176 A.D. 464 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1917
The action is to recover the purchase price of fifty cases of' Chateau Yquem wine. There have been four trials of the case. The case has been three times before this court (137 App. Div. 323; 143 id. 928; 165 id. 288) and once in the Court of Appeals (206 N. Y. 423). The negotiation for the sale of these goods which were in Bordeaux, France, resulted in an agreement for the goods to be held subject to shipping orders from the defendant to be delivered duty paid on dock in New York to be billed November 1, 1906, payable in four months. Pending instructions for shipping the goods were to be held at Bordeaux. An invoice was sent to the defendant by the plaintiff stating these terms. The four months having elapsed, on March 25, 1907, the plaintiff wrote to the defendant: “If you will advise me what quantity you
This rule has seldom been invoked in actions for the price arising out of contracts for sales of goods, for the reason that it is rarely that an agreement is made to pay for goods except upon condition of prior or concurrent delivery of the goods. That it is, however, applicable to such an action is clearly recognized. In the “Sales of Goods Act” (Pers. Prop. Law [Consol. Laws, chap. 41; Laws of 1909, chap. 45], § 144, as added by Laws of 1911, chap. 571) it is provided: “Action for the price. * * * 2. Where, under a contract to sell or a sale, the price is payable on a day certain, irrespective of delivery or of transfer of title, and the buyer wrongfully neglects or refuses to pay such price, the seller may maintain an action for the price, although the property in the goods has not passed, and the goods have not been appropriated to the contract. * * *.”
While this statute was not passed until several years after the contract in the instant case was made, it is merely declaratory of the common law as it theretofore existed, and the principles thus declared are applicable. (Benj. Sales [7th ed.], §§ 562, 762; Willis. Sales, § 575.) As I read the opinion of the Court of Appeals in the instant case this rule was recognized as applicable to the facts in this case. Of course the seller cannot have both the purchase price and the property; he must, when the time arrives for him to perform his part of the contract, make the delivery. This obligation the plaintiff, in the instant case, appreciates and in his complaint states:
“Fourth. That the plaintiff was at all times since about the 21st day of May, 1906, as aforesaid, ready and willing to deliver said wines to the defendant, and that the plaintiff stands ready and -willing now or in the future to deliver the same; but that the defendant has refused to receive said wine.”
Evidence was offered by the plaintiff to prove that at the
And further states that the correspondence leaves it somewhat uncertain whether the time for delivery and payment had been extended only to October, 1907, or for an indefinite period, and if the time for delivery was extended for an indefinite period the question would be whether the defendant had been given a reasonable time in which to comply, and that these questions should be submitted to the jury. They have been so submitted and we have answered them in the plaintiff’s favor.
The judgment and order should be affirmed, with costs.
Clarke, P. J., Scott, Davis and Shears, JJ., concurred.
Judgment and order affirmed, with costs.