65 Iowa 593 | Iowa | 1885
The plaintiffs are provision dealers residing and doing business in the city of Mobile, Alabama. The defendant is a pork-packer residing and doing business in the city of Council Bluffs, Iowa. In August, 1881, he entered into a contract through his broker, one 0. Wilson, located at Mobile, for the sale of a large quantity of hams, and shipped the same on the nineteenth day of that month. The bains arrived in Mobile in due course of transportation, and in about ten days. The plaintiffs had paid for them on the twenty-fourth of that month, and while the same were in transit. They aver that they purchased the hams as “ choice, sugar-cured, canvassed hams,” and that when the same were delivered to them they were unsound, tainted and unmerchantable. They introduced evidence tending to show that the hams, without their fault and without the fault of the carrier, had, upon their arrival at Mobile, become sour, tainted and skippery. They also introduced expert evidence tending
The defendant, on the other hand, introduced evidence tending to show that the hams were properly cured, and were in good condition when shipped at Council Bluffs. As to when, if at all, the hams became unsound, there was no direct evidence whatever. As will be seen, it became important to determine with what warranty, if any, the hams were sold and delivered, and if with a warranty, whether the hams delivered were of the quality warranted at the time they were delivered; and in this inquiry it will be seen that there was involved another, and that is as to the time when the hams should be deemed to have been delivered. The plaintiffs contend that there was an express warranty that the hams were choice, sugar-cured, canvassed hams. The defendant denied that there was any express warranty. Again, the plaintiffs contend that the delivery to them took place when the hams were received by them from the carrier at Mobile. The defendant contends that the delivery to them took place when the hams were delivered to the carrier at Council Bluffs. Respecting this matter of delivery, the undisputed fact appears to be that the defendant took from the carrier a bill of lading, or shipping receijff, in his own name, whereby the hams were made deliverable to him or his order. This bill of lading the defendant indorsed in blank; to it he attached a sight draft, which he drew upon the plaintiffs, for the purchase price of the hams, and delivered the same-to his banker in Council Bluffs in the usual way'of such business, and received credit therefor in his bank account. The draft and bill of lading were forwarded by the bank to its correspondent in Mobile, and by the latter were presented to the plaintiffs, who, after some hesitation and negotiation, paid the draft and received the bill of lading.
It is true that the plaintiffs could not be considered as having had an opportunity to inspect the goods at the time when the transfer was made to them of the bill of lading. But we do not see how the plaintiffs’ inability to inspect at that time could give the transfer of the bill of lading an effect different from what it otherwise would have had. The plaintiffs were not bound to accept the transfer at that time. The defendant had put the goods in transit without a tender of delivery. The plaintiffs might unquestionably have withheld payment of the draft and acceptance of the bill of lading until the goods reached their destination. But for reasons satisfactory to themselves they preferred to pay in advance. It was their right to do soyf they preferred, and secure whatever advantages there might be from such payment and such acceptance. But in securing those advantages we think they took upon themselves whatever risk there might be of damage from the. elements from that time forward.
"We ought to say, in this connection, that the plaintiffs claim that they declined at first to pay the draft and accept the bill of lading, and were induced to do so at the time they did only by an agreement on the part of the defendant that he would protect them, which agreement they construe as meaning that the defendant would guaranty that the goods
A representation as to the quality of goods by the use of
What the defendant’s communications to his broker were concerning the quality of hams which he desired to offer through him in the Mobile market, we think that there was no doubt. But we do not desire to rest our decision expressly upon these communications. It is enough for us to know that the defendant constituted him his agent at Mobile to take orders for, and contract to sell, hams; and the order which the agent took from the plaintiffs was for choice sugar-cured, canvassed hams. No one would claim that, where a principal should appoint an agent to contract for the sale of wheat, and such agent should contract for the sale of No. 1 wheat, the contract could be properly executed by the delivery of an inferior grade. An agent appointed to contract for the-sale of hams is clothed with apparent authority to contract for the sale of at least the usual grades known in the market, and especially for the sale of such a grade as that in question, where the hams are to be shipped, in summer, to a distant southern market. It would be a reproach to the law to hold that a seller, under the circumstances shown, was not bound to fulfill his agent’s contractas made. Neither buyers nor sellers desire such rule established as that contended for. It would go far towards destroying all confidence in an important mode of trade. In our opinion, then, the instruction which the court gave, to the effect that there was no special warranty, cannot be sustained. Nor do we think that the instruction given was without prejudice. It is true that, under other instructions, the jury must have found that the hams were merchantable on the day the bill of lading was accepted by plaintiffs. But the plaintiffs contracted for a superior grade, and the evidence tended strongly to show that, if the hams had been of such a grade, they would not have been unsound, tainted and skippery on the day they arrived.
Reversed.