18 F.2d 734 | 2d Cir. | 1927
(after stating the facts as above). This being an action for the purchase price, and the ease not falling ■within any of the exceptions in section 144 of the New York Personal Property Law (Consol. Laws, c. 41), it was necessary to prove that the title had passed. The buyer argues that' the final exchange of telegrams did not leave as the sole remaining condition to the passage of title the conformity of the trial at Trenton with that at Oneida. He argues that it still was incumbent upon the seller to satisfy him that the machines would work at satisfactory speed, would satisfactorily manufacture the standard of cable required by the board of underwriters, and would in other respects be satisfactory. Hence he insists that the case is within section 100, rule 3, subd. 2, of the New York Personal Property Law, and that without his acceptance, or other adoption of the transaction, title did not pass. We shall for the purpose of argument assume that the buyer was already satisfied with the machines, provided that they worked at Trenton as satisfactorily as they had at Oneida. Nobody suggests that the title passed on delivery or on installation, and plainly it did not; it was subject to a condition precedent. Therefore, taking the seller’s position as correct, the question remains whether that condition was the machines’ performance, or the buyer’s acceptance. We are not met with the vexatious question whether there has been an acceptance of title, subject to a condition subsequent, if the goods fail to conform to the description or to a warranty. That is the difficulty dealt with in such eases as Delaware, L. & W. R. Co. v. U. S., 231 U. S. 363, 34 S. Ct. 65, 58 L. Ed. 269, and Glass & Co. v. Misroch, 239 N. Y. 481, 147, N. E. 71. In the case at bar, the parties had agreed that title should not pass except either upon the actual results of the trial, or upon the buyer’s “adopting the transaction” by something equivalent to “approval” or “acceptance.”
After considerable search we have not been able to find any case near enough to serve as a precedent, and we are forced to construe the contract as it seems to us to read. There are indeed many decisions where the seller agrees unconditionally that the buyer shall be satisfied, but these are not in point, and the statute expressly covers that situation in any event. Assuming that the seller did not have to satisfy the buyer generally, did he have to satisfy him at all ? Did he have to do more than make the machines perform -as they had at Oneida? We need not pass on whether the buyer was bound to accept, if the performance was in fact the same. Perhaps so, perhaps as regards this limited feature the buyer was not free unreasonably to reject. We do not therefore say that this was the usual “satisfaction” contract so far as the buyer’s obligations were concerned, for we are dealing only with the question whether he had become the owner. He may have wrongfully refused to become so, and still have successfully rejected the title.
We think that the intention was that he should accept the performance on the second trial as equal to that on the first before the title passed. For this conclusion we rest both upon the language used and the situation of the parties. The word, “satisfactorily,” selected by the seller himself can scarcely mean anything in this connection but “satisfactorily to the buyer.” Of course, it does not mean “satisfactorily to the seller,” and, if it means “satisfactorily to any reasonable-person,” it adds nothing. It would have been as well to say, “turn out the same product,” which we cannot accept as an equivalent. Even had that been used, we should say that the phrase still presupposed an inspection by the buyer and his acceptance. It was quite unnecessary if he was not to pass upon the result, to have the trial take place in his factory. This could only have been stipulated because he wished to see the product and to compare it with what he had received from Oneida. While he had inspected the machines there, and had indeed seen them operate, that was not the trial he demanded. The Oneida trial with his own strip he had never seen, and even though there remained nothing open to him but the comparison of the Oneida product with the Trenton the natural conclusion from his position is that, before the machines were to become his, he should pass upon their product made where he was to make it. This had become, under the seller’s interpretation, the hinge upon which the bargain turned. He naturally did not wish to have the title forced upon him until he had had the chance to determine for himself whether they came up to the standard he had fixed. This conclusion is corroborated by the provision that he should “accept” them. As we have said, the case is not one where a preliminary acceptance of ownership can be contrasted with acceptance of performance. , There was to be no period during which the buyer was to be owner with a power of rejection. Hence it seems impossible to give any meaning to acceptance, unless it was acceptance of title.
It is not necessary to hold that this was a
Judgment reversed and new trial ordered.