Hewes v. Jordan

39 Md. 472 | Md. | 1874

Alvev, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The question presented in this case, arises under the 17th section of the Statute of 29 Car. II, chap. 3, known as the Statute of Frauds, and is as to what will amount to a sufficient acceptance and receipt of goods sold, in order to render the contract binding, where there is nothing given in earnest, or in part payment of the price, and there has been no note or memorandum in writing of the bargain made and signed as the Statute requires.

The bargain in question, was in reference to 3,148 lbs. of butter grease, alleged to have been sold and delivered to the appellants by the appellee, on the 24th of May, 1872.

The butter grease was, at the time of the bargain, in the cellar of the appellee in packages, and was seen by the agent of the appellants, and both the appellants and their agent could have examined the same before its removal, but did not do so, except that the agent removed the loose heading of some of the packages, and inspected the top of those packages, but did not use any auger or trier, or in any manner probe into the packages to ascertain the condition of the grease. On the same day of the sale, the appellants, by written order, directed the appellee to deliver the grease to a drayman, by whom it was taken to the store of the appellants and there received. The appellants, upon further inspection, objected to accepting the grease in fulfilment of the contract, upon the ground, that the grease was not merchantable, because of an undue quantity of salt which was alleged to be contained in it; and of such objection due notice was given the appellee.

At the trial, the appellants offered several prayers to the Court, some of which were granted, but the first, *479third and fifth were rejected, and in lieu thereof'the Court instructed the jury, that unless the appellants received and accepted the goods, or some portion thereof, the verdict should be for them; but such receipt and acceptance need not he absolute and unqualified, but might be such as would not preclude the appellants from questioning the quantity or quality of the goods, or in any way disputing that the contract had been fully performed by the appellee.

The Statute declares that “no contract for the sale of any goods, wares or merchandises, for the price of £10 sterling or upwards, shall be allowed to be good, except— 1. The buyer shall accept part of the goods so sold, and actually receive the same. 2. Or give something in earnest to bind the bargain, or in part payment. 3. Or that some note or memorandum in writing of the said bargain be made and signed by the parties to be charged by such contract, or their agents thereunto lawfully authorized.” It is the first of these conditions only that is here involved ; and in respect to the question presented, it is exclusively as to the proper construction of that pai-ticular clause of the Statute.

In the case of Clarke vs. Marriott, 9 Gill, 331, this Court decided, by quoting with approval from 2 Starkie on Ev., 490, that in order to satisfy the Statute, there must he a delivery of the goods with intent to vest the right of possession in the vendee, and there must be an actual acceptance by the latter, with .intent to take possession as owner. This proposition, quoted from Starkie, is said by this Court, in Jones vs. Mechanics’ Bank, 29 Md., 293, to be an accurate statement of the acts and intents required of the respective parties, in order to make the contract binding and effectual.

From the plain meaning of the lerrns of the Statute itself, independent of all authority, the concurrence of two distinct acts on the part of the-vendee, would seem *480to be required; lie must accept, and he must actually receive part of the goods, in order to render the contract binding on him. There may be an actual receipt without any acceptance, and there may be an acceptance without any receipt. But if both these acts concur, with the intention of the parties that the vendee shall take possession of the goods under the contract as owner, then the latter must be taken as having made a final election to accept the goods, or such part of them as he may have actually received, as his property, and, at the same time, assent to their being such as will gratify the contract; and acceptance and receipt being thus complete, to bind the contract, the vendee cannot afterwards withdraw his acceptance and reject the goods, except it be on the ground of fraud. So long, however, says Mr. Justice Blackburn, in his work on Sales, “as the buyer can, without self-contradiction, declare that the goods are not to be taken in fulfilment of the contract, he has not accepted them. And it is immaterial whether his refusal to take the goods be reasonable or not. If he refuses the goods, assigning grounds false or frivolous, or assigning no reasons at all, it is still clear that he does not accept the goods, and the question is not whether he ought to accept, but whether he has accepted them. The question ot acceptance or not is a question as to what was the intention of the buyer, as signified by his outward acts.

“The receipt of part of the goods is the taking possession of them. When the seller gives to the buyer the actual control of the goods, and the buyer accepts such control, he has actually received them. Such a receipt is often evidence of an acceptance, but it is not the same thing; indeed, the receipt by the buyer may be, and often is, for the express purpose of seeing whether he will accept or not.” Blackb. on Sales, 22, 28. The delivery, therefore, of the goods to the intended purchaser, and *481the unpacking of them by him, are not sufficient, if it appears that he has taken them and had them in his possession for no greater time than was reasonably necessary to enable him to examine their quantity and quality, and to declare his approval or disapproval of them. Curtis vs. Pugh, 10 Adol. & Ellis, N. S., 111; Lucy vs. Montflet, 5 H. & N., 233.

That the acceptance and actual receipt of the goods sold, or some part of them, by the vendee, to gratify the Statute, must bo intended by the parties to effect a final and complete change of property in the goods so actually received, under the contract, would seem to be clear; and without going at large into the numerous cases upon the subject, we may state the result of them by citing a passage from the last edition of Taylor’s Worlc on Evidence,, sec. 957, in which the author says, “that each of the two terms (acceptance and receipt,) has a distinct and separate meaning; that a compliance with both requisites is necessary to satisfy the Statute; that an acceptance and receipt of part of the goods will be as operative as an acceptance and receipt of the whole; that in cases relating to the purchase of specific goods, the acceptance may precede the receipt as well as follow it, or be contemporaneous with it; that an agent authorized to receive goods is not consequently authorized to accept them ; that the receipt, which itself implies delivery, must be such as will preclude the vendor from retaining any lien on the goods, and that the acceptance and receipt together must be such as will preclude the purchaser from objecting to their quantity or quality. ( Indeed, the broad question, which must be submitted as one of fact to the jury, is, whether the circumstances prove a delivery by the vendor, and an acceptance and actual receipt by the vendee, intended by both parties to have the effect of transferring the right of possession from the one to the other.” For the support of these pro*482positions numerous authorities are cited. See also 2 Kent’s Com.,p. 495, and Caulkins vs. Hellman, 47 N. Y., 449.

Opposed to the general proposition, that there is no such actual acceptance as the Statute contemplates, so long as the vendee continues to have the right to object to the quantity or quality of the goods, we have the judgment of Lord Campbell, in the case of Morton vs. Tibbett, 15 Q. B., 428. The facts of that case were these : The defendant purchased wheat of the plaintiff by sample, and directed that the bulb should be delivered on the nest morning to a carrier named by himself, who was to carry it to the market town of W., and the defendant himself took the sample away with him. On the next morning the bulk was delivered to the carrier, and the defendant re-sold it at W., on that day, by the same sample. The carrier conveyed the wheat by order of the defendant, who had never seen it, to the sub-vendee, who rejected it as not corresponding with the sample; and the defendant, on notice thereof, repudiated his contract with the plaintiff on the same ground. And on this state of facts it was held by the Court of Queen’s Bench, that there was evidence to warrant the jury in finding an acceptance and actual receipt of the wheat.by the defendant, so as to gratify the 17th section of the Statute of Frauds; — a decision that would appear to be sustainable upon the ground that, as the defendant had taken upon himself to exercise dominion over the wheat, and dealt with it in a manner wholly inconsistent with the right of property being in the vendor, those facts of themselves furnished evidence to justify the jury in finding that the defendant had accepted the wheat and actually received the same. Lord Campbell, however, in the course of his very elaborate judgment, maintained what the case did not really require to be maintained, that the acceptance contemplated by the Statute is, in all cases, to precede, or at any rate to be contemporaneous with, the actual *483receipt of the goods, and not a subsequent act; that there may be an acceptance and receipt within the Statute, without the purchaser having examined the goods, or done anything to preclude him from contending that they do not correspond with the contract; and that the acceptance to let in parol evidence of the contract is a different acceptance from that which affords conclusive evidence of the contract having been fulfilled.

Now, it may be readily conceded, that the question, whether there has been, in any particular case, such acceptance and actual receipt of a part of the goods as will bind the contract, may be quite different and distinct fi’otn that as to whether the contract has been fulfilled in respect to quantity and quality of the residue of the goods, where the vendee has had no opportunity of examining the goods that may be offered in fulfilment of the contract, and where he has done nothing to preclude himself from the exercise of the right to object that they do not correspond with those actually received by him. The effect of the acceptance and actual receipt of part of the goods, however small, is to prove the contract of sale, and it is not inconsistent with this, that the vendee should have the right, with respect to the residue of the goods when offered in fulfilment of the contract, to object that they are not such in quantity and quality, as the contract requires; and in such case, the question in dispute can only be determined by the aid of parol evidence. But, in all cases, where the goods bargained for, have been accepted and actually received by the vendee, he is thereby precluded, in the absence of fraud, from objecting that they do not correspond with the contract. Any other construction would certainly tend to let in all the evils that were intended to be excluded by the particular provision of the Statute; and hence, the proposition maintained by Lord Campbell, in Morton vs. Tibbett, that there may be an acceptance and receipt within the Statute, *484without the purchaser having examined the goods, or done any thing to preclude him from contending that they do not correspond with the contract, has found but partial favor with the judges of Westminster-Hall. Some of those judges have openly expressed their dissent from it; and while it may be taken as the established construction of the Statute by the Queen’s Bench, it has failed to receive the sanction of the Court of Exchequer. Hunt vs. Hecht, 8 Exch., 814; Coombs vs. Bristol & Exeter R. Co., 3 H. & N., 510; Benjamin on Sales, (2d Ed.,) 118, 120; See also the recent case of Smith vs. Hudson, 6 B. & S., 431.

As we have seen, the act of acceptance is not confined to any particular order of time in reference to the actual receipt of the goods. On the contrary, acceptance may precede, as in cases where the vendee has inspected and approved the specific goods purchased, as well as be contemporaneous with, or subsequent to, the actual receipt of the goods. This was decided in the case of Cusack vs. Robinson, 1 B. & S., 299. And in the present case,' we think there was evidence from which the jury might have found both acceptance and actual receipt of the goods, within the meaning of the Statute. Kershaw vs. Ogden, 3 Hurl. & Colt., 717. But it follows from what we have said that the instruction of the Court, given in lieu of the appellants’ rejected prayers, was erroneous ; and we think the Court was also in error in not granting the appellants’ third prayer. Their first and fifth prayers were open to objection, because they furnished no proper or clear definition of acceptance, such as would be intelligible and a safe guide to the jury.

It is contended, however, that, notwithstanding there was error committed in the instruction given, and in the refusal to grant the third prayer of the appellants, yet as they obtained all the law to which they were entitled in their second and fourth prayers, which were granted, *485they were not injured by the error of the Court, and therefore the judgment ought not to be reversed. But in this we do not agree. By the Court’s instruction, the law embraced in tbe appellants’ granted prayers was qualified, and must have been so intended, and it is but fair to conclude that it was so understood by the jury. Otherwise it would be difficult to conjecture which instruction was regarded by the jury in arriving at their verdict.

(Decided 17th February, 1874.)

Judgment reversed, and new trial awarded.

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