83 Vt. 516 | Vt. | 1910
The suit is brought to recover the price of goods sold, and the question is whether there was an acceptance sufficient to satisfy the statute of frauds. The property consisted of a gasoline engine, a water wheel, a steel grinder, a corn cracker, and certain shafting, pulleys, sprockets and other iron ware, all of which had been used in a grist mill burned two years before, and most of which, exclusive of the gasoline engine, was in the basement of the mill, where it had remained undisturbed since the fire. The main value of the property was in the engine and wheel. The wheel was understood to be damaged, but the extent of the damage was not known. The defendant relied on the statement of a third person by whom the wheel was last used. It could not be fully examined as it stood, but was to be taken by the defendant where it was.
The defendant moved all the property except the wheel to a bank on the premises about seventy-five feet distant, whence it could be conveniently loaded for carrying away. It could not be conveniently loaded without doing this. When the corn cracker was moved it was treated as junk and broken into pieces
Laying aside all questions regarding the effect of the preliminary moving of some of the property and the unnecessary breaking of bolts in getting at the wheel, we take up the question presented by the breaking in pieces of the corn cracker. To satisfy the statute the. purchaser must accept and receive part of the goods; and the defendant’s claim is based upon the distinction between a receipt of the goods and an acceptance of them. It is well settled that the term “acceptance” covers more than “receipt,” and that a receipt without an acceptance is not sufficient. Notes 49 Am. Dec. 327; 96 Am. St. 216; Caulkins v. Hellman, 47 N. Y. 449, 7 Am. Rep. 461. This distinction is recognized in our own cases, although not expressed in terms. Spencer v. Hale, 30 Vt. 314, 73 Am. Dec. 309; Gibbs v. Benjamin, 45 Vt. 124. The defendant insists that although he received the property he did not accept it; that he merely took possession of the property by way of preparing for its removal; that he had a right to inspect the property and reject it if unsatisfactory ; that an intention to make an unconditional appropriation of the property is an essential element of an acceptance, and that there was no intention to accept this property unless the wheel was found to be as it was supposed to be. . The defendant supports these claims by a citation from Hunt v. Hecht, 8 Exch. 814, to the effect that an acceptance implies some act done by the purchaser after he has exercised or has had the means of exercising his right of rejection. We find nothing in this argument, if treated as wholly sound and applicable, that meets the fact that the de
The defendant contends that inasmuch as the agreed statement does not show that the corn cracker had any value as such, it cannot be said that the plaintiff was damaged by its destruction. But the matter for consideration here is not the value of the article destroyed, but the quality of the defendant’s act as affecting the ownership of all the articles. If the defendant was not to be the owner of the machine, it was not for it to pass upon its value or say what should be done with it. It is said that the plaintiffs were entitled to a vendor’s lien on the property, and that the defendant’s control of it could not be complete while this lien existed. Whatever the effect of a vendor’s lien may be, it is certain that a vendee who destroys an article cannot deny that he has assumed entire control of it, or that he has deprived the vendor of the benefit of his lien upon it. The defendant’s disposition of the corn cracker was an assumption of ownership, and anything done by the purchaser as owner is an acceptance. The receipt and acceptance of the one article took the whole contract out of the statute. Danforth v. Walker, 40 Vt. 257.
Judgment affirmed.