40 F. 525 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Western Missouri | 1889
This is an action to recover tbe purchase price of a threshing-machine. The facts are substantially as follows: The plaintiffs are manufacturers at Richmond, Ind., under the firm name of Robinson & Co., of traction-engines with designated equipments for threshing out grain. In J une, 1886, the defendant John Mackler was the local agent of plaintiffs in and about Cooper county, Mo., for the sale of said machines. In the forepart of that month he obtained from one D. P. Weathers an order on plaintiffs for the machine in controversy. The machine was shipped about the 21st of that month from Richmond, Ind., to said Wreathers, but the plaintiffs were named as consignees. On the 28th day of June, Mackler wrote plaintiffs from Pilot Grove, Cooper county, Mo., informing them that Weathers had failed to comply with his contract and take the machine, and proposed to store it for plaintiffs if they would advance the freight charges thereon, which the vendee by his contract was to pay. It does not appear from the evidence wjuether, the machine was then at Sedalia; for Mackler himself, as appears from his letter, did not know where it was. Macklor also suggested in tins letter of the 28th oí J une that he thought within ten days he could find another buyer for the machine. On receipt of this letter, plaintiffs noli-' fied Mackler that they expected Weathers to comply with his contraed, and take the machine. On the 80th day of June, Mackler wrote plaintiffs that he had happily solved the difficulty by finding another purchaser'
1. The important matter presented on the foregoing facts is, was the delay in forwarding the machine from Sedalia to Pilot Grove such as to discharge defendants from the obligation io accept it when it did arrive? This turns upon the construction or effect to be given to the terms of the contract, “at once, or as soon as possible.” These words, in the administration of justice, cannot have an arbitrary, stereotyped definition. They, must possess so much flexibility as to be read and applied in the
The great mistake which has led to this litigation was the thoughtless security with which plaintiffs sat down after leaving an order with the local railroad agent at Richmond, on July 2d. They trusted him to do that which they should have seen -was done. His neglect, his delay, cannot be attributed to these defendants, nor exonerate the plaintiffs. Plaintiff's, in fact, seem to havé'acted with little business sense, conserv-atisni,-or prudence, throughout. After being advised, as they were, by Mackler that the machine would not be accepted if shipped after that date, they had two courses open to them, — to have stopped there, and sued defendants for damages consequent upon their refusal to accept, or, after shipping to Pilot Grove, and finding no one to receive the machine, they should have housed it, and sold it for the best price attainable, and sued for the difference in damages. They would neither advise the defendants to house it, without prejudice, nor reship to Sedalia, but abandoned the machine to its fate, to be sacrificed by the railroad for freight-age. The exercise of.a little common sense, and a spirit of compromise,