249 Mass. 365 | Mass. | 1924
This is an action to recover damages for breach of warranty of quality in the sale of Kraft pulp, delivered by the defendant to the plaintiff from June, 1917, to January, 1919. After the earlier decision of this court (reported in 242 Mass. 206), it was retried in the Superior Court by a judge sitting without a jury. The evidence before him, by agreement of parties, consisted of the report of the auditor, and the testimony and exhibits which were in evidence before the auditor. The plaintiff waived, counts 2 and 3. The judge found for the plaintiff in the sum of $40,860 and interest. The case is now before us on exceptions taken by both parties.
We consider first the exceptions taken by the defendant. The first, which was to the ruling that the defendant is liable, depends upon the disposition of his requests numbered 9, 10 and 11. These are, in substance, that the only warranty of the defendant was that the pulp supplied by him to the plaintiff should be of a quality equal to the making of paper commercially acceptable as No. 1 Kraft, and that there was no breach of such warranty. As to these it is enough to say that the finding of the auditor, later adopted by the trial judge, as to the construction of the warranty, was amply supported by the evidence. Indeed at the trial the defendant substantially admitted that the warranty was that all sulphate pulp which he sold was No. 1 Kraft pulp. The fact, that as selling agent for the paper, he was able to obtain the prices he did, is explained by the fact that during the war there was such an unusual demand for Kraft paper that even the poorer quality commanded a higher price than usual. The third exception was to the refusal of the judge to rule that on the evidence the plaintiff had waived any failure of the defendant to deliver pulp of the warranted quality. The question of waiver was one of fact, and the burden of proving it was on the defendant. It could not properly be ruled as matter of law that he had established that defence. Nashua River Paper Co. v. Lindsay, 242 Mass. 206, 209. See Samuel v. Page-Storms Drop Forge Co. 243 Mass. 133, 136. The defendant’s remaining exception is to the judge’s ruling that sufficient notice under the sales act was given by the plaintiff of the alleged breaches of warranty with respect to the pulp shipped from the Van Burén Mills and eleven carloads shipped from the Deerfield and
The plaintiff’s exceptions are four in number. The fourth is to the alleged ruling of the judge that “ Each shipment [of pulp] was a sale.” This, however, was not a ruling, but a finding of fact, as shown by the language and its context. The finding must stand, as it is supported by the evidence. The other exceptions of the plaintiff are to the rulings of the trial judge, in substance that the plaintiff failed to give to the defendant notice of the breach of his warranty of quality, within the meaning of the sales act, with respect to the pulp other than the Van Burén pulp and eleven carload lots already referred to. In common with the defendant’s exception No. 2, they deal with the subject of notice under the act, and will now be considered in connection therewith.
The material section of the sales act (G. L. c. 106, § 38) is as follows: “ In the absence of an express or implied agreement of the parties, acceptance of the goods by the buyer shall not discharge the seller from liability in damages or other legal remedy for breach of any promise or warranty in the contract to sell or the sale. But, if, after acceptance of the goods, the buyer fails to give notice to the seller of the breach of any promise or warranty within a reasonable time after the buyer knows, or ought to know of such breach, the seller shall not be liable therefor.”
- The statute does not attempt to define the kind of “ notice ” of the breach of warranty that must be given within a reasonable time, in order to hold the seller liable. Nor do we find any definite standard formulated in our cases under the act. In Borden v. Fine, 212 Mass. 425, Gascoigne v. Carey Brick Co. 217 Mass. 302, M & M Co. Inc. v. Hood Rubber Co. 226 Mass. 181, and Lincoln v. Croll, 248 Mass. 232, the subsidiary fact of a proper notice was involved, but is not expressly referred to in the opinions. In Trimount Lumber Co. v. Murdough, 229 Mass. 254, the charge of the trial judge was held unexceptionable. In that charge it was stated in substance that the buyer must let the seller “ know of any claim you are going to make against him ”
In view of the judge’s finding that each shipment was a sale, the exceptions of the defendant render it necessary to consider whether a proper notice was given of the breaches of warranty in the shipments of Van Burén pulp and said eleven carloads of Deerfield and Howland pulp. He further finds that the complaints with respect to these “ did not in terms or in substance state that the plaintiff intended to claim damages for the defective quality of the pulp or to charge him with liability therefor.” Apparently the only letter which specifically refers to a particular carload of Van Burén pulp is that of August 16, 1918, (exhibit 50). Nevertheless there was much evidence of written and oral complaints about the dirt in the Van Burén pulp, tending to show that the whole run of this pulp was bad. The trial, especially before the auditor, seems to have proceeded on the theory that it was not individual sales that were being dealt with, but that the matter to which the notices should
As to the ruling that the plaintiff failed to give notice of the breaches of warranty with respect to the rest of the Deerfield and Howland pulp: On this question also it seems to us that an issue of fact was presented. The judge found that “ the plaintiff did not prior to January, 1919, know nor ought it to have known,” (except with reference to the Van Burén and eleven carloads above mentioned,) “ that its difficulties in the manufacture of Kraft paper were due to the poor quality of the pulp sold by the defendant arising from a breach of his warranty of its quality.” As the warranty involved the suitability of the pulp to make No. 1 Kraft paper, the breach related considerably to the quality of,the product. In determining the timeliness and the sufficiency of the notices, it must also be borne in mind that the defendant not only maintained a laboratory in which all the pulp was examined, but purported to understand the manufacture of Kraft paper, which was a new line to the plaintiff; he kept in constant touch with the plaintiff’s mill and officers,, and for a long time represented to them
The result is that the exceptions of both the plaintiff and the defendant must be sustained.
So ordered.