130 A. 589 | Vt. | 1925
Lead Opinion
The plaintiff, doing business in New York City, delivered to the defendant at St. Albans, Vermont, a bill of goods under a "sale or return" contract. The defendant elected to return the goods; he delivered them to the express company in St. Albans in a package bearing the plaintiff's New York business address, for transportation. The express company issued to him a receipt therefor, naming him as the consignor and the plaintiff as the consignee of the goods. It turned out that the package bore the address of another New York firm, to which the goods were actually delivered; and they have never been recovered or received by the plaintiff. This action of contract was brought in the St. Albans city court where the plaintiff had judgment for the value of the goods on findings of fact made by the court. The defendant alleges error.
The nature of the contract was such that the title to the goods in question passed to the defendant upon their delivery to him, subject to be revested in the plaintiff by their return pursuant to the terms of the contract. No.
If the record before us can reasonably be construed as requiring the defendant to return the goods to the plaintiff at New York, it is for us to give it that construction, for this would support the judgment, and every reasonable intendment is in favor of the judgment; and it cannot be reversed unless all *81
reasonable intendments are against it. Kelley v. Seward,
We think the record can be so construed. The findings do not expressly show where the return delivery of the goods was to be made, but when the contract is silent on the subject of delivery and no usage of trade to the contrary is shown, the seller's place of business is the lawful place of delivery. Uniform Sales Act, § 43. So this plaintiff, ordinarily, would be under no obligation to pay transportation charges to St. Albans and make the delivery there; but having done so; as the findings show, it must be taken that this was according to the contract. Though the case is not within the statute, to make the law logical, we hold that when the contract is silent on the subject of the place of return, and no usage to the contrary is shown, the return must be made to the seller's place of business. It was so held in White
v. Perley,
It follows that inasmuch as the return was to be in New York, the express company was the agent of the defendant; its mistake was his mistake; the title has never revested in the plaintiff, and the loss falls on the defendant.
The case is argued before us as though the mismarking of the package containing the goods determines where the loss falls; but this is no embarrassment to our affirming the judgment on other grounds. Temple Bros. v. Munett,
Judgment affirmed.
Dissenting Opinion
I regret exceedingly that I am unable to concur with the result reached by my Associates. The *82 court below says that "under these facts and circumstances, the question before the court was whether or not the delivery of the goods by the defendant to the Express Company was a delivery to the plaintiff." This is a finding of facts, and it held as a matter of law that "the delivery of the goods directed to the plaintiff as hereinbefore stated, to the express company and the taking of said receipt was not a delivery to the plaintiff." The sole reason why it was not a "delivery to the plaintiff" in accordance with the contract is stated to be that it was directed as stated, that is, there was another address on the package, otherwise it must be treated as a good delivery. Such was the claim of the plaintiff.
The case is put by the plaintiff in his brief upon the sole ground that "the return of the goods has never been performed, * * for, if the goods are misdirected, a delivery to the carrier is not a good delivery." Otherwise the delivery is unquestioned by plaintiff. See No.
By the "facts and circumstances" referred to, the court has found the fact to be, that "the return of the goods was in accordance with an established practice between the plaintiff and defendant." Such must be taken to be the contract. The place of return and mode of transportation in accord with the "established practice" between them was, of course, known and understood by the parties, and the return was actually made in accordance therewith. Where the mode of transportation in return is agreed upon, or where no mode is agreed upon for that matter, and the party under obligation to return adopts a mode of transportation, justified by the usage of trade, the delivery is complete when the goods are placed in the hands of the carrier properly consigned. Gottlieb v. Rinaldo,
On the facts, as I understand them, I cannot escape the conclusion that the express company was the agent of the plaintiff *83 designated by the parties to receive the goods for transportation. Thus the other markings are unimportant.
The delivery to the carrier designated has the same legal effect as the delivery to the party. United States v. Andrews,
The bill of lading was a contract (Pollard v. Vinton,
I discover no ground for supposing that the plaintiff would not undertake to pay the transportation charges both ways or that the defendant did not pay them. No such claim is made by either party. Not a word is found in the record about them, and such an inference, it seems to me, ought not to be drawn without some fact or circumstance on which it may rest. Temple Bros. v.Munett,