199 A.D. 854 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1922
Upon November 5, 1919, the defendant and the Lily Mill and Power Company entered into a, contract for the purchase and sale of Sea Island cotton yarn on cones. The contract, so far as material to this controversy, is as follows:
“ Cotton Yarns
“ Catlin & Co. Broadway, Cor. Leonard St.
“ New York, Nos. 345-7 No. 92.
“ Boston, Phila.,
“ Chicago.
“ New York, Nov. 5, 1919.
“ Frank F. Pels Co.
“ 17 East 24th St., City:
“ Allowance for Cones and Paper will be made as follows — Foster Wind 2%, Universal 1%
“ Dear Sirs.— We enter your order for 4500 Lbs. 60 /2 Combed Sea Island Cotton Yarn on Cones. Regular twist — 22 turns.”
Thirty-eight hundred pounds were delivered and accepted by the defendant. Seven hundred pounds were finally delivered tó the defendant upon the 22d of June, 1920. This action is brought by plaintiffs as assignees of the Lily Mill and Power Company to recover the purchase price of the 700 pounds, amounting to $3,659.25. The answer served by the defendant contains certain denials, and as a separate defense, by way of setoff and counterclaim, alleged a warranty by the Lily Mill and Power Company that the cotton was and would be good and merchantable and of the first grade or class. It further alleged that said cotton was full of slugs and nits and was unevenly spun and was not merchantable. It further alleged that, within a reasonable time after the discovery of the true condition of the cotton, the defendant notified the plaintiffs of its said condition and the said breach of warranty in relation thereto, and that by reason of the fact that such merchandise was worthless, useless and unmerchantable, the defendant has suffered damage in the sum of $3,412.50. The demand for relief is that this damage be offset against the plaintiffs’ claim. The trial judge submitted
The first objection urged is that the trial court improperly admitted evidence to the effect that the seller had notice of the purpose for which the purchase was made, to wit, for the purpose of selling to the embroidery trade. This objection is founded, first, upon the fact that the evidence was not admissible under the pleadings. To this contention it may be said that at no time upon the trial was objection made on the ground that the evidence was inadmissible under the pleadings, and that objection is raised for the first time upon this appeal. The failure to object to the evidence upon this ground is a waiver of the insufficiency of the pleading, and the plaintiffs cannot now avail themselves of the insufficiency of the pleading for the purpose of reversing this judgment. Another ground of the objection is that the effect of such evidence would be to contradict the written contract by parol evidence; and cases are cited in support thereof, which hold that, where a contract of sale specifies the goods by description, proof that the goods were sold by sample would be a contradiction of the terms of such a contract and inadmissible; and other cases are cited holding that express warranties cannot be shown under the parol evidence rule, unless expressed in the contract itself. No case is cited, however, which holds that the warranties which the law implies cannot be shown, although not specified in the contract. The law implies those warranties only because they are not expressed. In Carleton v. Lombard, Ayres & Co. (149 N. Y. 137) it is held that: “ Implied warranties may attach to a written as well as to an unwritten contract of sale.” (See, also, Landreth v. Wyckoff, 67 App. Div. 145.) The third objection assigned is that this contract is for the sale of a specified article under its trade name, and that, therefore, there is no implied warranty as to its fitness for any particular use. The evidence shows that this cotton was bought mainly for the embroidery trade. For that purpose it must be so combed as to be free from slugs and nits. If this be deemed a contract for a specified article
Finally it is contended by the plaintiffs that this evidence was inadmissible on the ground that the law will not imply a warranty unless the facts appear in the contract itself, from which such implication can be drawn. In answer to the
Plaintiffs cite four cases, one in Maine, one in Maryland, one in Massachusetts, and one in the United States Supreme Court, which seem to support their contention. But those were all cases decided before the Sales Act was enacted by several States within this country. As against its contention is a clearly written opinion in Gillespie Bros. & Co. »v. Cheney (L. R. [1896] 2 Q. B. 59-64) which was decided under the Sale of Goods Act in England. Section 96 of our Personal Property Law was taken from section 15 of the Sales Act, which is itself a substantial re-enactment of section 14 of the English Sale of Goods Act. While it is apparently true that the English Sale of Goods Act expresses the common law as it was ruled in England at the time of the adoption in England, the courts of this State never even interpreted the common law upon this question, and the cases cited from Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts and from the United States Supreme Court express, perchance, the common-law rule as held in those particular jurisdictions. In the Gillespie Bros. & Co. Case (supra) Lord Russel, Ch. J., says in his opinion: “ RMs clear, also, to my mind, that section 14 is intended to deal with cases in which there is nothing in the contract itself from which it appears that the buyer made known to the seller the particular purpose for which the goods are required, or that he relied on the sellers’ skill and judgment. Those are facts which are to be supplied ah extra by other evidence.” In Williston on Sales (§ 248) the author says: “ The provisions of the Sales Act are copied from the English statute and the English statute was intended to express the common law of England as it existed at the time the act was passed. It may, therefore, be supposed that the liability of a seller under the Sales Act will be somewhat greater than that imposed by the common law of
Within these authorities upon the construction of the provisions in the Sales Act and in the Personal Property Law in question, this implied warranty may be found from facts ab extra the contract, and the decisions upon which appellants rely, before the enactment of the Sales Act in several of the States in this country, are not deemed controlling upon the question here presented. Upon examination of the record, I am of the opinion that there was sufficient evidence to warrant the verdict of the jury, and I find no legal errors which would lead to a reversal of the judgment.
The judgment and order should, therefore, be affirmed, with costs.
Clarke, P. J., Laughlin, Merrell and Greenbatjm, JJ., concur.
Judgment and order affirmed, with costs.