126 A. 243 | Pa. | 1924
Argued May 19, 1924. The plaintiff is a Wisconsin corporation engaged in the manufacture and sale of sauerkraut, while defendant is a copartnership, located at York, Pa., and engaged in the purchase and sale of the same commodity. This suit is based on a written contract, in part as follows:
"Milwaukee, Wis., Feb. 22d 1918.
"The Frank Pure Food Company, Milwaukee, Wisconsin, has this day sold and Wm. Dodson Canning Co., York, Pa., has this day purchased 2500 cases Frank's Quality Sauerkraut, packed in No. 3 Sanitary Tins, at $1.35 per dozen, F. O. B. Factory, Wisconsin points, fall 1918 pack. *127
"$1.00 per M. label allowance for buyer's labels.
"Labels to be forwarded to The Frank Pure Food Company, Franksville, Wisconsin, by express or freight, prepaid, at least six weeks before date specified for delivery of kraut.
"Shipments to be made in carload lots, payments to be made for each car on following terms: 1 1/2% 10 days or 30 days net from date of invoice." Later by mutual consent the amount was reduced to two thousand cases, of which one-half (a carload) delivered to defendant late in the fall of that year, was accepted and paid for. Before receiving the one-half, however, defendant notified plaintiff of its refusal to receive the balance, and, as to that, repudiated the contract. On the other hand, plaintiff insisted on defendant receiving the remaining one thousand cases and finally placed same in a storage warehouse at Milwaukee and tendered defendant the receipt therefor, which the latter refused to accept. Thereupon plaintiff brought this suit and claimed the contract price of the commodity, on the contention that the title had vested in the purchaser. The trial court denying the latter contention, sustained a directed verdict for the defendant, and plaintiff has appealed.
In our opinion the ruling complained of was right. The contract was executory; in other words, it was not a purchase of existing specific property, but an agreement to purchase unascertained and nonexistent goods, to be thereafter produced; the case therefore, falls within Rule 4, clause 1, of section 19, of the Sales Act of May 19, 1915, P. L. 543, 548, that: "Where there is a contract to sell unascertained or future goods by description, and goods of that description and in a deliverable state are unconditionally appropriated to the contract, either by the seller with the assent of the buyer, or by the buyer with the assent of the seller, the property in the goods thereupon passes to the buyer. Such assent may be expressed or implied, and may be given either before or after the appropriation is made." Thereunder, *128
in the case of future goods, the title does not pass until they are ascertained and set aside by the act or consent of both parties. In Conard v. Penna. R. R. Co.,
Furthermore, he who would exact specific performance from another must be in no default; for example, where the attempted rescission of the buyer has been refused by the seller, the latter, in order to so hold the former must strictly comply with the provisions of the contract: Fairfax Textile Mills v. Feingold,
The rule that a delivery to a carrier is a constructive delivery to the buyer does not apply here, (a) because the latter had not given an express or implied assent to the appropriation of the goods, but had repudiated the contract long before delivery to the carrier, (b) because the goods, being without the required labels, were not in a deliverable condition (see sub-sec. 5, sec. 43, of the Sales Act, P. L. 555; also same act, sub-sec. 4, sec. 76, P. L. 566), and (c) because the goods were not consigned to the buyer (see sub-sec. 1 of sec. 46 of the Sales Act, P. L. 556) but to a warehouse in Milwaukee for storage. Under such circumstances the carrier who took them to the warehouse cannot be treated as the agent of the buyer for the purpose of accepting the property; this is *131
especially true as such consignment was made to plaintiff's own order. Placing in storage might have been justified had the title passed and the buyer refused to accept the property; see sec. 51 of the Sales Act, P. L. 557, also Uniform Laws Annotated, vol. 1, Sales Act, p. 190. But in case of an executory contract the title does not pass so long as some material thing remains for the seller to do to put the goods in deliverable condition (here, if for no other reason, a failure to attach the labels): Swift et al. v. Morrison (Pa.), 2 W. N.C. 699; J. B. Bradford Piano Co. v. Hacker,
The assignment of error is overruled and the judgment is affirmed.