknowledge the of the order, according to a custom of the house; that the order was then referred to the officer who passed on orders; that he on the same day as soon as the order
“The terms of every written instrument are to be understood in their plain, ordinary, and popular sense, unless they have generally, in respect to the subject-matter, as by the known usage of trade, or the like acquired a peculiar sense, distinct from the popular sense of the same words; or unless the context evidently points out that, in the particular instance, and in order to ef- . fectuate the immediate intention of the parties, it should be understood in some other and peculiar sense.”
There were no technical words used in the card. There is no proof of any usage of trade by which the words used have acquired a peculiar sense distinct from their popular sense. The words are, therefore, to be understood in their plain ordinary and popular sense, and what they mean is a question for the court. In Mannier v. Appling, 112 Ala., 663, the Supreme Court of Alabama had before it the question whether a card acknowledging the receipt of an order sent in by a drummer and stating that “the same shall receive prompt attention,” was an acceptance of the order. Holding- that it was not, the ¡court said:
In Rees v. Warwick, 2 B. & Ald., 113, the person who was notified that a bill of exchange had been drawn upon him, replied that it should “have attention,” it was held that this did not as a matter of law import an acceptance of the bill. In Cheboygan Paper Co. v. Swigert Paper Co., 140 Ill. App., 314, an order bad been sent in by a drummer for certain goods. Tbe bouse wrote a letter acknowledging tbe receipt of tbe order, _ and saying, “same has gone forward to tbe mill for tbeir attention.” Tbe court said:
“Tbis language can not, in tbe opinion of a majority of tbe court, be beld acceptance of or an assent to plaintiff’s order, nor more than a statement that tbe writer bad sent tbe order to tbe defendant for its attention.”
In Jordon v. Patterson, 67 Conn., 473, tbe plaintiff sent tbe defendant fourteen separate orders for goods. The defendants replied acknowledging and describing tbe orders received expressing tbeir thanks therefor, and subsequently delivered a portion of tbe goods but dedined to deliver tbe remainder. It was beld as a matter of law, that tbe order was accepted but tbe ruling is based
The question when such an order is accepted, is not without importance. Until it is accepted it may be countermanded by the buyer. When it is once accepted and the buyer’s right to countermand is at an end, the seller ean not revoke the acceptance without the consent of the buyer. It is generally held that, if- the seller does not.
We, therefore, conclude that there was no acceptance of the order for the sample shoes, and that the court should have instructed the jury peremptorily to find for the plaintiff the amount of their claim sued for.-
Judgment reversed and cause remanded for further proceedings consistent herewith.