98 Ala. 560 | Ala. | 1893
The Circuit Court did not err in overruling the demurrer to plea No. 3, and to pleas Nos. 2 and 5 as amended. They each tendered an answer to the complaint.
The plaintiffs (appellees here) sued for the breach of an alleged contract, by which the defendants (appellants here), on the 15th of April, 1889, agreed to accept and pay for a large lot of flour in barrels, at a stipulated price, if delivered by the plaintiffs to the defendants at Opelika, Alabama, within a reasonable time thereafter; and they aver that they complied with the contract on their part, and the defendants failed to comply with the provisions of said contract, to receive and pay for said flour, at the prices agreed on, and plaintiffs were damaged. The damage claimed is the loss on a re-sale of the flour by plaintiffs, to the extent of the difference in the price obtained on a re-sale and the contract price of the flour. The common counts for money due, and for goods and merchandize sold, are added.
The evidence tended to show the following facts: that the flour was sold by samples; that on its arrival in Opelika, the defendants declined to accept it; that they sent a telegram to plaintiffs, at their home — “Flour not up to grade
It is a familiar principle that when goods are sold by sample there is an implied warranty by the seller, that the bulk of the commodity is equal in quality to the sample exhibited to the buyer';!and if they do not correspond the purchaser may refuse to receive it.—Magee v. Billingsley, 3 Ala. 679. flf they do correspond, and the purchaser refuses, notwithstanding, to accept the goods, the vendor may re-sell them at the risk of the purchaser, the damage being the difference between the price at which sold at first and the price obtained on re-sale.' — 2 Benj. on Sales, § 1022, n. Before the vendor proceeds to a re-sale he should manifest
In making such re-sale, the vendor acts as the agent of the buyer in default. His right and duty are so well stated in Brownlee v. Bolton, 44 Mich. 218, we quote what the court say as correct and applicable to this case: “It is sufficient to say, generally, that the vendor’s right of re-sale must be exercised in good faith, and in such time, and in such manner, and under such circumstances, and by such methods, as will he best calculated to produce the fair value of the property ; and in case he seeks to avail himself of it before a jury, it is incumbent on him to adduce the necessary facts to show that, in exercising this right, this manner was observed.” — 2 Benj., p. 1022.
The re-sale may be made at public auction, or privately, and it often happens that the goods can be best sold at private sale; but, whether in the one mode or the other, in the absence of any instructions from the buyer, the vendor has the right to exercise his discretion within reasonable bounds; and whether this discretion is exercised properly and in good faith, are questions of fact for the jury.— Lewis v. Grider, 51 N. Y. 231.
The vendors had the right to sell in Opelika, the place where the goods were to be delivered; and if they acted in good faith in making the re-sale in that place, and obtained the best price they could for the whole lot, this discharged their duty in this respect. If the buyers, after a notice to them by the vendors of their purpose to re-sell, desired them to sell in one mode or another, or at a different place from Opelika, they should have communicated their desires or instructions to the vendors; but, in the absence of such instructions, they can hardly be heard to compHin at the sale, unless they can show it was unfairly made. J
Charges (except the second and thirteenth) given at the request of the plaintiffs, when referred to the evidence, are free from error.
When this case was here on a former’appeal (93 Ala. 476), on substantially the same evidence, we held that the transaction was a sale by sample, and that the defendants might refuse to receive the flour, if of an inferior quality to the samples. The complaint, as before stated, contains the common counts for goods sold and delivered, and on an account stated, joined with a special count, claiming damages of the purchaser for his refusal to receive and pay for the goods bought.
Tbe precise question here raised was raised and decided in the case of Merriman v. Chapman, 32 Conn. 146, where the court say, “If the action had been brought upon the ex-ecutory contract, for not accepting and paying for the goods, it is apparent that in order to prove his whole case, the plaintiff must show that the goods .correspond with the sample, since otherwise it would not appear that his part of the contract had been performed, while on an executed contract, it is only necessary for the plaintiff to prove its execution, and it is then for the defendant to show that the goods were inferior to the quality stipulated for, in order to reduce the price to be paid for them. Here the plaintiff sues upon an executed contract. He may do this, if he can show in point of fact it has been so far executed as to create a debt against the defendant for which indebitatus assumpsit will lie, and he can do this in one of two ways; he may show a delivery of the goods, and an acceptance of them by the defendant, either expressly or by retaining them for ail unreasonable time, or an appropriation of them to his own use; or he may show an execution of the contract on his part by the delivery of the goods corresponding in quality with the stipulations of the contract.” This language is applicable to our case, and we hold, as was held there, that where goods are sold by sample for an agreed'price, and are delivered by the vendor at the place where they were to be delivered by the terms of the contract, but the buyer, not having accepted them, on examination within a reasonable time, refused to accept them, on the ground that they did not correspond with the sample, the burden of proof as to whether they correspond with the sample or not, in a suit brought by the vendor for the price or for the difference in price on a re-sale, is on the vendor and not on the vendee. —Miller, Law of Conditional Sales, 93; Hollender v. Koetter, 20 Mo. App. 79. The case of Brigham v. Retelsdorf, 73 Iowa, 712, cited by appellees, is distinguishable from the one in 32 Conn. supra, but if not reconcilable therewith, and asserts a contrary doctrine, it is, in our judgment, erroneous.
Charges Nos. 4 and 6, requested by defendants and refused, are but counter-charges to charge No. 2 given for plaintiffs, and ought to have been given.
Charge No. 2 requested by defendant was properly refused. It fails to aver, as a part of the contract, that the samples by which the flour was sold, if compared with that in the store of Penn & Co., should be the same in quality, was calculated to confuse, and is argumentative.
Charges Nos. 3 and 5 were properly refused.
From what we have heretofore said, it will appear that the court committed no error in refusing to allow the witness Smith to be ashed, on cross-examination, if he could not have sold the flour to better advantage in Columbus, Ga., or in some other larger market. The law did not require him to sell in any other than the Opelika market, under the evidence given here. The plaintiffs having given notice of their intention to re-sell, the defendants made no request, and gave no instructions as to where the flour should be sold. The sale in bulk, instead of in car-load, was not an illegal disposition of the property.
The exception based on the ruling, that the witness Smith was allowed to testify, that the words “Patent” and “Straight,” used to designate the kinds of flour- sold, have acquired a “general signification in the commercial world,” furnished no ground of exception. The witness was not asked, and did not say, what the general signification was. It was without injury, even if erroneous.
There was no error in permitting the witness Erwin to state, that he advised Smith, as to the best way to dispose of the flour. It was relevant as tending to show the bona fieles of Smith, in exercising his discretion to re-sell.
Reversed and remanded.