147 N.E. 71 | NY | 1925
In October, 1918, plaintiffs agreed to sell and defendant to buy 6,000 yards of material, described as Palm Beach suitings, to be delivered at defendant's place of business on January 15, 1919, and to be paid for seventy days thereafter. Tender of delivery was made at the prescribed time, and rejected by the buyer's agent. The sellers thereupon gave notice to the buyer that the goods would be resold for his account and that he would be charged with the deficiency. Thus warned, the buyer telegraphed the sellers: "Had instructed receiving clerk to accept invoice of January fifteenth." At the same time his attorneys wrote that their client had need of the goods, and had not intended to reject them. "You will please send them in and if they are in accordance with the contract they will be paid for." Obeying these directions, the plaintiffs, on January twentieth, sent the goods again by their truck to the defendant's place of business and tendered them to the defendant, who received them without reservation or condition. The following day, January twenty-first, he wrote that the goods were defective, and that payment would be refused. He reiterated this position later. This action followed for the recovery of the price.
The jury found the goods to be of merchantable quality and in accordance with the contract. Upon their verdict to that effect there was a judgment for the plaintiffs. The Appellate Division reversed and dismissed the complaint upon the ground that the contract was executory and that the remedy was by action for the damages resulting from the breach.
"Where, under a contract to sell or a sale, the property in the goods has passed to the buyer, and the buyer wrongfully neglects or refuses to pay for the goods according to the terms of the contract or the sale, the seller may *479 maintain an action against him for the price of the goods" (Pers. Prop. Law [Cons. Laws, ch. 41], § 144, subd. 1).
There has been wrongful refusal by this defendant to pay for the goods in accordance with the contract. The question is whether the property had passed to him at the time of the refusal. Up to the time of the Sales Act, the answer to that question would have been unimportant in New York. Till then, the seller, upon tender of goods in conformity with the contract, might have maintained an action for the price, if the tender was wrongfully rejected, though there had been no transfer of the title (Dustan v. McAndrew,
The defendant insists that the goods are not appropriated to a contract with the assent of the buyer until the buyer has so manifested his approval of their quality as to preclude him thereafter from giving notice of rescission (Pers. Prop. Law, § 128, subd. 1; § 129). In that view, the passage of title may be indefinitely postponed, for the reasonable time within which a buyer is privileged to return goods found to be defective will vary with many circumstances, as, for instance, the nature of the defects, whether patent or concealed (Schnitzer v. Lang,
When we speak of delivery, we must be on our guard, none the less, against misleading ambiguities. Delivery to be operative as a transfer of the property must be assented to by the buyer (Williston, Sales, § 472; cf. § 280, p. 592). The seller may not force the goods upon a buyer unwilling to receive them. The buyer, when delivery is tendered, may refuse to assent to it at all (taking, of course, the risk of liability for damages), or may assent subject to the condition that he be allowed to see the goods before delivery or appropriation shall be deemed to be complete. "Unless otherwise agreed, when the seller tenders delivery of goods to the buyer, he is bound, on request, to afford the buyer a reasonable opportunity of examining the goods for the purpose of ascertaining whether they are in conformity with the contract" (Pers. Prop. Law, § 128, subd. 2). The law was the same before the statute was enacted. "The rule is that a tender of bulky articles in the performance of an agreement must be seasonably made, so that the person may have an opportunity to examine the articles tendered, and see that they are such as they purport to be, and such as he is entitled to demand, before the close of the day on which the delivery is to be made" (Croninger v. Crocker,
The defendant argues that his telegram to the plaintiffs and the letter written by his attorneys do qualify the delivery, and in qualifying it rebut the inference of ownership. We do not so construe them. The telegram is in effect a notice to the plaintiffs that the buyer will assent to a delivery, if the tender, rejected by mistake, is made to him again. The letter is merely a reminder by his lawyers that payment will not be due if the goods are not as ordered. To state this is to state the obvious. Nothing in the telegram or in the letter is notice to the plaintiffs that delivery, when accepted, is to be subject *485 to consequences or conditions other than those that by legal implication are inherent in the act.
Two cases, one relied on by the sellers, and the other by the buyer, deserve a word of explanation to avoid misconstruction in the future. Turner-Looker Co. v. Aprile (
An error in the admission of evidence necessitates another trial. The plaintiffs' letter of January 28, 1919, contains a scathing arraignment of the defendant's conduct. It was erroneously received as evidence in favor of its authors.
The judgment of the Appellate Division should be modified by granting a new trial, and as so modified affirmed, with costs to abide the event.
HISCOCK, Ch. J., POUND, CRANE, ANDREWS and LEHMAN, JJ., concur; McLAUGHLIN, J., absent.
Judgment accordingly. *486