29 Md. 287 | Md. | 1868
delivered the opinion of the court.
The facts of this case, upon which are based the main propositions of law contained in the several prayers on either side, are these:
In the early part of March, 1865,. Mundorff, who was then engaged at City Point, Virginia, in the business of furnishing supplies to sutlers in the army, verbally agreed with the plaintiffs, Lewis Jones & Co., merchants in Baltimore, to buy from them two hundred barrels of apples at $10 per barrel, and ^directed then to send the apples to the schooner Mansion, chartered by Mr. Kilbourn, then lying at a wharf in Baltimore, and on which he had shipped other merchandise, to be by that vessel forwarded to him at City Point. The plaintiffs did not have the apples at the time, but subsequently obtained one hundred and fifty barrels, • which they delivered on board the schooner, taking from the mate a receipt stating that one hundred and fifty barrels of apples had been received from the plaintiffs, “ on board the schooner Mansion, for Mr. Mun
Upon this evidence prayers are based, presenting for our determination the questions, whether there was a sufficient *acceptance and receipt of the goods under the 17th section of the Statute of Frauds, which requires, as essential to the validity of a verbal contract for the sale of goods of the value of ten pounds and upwards, in the absence of any note or memorandum in writing, or any thing given in earnest, or in part payment, that the buyer “ shall accept part of the goods so sold and actually receive the same.”
What will constitute an acceptance and receipt so as to gratify this clause of the statute, has been the subject of a multitude of decisions, many of which it is difficult, if not impossible, to reconcile. We shall certainly attempt no such task. Confusion has arisen sometimes from not bearing in mind the exact words of this section of the statute, more frequently
Whether the buyer has accepted, depends upon the facts and circumstances of each separate transaction. No general inflexible rule upon the subject has been or can be established. It is well remarked by an eminent jurist and writer, *“ We must inquire into the intention of the buyer, the nature of the goods and the circumstances of the case. If the buyer intends to retain possession of the goods, and manifests this intention by a suitable act, it is an actual acceptance of them, although this intention may be manifested by a great variety of acts- in accordance with the varying circumstances of different cases'.” 3 Parsons on Cont. 44. In the earlier decisions, slight acts were considered as sufficiently evidencing acceptance and receipt, but the later cases are much more .strict, evincing a' commendable determination by the courts to give full effect to the design and spirit as well as the letter of the statute. .
The most material proposition, and the facts chiefly relied on by the appellants as constituting acceptance, are, that the buyer directed the goods to be sent or delivered to a particular vessel, and that the sellers did so deliver them, and they were accepted and received- by the person in charge of the vessel, and it is insisted that delivery to and acceptance by such per
From these authorities it may be considered as settled, that the mere designation of a carrier by the vendee, and delivery of the goods to, and receipt of them by him as carrier, does not operate such acceptance and receipt as the Statute requires. There are no other facts in this case which would warrant a jury in finding such acceptance and receipt. No express authority or agency in the carrier to accept or receive the goods, in order to bind the bargain, is attempted to be shown. The receipt given by the mate, in fact, shows -the master of the schooner did not claim to have any authority beyond that of receiving the goods for the purpose of carriage, and no legitimate inference of any agency in the carrier can be drawn from his designation or appointment, except that derived from the nature of the service to be formed, viz.: to receive the goods for the sole purpose of transportation. The vessel was not designated as a place of delivery, at which the buyer was bound to exercise his option of accepting or rejecting the goods. Mundorff had never seen the apples; was not in Baltimore when they were shipped, and the sellers knew when the verbal contract was made and the order to send them to this vessel given, that they were to be transported to City Point, where the vendee was then engaged in business, and there delivered to him by the master of the vessel in the sole capacity of carrier. The refusal to accept was promptly made and promptly communicated to the sellers, and it can make no difference that this notice of refusal came not from the hand or mouth of the buyer himself, but from a third party by his direction. Nor does the fact that he sold or offered to sell, at City Point, Russet apples in anticipation of the arrival of these, amount to such assumption of authority or assertion of ownership over them as to bring the case within the ruling of Morton v. Tibbett, as explained in Meredith v. Meigh.
Finding in this case no proof from which a jury would be authorized to draw the inference of such acceptance and receipt of the goods sold by this verbal contract, as the Statute of. Frauds requires, it follows there was no error in the granting of the defendant’s prayer, and in the rejection of the first, second and third prayers of the appellants. Their fourth prayer, which presents the theory of an executory contract, is entirely unsupported by proof, and was also properly rejected, and the judgment must be affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.