108 A. 501 | Conn. | 1919
The court, in granting the motion for a nonsuit, based its action upon the ground that there was "no proof, proper evidence of the existence of the plaintiff, or the Army and Navy Magazine, or the party who took the contract." The complaint set up a contract of the defendant with the Army and Navy Magazine acting by its agent, one Swift. The proof consisted of the contract with the Army and Navy Magazine, defendant's check indorsed by the Magazine, the letters of the defendant and of the defendant's attorney to the Magazine, and defendant's testimony as to the presentation of the contract to him by Swift, his signing and the delivery of his check to Swift drawn to the order of the Army and Navy Magazine when he signed the contract, and his directions to his bookkeeper not to receive a package from the Magazine when delivery was attempted. This is quite sufficient to show a business entity, recognized as such by the defendant, from which the defendant ordered the books in question. Whether this entity was a person, *84 partnership, or corporation, doing business under an actual or fictitious name, is of no consequence, and, in the absence of a special issue, the defendant cannot now be heard to deny the existence of the Army and Navy Magazine, having repeatedly recognized it over his own signature.
But the record shows that the real point urged and upon which the court acted, was the claimed failure of the plaintiff, Lewis, by his proof to show the relation between him and the Army and Navy Magazine. As we have seen, the plaintiff is designated in the writ as Herbert Cecil Lewis, doing business under the name Army and Navy Magazine. The claim of the defendant, sustained by the court, is that proof in the way of evidence must be offered showing that the plaintiff Lewis and the Army and Navy Magazine were one and the same person. As the record stands this claim cannot be supported. No such question is raised by the pleadings. And it is well settled under our practice and procedure, that where objection is intended to be taken to the capacity of a plaintiff to sue, this objection must be specially raised by proper pleading for that purpose. The answer here is a general denial. This only admits of proof contradicting the allegations of the complaint, and these, so far as the plaintiff is concerned, relate only to the Army and Navy Magazine. The question of plaintiff's right to sue because he is in fact the Army and Navy Magazine is not in issue under the general denial. Further, a special defense recognizes Swift as agent of the Army and Navy Magazine, recognizes the making of the contract by the defendant and alleges that the books, under the circumstances set forth in the special defense, could be returned "at the expense of the plaintiff," and that the defendant notified "the plaintiff" of his intention to rescind the contract. We have the case, then, where the general *85
denial does not raise the question of the right of Lewis to sue, and a "special defense" in express terms recognizes "the plaintiff," Lewis, as bound by the terms of the contract made by the defendant with the Army and Navy Magazine, and in which the defendant seeks to be relieved from the obligations of the contract by alleging a breach on the part of this plaintiff. Paraphrasing the language of the court in Merwin v. Richardson,
The defendant claims that, even if the ruling upon the specific grounds stated by the court was erroneous, yet the conclusion to grant a nonsuit was right for other reasons, and that a correct ruling will not be set aside because based on an erroneous reason. Neither the motion for a nonsuit, nor the motion to set aside the judgment as of nonsuit, need specify the particular reasons. The single question, where no other rulings are involved, is whether for any reason the plaintiff has failed to make out a prima facie case. General Statutes, §§ 5793, 5794; British American Ins. Co. v.Wilson,
The Sales Act, General Statutes, § 4729, provides: "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 maintain an action against him for the price of the goods." The present action is for the price of the goods. The defendant claims that this action will not lie because no proof of delivery has been made, and for the further reason that the proof showed a countermand of the order by the defendant on the day after the order was executed and, apparently, before the goods were shipped. *87
Delivery of goods to a carrier for transmission to the buyer, pursuant to the terms of a contract requiring delivery to a carrier, is a delivery to the buyer. General Statutes, § 4712. The defendant's order was: "Deliver to any common carrier, addressed to me . . . I . . . agree to pay cost of transportation." Under this provision of the contract delivery to the carrier was delivery to the defendant, the property in the goods then passed to the defendant, and it became his duty to accept and pay according to the terms of the contract. Kinney v. Horwitz,
The defendant further claims that because, on September 3d 1914, and before the goods were tendered, he wrote to the plaintiff the letter of cancellation, no action to recover the price of goods sold and delivered can be maintained, but that the plaintiff is limited to an action to recover damages for breach of contract. Whether the goods were sent before or after receipt of this letter does not clearly appear. As the goods were manifestly not goods thereafter to be manufactured, this is not material. The attempted cancellation was not accepted or acquiesced in by the plaintiff, and the goods were, pursuant to contract, delivered to the carrier which, by the contract, was defendant's agent. The effect of such an attempted cancellation appears to have been undetermined in this State until the decision in Wells v. Hartford ManillaCo.,
In Home Pattern Co. v. Mertz Co.,
Our own decisions are so recent and so clear that further examination of the question is unnecessary. Applying our rule to the case in hand, we find that under the contract there was to be a delivery of the goods, apparently already manufactured and ready for shipment, to the defendant by a carrier designated, in general terms, by the defendant, defendant to pay transportation charges, a repudiation or attempted cancellation of the contract by the defendant, no acquiescence in this repudiation by the plaintiff, and actual shipment of the goods by the carrier designated in the contract, and it does not appear that the goods are not still in the hands of the carrier, by the contract defendant's agent to receive the goods. Repudiation of the contract was not a breach of it. Delivery to the carrier was delivery to the defendant and the title passed to the defendant upon such delivery. Refusal by the defendant to receive the goods did not revest title in the plaintiff, and he is, under the ruling in the above named cases, and so far as this case has yet been developed, entitled to recover the contract price. Upon no ground urged by the defendant does it appear that he was entitled to judgment as of nonsuit.
The record shows a judgment-file in which the issues are found for the defendant and judgment is rendered accordingly. This is erroneous. It was agreed, and the record otherwise showed clearly, that the actual judgment was as of nonsuit under the statute. A nonsuit for failure to make out a prima facie case determines no *91 issue between the parties. The defendant is not entitled to a judgment on the issues, but only for his costs. The judgment-file should show that the decision is based on the nonsuit. The forms are in common use, and doubtless the adoption of an erroneous form in this case was inadvertent. We call attention to the defect here, notwithstanding the agreement of the parties, because possibly serious consequence might follow from a judgment-file purporting to decide the issues when in fact no issues were decided.
There is error, the judgment is set aside and a new trial ordered.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.