96 Me. 73 | Me. | 1901
This case comes up on report. We think the essential facts to be deduced from the evidence are as follows:
Oh September 15, 1900, the plaintiff wrote to the defendant, “You may ship me car of straw at price named $7.00 per ton in Bangor.” Four days later the defendant wrote to- the plaintiff, and after explaining his inability to ship a whole car of straw, said, “ 1 don’t see any other way to load the car but to make up with hay. The hay will cost you $13 in Bangor. Shall I ship it to you or not.” On the same day, September 19, the plaintiff' replied, “If your hay is extra nice, strictly No. 1, you may ship with the straw at that price, but if not, please ship the straw and I will pay the difference in freight on half car of straw.” After some delay, but without additional negotiations, the defendant shipped to the plaintiff a car of straw and hay, which arrived in Bangor September 27. September 29, the plaintiff paid the freight, ten dollars, and without examination of the hay, caused one load of it to be removed from the car to his barn. After examination, the same day, the plaintiff immediately wrote and also telegraphed to the defendant that the hay ivas not “first class,” that he did not Avant it. He added, “The car is on the track at your risk; Avhat Avill you do about it ?” This AAras Saturday. On the folloAving Monday, October 1, the defendant called upon the plaintiff in Bangor. The plaintiff said he Avould not accept the hay, and demanded of the defendant the ten dollars paid for freight, and fifty cents paid for trucking the load Avhicli had been removed. The defendant offered to pay the ten dollars, Avhibh the plantiff declined. A little later, the plaintiff^ speaking of the hay which had been removed, said to the defendant: “There it is out there in the barn. If you take it Avliere it is, it Avill cost you ten dollars and fifty cents. . . . . If I put it back, it Avill cost you eleven dollars.” Still later in the day the defendant notified the plaintiff “that the hay on the car AA'as at his risk and disposal. The plaintiff replied that he Avould not take it. On the fifth day of October the plaintiff returned to the car the hay aaIiícIi had been rennwed, and notified the defend
The plaintiff now brings this action to recover the ten dollars paid for freight, and one dollar for truckage of the load removed and returned, fifty cents each way. The defendant has filed in set-off an account for the contract price of the hay and straw sold.
We art; satisfied that the hay in question was not “extra nice, strictly No. 1” in quality, as stipulated • in the order given by the plaintiff. Inasmuch as there was no opportunity for inspecting the hay before delivery, the defendant, by accepting the plaintiff’s order and shipping the hay, impliedly agreed that the hay was of the quality specified in the plaintiff’s order. The hay not being of that quality, there was a breach of the defendant’s implied agreement, and the defendant accordingly would have been justified in declining to accept the hay. But he removed one load, which, under the circumstances, was an acceptance, unless rescinded. Nevertheless, he had a right to rescind the contract. To rescind the contract, lie must restore the hay. Pratt v. Philbrook, 33 Maine, 17. To make the rescission effective, the restoration must be within a reasonable time. Wingate v. King, 23 Maine, 35. The plaintiff did claim to rescind the contract, and he restored the hay to the car from which he took it. If this was done seasonably, the title in the hay would then be in the defendant, and the plaintiff may recover the amount he advanced for freight.
The case at this point turns upon the answer to the question whether the hay was restored within a reasonable; time. We think it was not. A party desiring to rescind must use proper diligencie. Cutler v. Gilbreth, 53 Maine, 176. Idle plaintiff began unloading the hay Saturday, September 2i). It was not restore;! to the car until Friday, October 5. Wo think that this delay in itself was unreasonable. But aside; from that, while the plaintiff was delaying the: restoration of the hay, the car upon which the remaining hay and straw was loaded had become subject to demurrage. The defendant was thereby made liable for extra expense. Merely restoring the hay did not place the parties in statu quo. Potter v. Titcomb, 22
Applying this rule, the evidence.satisfies us that the defendant should recover only seventy-five dollars on his aecount in set-off.
Judgment for the defendant for seventy-five dollars and interest from the date of the writ.