43 Vt. 410 | Vt. | 1871
' The opinion of the court was delivered by
This action is assumpsit for the non-delivery of a hearse, according to special contract. The plaintiffs contracted with defendant to manufacture and deliver at Rutland, to plaintiffs, the hearse of specific description, for the price of $210. The hearse was made and delivered to plaintiffs at Rutland, as defendant claims, fully according to the terms of the contract. The plaintiffs claim that in some things it was not fully up to what' the contract required. When the plaintiffs received the hearse they wrote defendant, saying that they were much pleased with the general proportions of it, suggesting that defendant had overlooked plating the “ ends of the nuts,”—“ also plated pins.” Varnish looked bad, but not defendant’s fault, and concludes, “ Your money is ready, though we would like to hear from you before sending.” The plaintiffs received and retained the hearse without any further intimation to defendant until the 8th of August, when they sent to defendant $200, with a bill of the cost of making the hearse what the contract called for, amounting to $15.22, saying, “ But we send you $200, trusting the above is satisfactory.”
The defendant brought a suit to recover the balance of the contract price in Franklin county; the plaintiffs opposed and defended the suit, and appealed it into the county court, but defendant recovered the ten dollars.
I. The letter from plaintiffs to defendant, on the 26th of July, 1865, contains no intimation that plaintiffs purposed to disaffirm and rescind the contract; on the contrary the letter after suggestion of some deficiencies in the performance of the contract, and commending the general style of the hearse, proceeds to inform the defendant that the “ money is ready,” indicating most evidently that they received the hearse, accepted it on the contract, and was ready to pay for it as contracted.
In case of warranty or fraud, on the sale of chattels, there is no question ; the property sold may be retained by the vendee,
In Percival v. Blake, 2d Car. & Payne, 514, which was assumpsit for a vat which had proved defective, Abbott, Ch. J., held, if the defects were not discovered and notice given in a reasonable time, it could not be any defense in an action for the price. And in Wilson v. Tucker, 1st C. & P., 15, Burroughs, J., says: “ If the goods supplied were not conformable to the order, the buyer must return them in a reasonable time, or he will be bound to pay for them.”
In Cook v. Giles, 3 C. & P., 408, Park, J., says, (in an action to recover the price of a threshing machine which was defective,) that “ it was the duty of defendant either to have immediately returned or given immediate notice to the plaintiff to fetch it away.” In Growing v. Wenham, 1 Stark. Ca., 257, which was an action for the price of clover seed sold by sample, the defendant was not allowed to show in defense that it was not according to sample, without proof that he offered to return the seed. The case of Kellogg v. Denslow, 14 Conn., 411, is a very thorough analysis of all the cases on this subject and very decisive authority, and we think the rule is well founded on reason and authority.
This suit is therefore brought, because they have paid the $10 to defendant in satisfaction of a legal judgment. The judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded.
Our attention has been called to Carver v. Adams, 38 Vt., 500, and Gale v. Cooper, 11 Vt., 597, which decide that if a party omits to plead an offset he is not thereby precluded from collecting his demand. But there was no offset or question of offset in this case. It was a disputed claim and of one single item.