109 Ky. 246 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1900
Opinion op tiib Court by
Reversing.
Tjhe appellants live in and are engaged .in business in, Chicago, and the appellees' live in, and are doing business at, Princeton, Ky. On May 3, 1898, the appellees, Kevil .& Sons, sent appellants, Munford & Co., a telegram as follows; “.Make offer one oar number two wheat f. o. b. track Chicago.” On the same day the appellants responded in a telegram as follows: “Rid dollar nineteen track Chicago two red — prompt shipment.” The appellees responded by telegram as follows: “Accept- your offer on one. car two red.” On May 5, 1898, the appellants wired appellees: “Offer dollar twenty-five track Chicago two red wheat.” On same day the appellees responded by wire: ■“Offer you twelve hundred bushels two red one twenty-
The rule in this State is that, where there is a contract to deliver goods or chattels of a particular description or quality, at a future day, and the vendor tenders goods not of the agreed description or quality in discharge of the contract, and the vendee, after inspecting them, or after having had a fair opportunity to do' so, receives them in discharge of the contract, he can not thereafter maintain an action against the vendee to- recover damages for the defects in the description or quality. The stipulation that goods of a certain description or quality are to be delivered is made an essential part of the contract, which must be complied with by the vendor as a condition preceding the obligation of the vendee to receive the goods and pay for them; and,, if the goods are not of the description or quality described, the vendee has the right to reject them, and hold the vendor responsible in damages; but if he inspects the goods, or, after having had a fair opportunity to do so, received them in discharge of the contract, although they are not of the description and quality sold, he waives their defect by their acceptance, and is not entitled to recover damages. Jones v. McEwan, 91 Ky., 376, (16 S. W., 81), (12 L. R. A., 399). In this ease the contract seems to have become executed by the payment of the contract price and a delivery of the, bill of lading before the goods reached the place where they were to be delivered. The wheat was not inspected, nor- did the appellants have an opportunity to do- so before it reached Chicago. The vendees found themselves in this dilemma: Their vendors lived in another State. They had the contract price of the wheat, and they had on their hands the wheat of inferior quality to that which the vendors agreed’