179 Mass. 318 | Mass. | 1901
The plaintiff dealt at wholesale and retail in nursery stock at Bedford and Boston in this State, and the defendant, having nurseries in Bagshot, England, had filled orders for the plaintiff. In October, 1895, the plaintiff mailed a letter inquiring about certain plants which it desired for the next
On February 21, 1896, the defendant wrote acknowledging the receipt of the letter of the tenth, naming prices for the five hundred, the four hundred, and the twenty-five rhododendrons, stating that the defendant could not offer the three hundred, thirty-six inches, but naming a price for three hundred, thirty ipches in size, and also naming prices for some of the evergreens and for the other five kinds of plants. In this letter the defendant suggested a cable code by the use of which if the plaintiff should cable the words “ Light,” “ Medium ” and “ Extra ” the message would be taken by the defendant to order it to send the five hundred, the four hundred and the twenty-five rhododendrons at the prices named in the letter. In reply to this letter the plaintiff on March 6, 1896, cabled “ Ship as ordered.”
The plaintiff considered this message as the closing of a contract whereby it bought of the defendant five hundred eighteen inch rhododendrons at the price of ¿£6/5 per hundred, four hundred twenty-four inch, at ¿67/10 per hundred, and twenty-five four to five feet at 10s. §d. each. The defendant did not so consider the message, made no reply, and sent no goods. On April 15,1896, the plaintiff cabled “Telegraph date shipment”, to which the defendant replied “ Not shipping. Can supply none”, and on the same day wrote the plaintiff as follows: “We
At the trial the plaintiff contended that it could recover the extra expense, but the court instructed the jury to return a verdict for the defendant, and the case is here upon the plaintiff’s exception to the instruction.
The letter of February 10 was not an order for any plants. As to rhododendrons it told tjie defendant that the plaintiff would want certain • plants, asked information as to their cost and said that the plaintiff would “cable as to filling order.” The letter did not say that the plaintiff would buy the rhododendrons if the prices should be satisfactory, and it committed the plaintiff to nothing more than to reply by cable if the defendant should send a list of prices. In sending the list the defendant suggested a cable code in which were three words which if used by the plaintiff in its reply would mean that the defendant was to send the three kinds of rhododendrons which it could supply at the offered prices. While the plaintiff was not bound to use the suggested code, if it did not do so, in order to bind the defendant by a contract, it must reply in language which ought to be understood by the defendant to mean that the plaintiff thereby ordered of the defendant certain goods at certain prices. This the message “Ship as ordered” did not do. There had been no order. The message might naturally.refer to an order on its way by mail or to be so sent. It could not be understood to require the defendant to send plants, as to which
Exceptions overruled.