86 Va. 97 | Va. | 1889
delivered the opinion of the court.
This was an action in the circuit court of the city of Biclimond, wherein Jane King, the defendant in error here, was plaintiff', and the Eastern Ice Company, a corporation chartered and. doing business under the laws of the State of Maine, was defendant. The action was brought to recover damages for an alleged breach of a certain contract, datefd June 17, 1886, whereby the defendant company sold to the plaintiff' fifteen thousand tons of Penobscot river ice.of the “ best quality harvested in Penobscot river ” during each year of the continuation of the contract, which was to run for five' years—three thousand tons to be delivered each year. There was a provision, however, in the contract in these words: “It is further agreed that the said Eastern Ice Company may be released of its obligation of delivering the said ice in the event of destruction of its housed ice by the elements, of if it be impossible to harvest the same by reasonable effort from the fields controlled by said Eastern Ice Company.”
. The breach alleged in the declaration was that the defendant company, during the year 1886, did not deliver to the plaintiff’ three thousand tons of ice of the quality stipulated for, but, on the contrary, delivered ice of a very inferior quality, “ consisting largely of compressed snow, and very dirty,” by reason whereof the plaintiff was greatly damaged, etc.
. In this posture- of the ease, we must, in reviewing the alleged errors in the rulings of the court below, look to the proceedings on the first trial, and if there be error in the action of the court in setting aside the verdict rendered for the defendant, it will be our duty to set aside all the subsequent proceedings, and render such judgment as the court below ought to have rendered; .that is to say, enter judgment' on the verdict for the defendant. Muse v. Stern, 82 Va., 33; Jones v. Old Dominion Cotton Mills, Id., 140; Tucker v. Sandidge, 85 Va., 546.
An important change, however, in the rule of decision of the appellate court in such cases has been effected by the new Code, which enacts that where, as in the present case, the evidence (not the facts) is certified, the case shall he considered as on a demurrer to the evidence by the party excepting. Code, sec. 3484. And this rule, as we have heretofore held, applies to judgments rendered as well before as since the Code took effect. Sutton v. Commonwealth, 85 Va., 128; Southwest Va. Improvement Co. v. Smith’s Adm’r, Id., 306. Therefore, instead of looking to the whole evidence at the first trial, according to the rule laid down in Muse v. Stern, we must consider the case under the statutory rule, as upon a demurrer to the evidence by the defendant, the plaintiff in error here, notwithstanding the first verdict was rendered in its favor, for so the law is written. And viewing the case in this light, the judgment must be affirmed.
There is no doubt, we think, that according to the true construction of the contract, the defendant company was not bound to furnish the plaintiff the best ice harvested on the Penobscot
But the evidence shows that the best ice harvested.by the defendant company on its said fields was not delivered by it to the plaintiff, .or, at least, only a small portion of the ice it ■delivered was of that quality. The greater portion of it was of very inferior quality. Much of it was “ anchor ice,” and a part of it “ little better than scrap ice,” and some of it was not marketable at all. Indeed, we think -the case, in this particular, is established for the plaintiff by the defendant’s own evidence ; for it is admitted by the president of the company, who testified as a witness before the jury, that the ice delivered to the plaintiff was not of the best quality, but he insisted that it was of average quality, and this, he seemed to suppose, was a compliance with the contract of the company with the plaintiff. He says the ice was cut from the river and run into the ice-houses, from which it was shipped to the plaintiff, “just as it ran,” and that the same quality of ice was shipped to the plaintiff that was shipped to every other customer of the defendant during the year 1886. He also says : “ We considered that we had only one quality of ice, and every customer’s vessel was loaded in its turn.” Yet he admits, while saying that the ice harvest of 1886, was a very poor one, that a part of the ice harvested by his company that year was of excellent quality, and
There is no doubt that all the vessels were loaded -in their turn from the defendant’s ice-houses, and that each received the ice as it ran. And this undoubtedly would have been a fulfilment of the contract with the plaintiff if that contract had called for ice good, had, or indifferent. But as it did not, and as it calls for the best ice harvested by the defendant, the furnishing of an average quality was not a compliance with its terms.
We think, therefore, without going into a further review of the evidence, which is voluminous, that the first verdict rendered by the jury was not warranted by the evidence, and that it was rightly set aside.
It also follows from what has been said, that the circuit court did not err in refusing to give to the jury the following instruction: “Said contract must be reasonably construed, and if the jury believe that said company furnished the best quality of ice, not picking out special lots, but as the ice ran, and such as it was furnishing to all its customers, that is a compliance with said contract, and the jury should find for the defendant.”
If talcing the ice as it ran did not result in furnishing the best quality harvested by the defendant, as we have seen it did not, then the instruction was wrong and was properly refused; nor were the rights of the plaintiff, under her plain and specific contract with the defendant, to he determined by the defendant’s course of dealing with its other customers, whose contracts may have been very different. She has the right to stand upon her own contract, and if in order to furnish the best quality of ice, or, in other words, to comply with that contract, it was necessary for the defendant to “pick out special lots,” it was its duty to have done so. The plaintiff contracted
Complaint is also made of tlie refusal of tlie circuit court to-give to the jury the following instruction: “ That it was the duty of the plaintiff to have claimed damages, and to have rejected cargoes within a reasonable time after they arrived, and if the jury believe that the plaintiff did fail to make such claims or reject such cargoes within a reasonable time, and that the defendant was injured thereby, then by laches on the part of the plaintiff she would he estopped from now asserting a claim for such damage.”
This instruction does not state the law correctly, and was properly refused. The true rule is that where goods delivered to the buyer are inferior in quality to that which was warranted by the vendor, the buyer inay bring an action for the breach of the warranty immediately, without returning the goods or giving any notice to the seller, though it has been held that the failure éitlier to return the goods, or to notify the vendor of the defect in quality, raises a presumption that the complaint of defective quality is not well founded. Vincent v. Leland, 100 Mass., 482; Fisk v. Tank, 12 Wis., 276; Day v. Pool, 52 N. Y., 416; 2 Benj. Sales (8th Am. ed.), sec. 1854.
The objection that the verdict at the last trial was not war7 ranted by the evidence, is also untenable. The plaintiff’s evidence shows that of the ice shipped by the defendant company to the plaintiff, in 1886, about eight hundred tons, or nearly one-third, was utterly worthless, and had to he thrown away, and that if the ice thus thrown away had been of the quality contracted for, it would have netted the plaintiff at least $1,200. In other words, the difference in this city between the value of the ice thrown away—-which was nothing—and the value of the same quantity of the best quality of ice harvested by the defendant company from the fields controlled by it on the Penobscot river, in 1886, was not less than $1,200; and in addi
The court at the trial instructed the jury that if they should find for the plaintiff, the measure of damages was the difference between the value in Richmond of the best ice above mentioned and the ice actually received by the plaintiff at the time the cargoes were shipped after the 17tli of June, 1886, and this is the true rule. In Wood’s Mayne on Damages, sec. 224, the rule is thus stated: “"Where the article has not been returned, the measure of damage will be the difference between its value, with the defect warranted against, and the value'which it would have borne without that defect. It was formerly laid down that the measure would be the difference between the contract price and that for which it would sell with its detect. But the rule in England is now settled as stated above, and the doctrine in America is the same.” See also Thornton v. Thompson, 4 Gratt., 121.
There is no error in the judgment of the circuit court, and the same must be affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.