68 Cal. 205 | Cal. | 1885
— .The complaint charges, and defendants by their pleading admit, that the plaintiffs sold and delivered to defendants a certain lot of wool at the rate of twenty and one half cents per pound, “subject to graders’ rejection.” It is" alleged in the complaint that the term “graders’ rejection” was understood by the parties to mean, and is generally understood among wool dealers
The meaning of the term “graders’ rejection,” as alleged by the plaintiffs, is not controverted by the defendants, except they allege in their answer that it also includes the right of the graders to reject any or all wool of a substantially different character from that purchased.
Thirty-three of the forty sacks of the wool delivered to defendants were graded and accepted by defendants and by them shipped East; and they also took from one or two of the remaining sacks enough wool to fill an order they then had. But all these remaining sacks the defendants claimed to have been rejected by the graders, and that the plaintiffs were notified of such fact within a reasonable time. But the plaintiffs, upon receiving the notice, contended that the wool had not been graded in accordance with the custom and the understanding of the parties, in that the bales claimed to have been rejected were not examined fleece by fleece, and refused to abide by the rejection. At the trial in the court below a good deal of testimony was given as to the custom in San
Judgment and order affirmed.
McKee, J., and McKinstry, J., concurred.