115 N.Y. 316 | NY | 1889
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *318 This action was brought to recover damages for an alleged breach of contract by the defendants' testator.
The plaintiff was the author and editor of a book called "Studer's Birds of North America," and the defendants' testator was engaged in the business of lithographic printing in colors and otherwise. The contract was in writing, and, so far as the questions in this case are concerned, was to the following effect: The defendants' testator proposed in writing to the plaintiff "to get out an edition of four thousand of each plate of your work, Birds of North America, best eastern plate paper, equal to sample furnished by you, * * * the stones with black drawings to be furnished by you. The color plates I agree to furnish correct in every detail, in the portraying of the birds, and in the general design and effect, as in the original colored copies furnished by you," for a price therein specified. The plaintiff accepted the offer in writing. There were to be one hundred and nineteen plates in each of the four thousand sets. When completed the plates were to be delivered to another company to print and bind, but no time for such delivery was stated in the contract.
It is now alleged by the plaintiff that some of the plates were defective in respect to the coloring of some of the birds, and that they were not printed on best eastern plate paper. *321 Immediately after the contract was executed, in April, 1881, the defendants' testator entered upon its performance. He procured the paper, upon which the work was to be lithographed, from the makers of the best eastern plate paper; but, upon an examination thereof by the plaintiff, he objected to its color, and thereupon the contractor procured other paper from the same manufacturers for the work. This paper the plaintiff frequently saw during the progress of the work and raised no objections to its quality or color, until long after the work was substantially completed.
In May, 1882, the first thousand sets of plates were finished, printed and bound, and the plaintiff was invited to inspect them with a view to their acceptance by him. He raised objections to the execution, in point of coloring, to some eight of the plates, and the defects being remediable, the defendants' testator agreed to perfect them by hand, to which the plaintiff assented. On July 1, 1882, the plaintiff was notified that the three thousand sets of plates necessary to complete the edition were finished and ready for inspection, and he was asked to examine the same with a view to their delivery to the parties who had contracted to do the press-work and binding, necessary to form complete books. On July 3, 1881, the plaintiff, after an unrestricted opportunity to inspect all of such plates, addressed and delivered the following letter to defendants' testator:
"The sample prints of the Birds of N.A. for the three thousand edition submitted to me and compared with the original sketches, are accepted.
"Yours, truly, "J.H. STUDER."
This letter is slightly equivocal, but, in view of all the facts and circumstances, it cannot be construed as meaning anything but an intention to accept the entire edition referred to as open to inspection, and was correctly so considered by the referee. No question is raised but that the samples *322 examined were fair representations of the bulk of the edition of three thousand, and they were thereupon, with the knowledge and consent of the plaintiff, delivered to the printing and binding company to be finished under their contract. A few days thereafter plaintiff again examined the first thousand plates which had previously been rejected, and they having then been repaired and corrected by the printers, he, after a thorough inspection, accepted the same as a compliance with the contract. Although the evidence as to this acceptance was conflicting, that supporting the defendants' version largely preponderated, and the referee found that such plates were accepted.
This finding is, of course, conclusive as to the fact of acceptance, on this appeal. The whole edition of four thousand plates was printed upon the same quality of paper, by the same workmen, and from the same plates, and it can hardly be supposed that there was any material difference in the various sets. Subsequent to the acceptance, the printing and binding company, during the years 1882 and 1883, upon the plaintiff's orders, delivered to various purchasers from him in Canada and the several states of the Union, some six hundred volumes of the bound books containing the plates contracted to be furnished by the defendants' testator. The referee found that the paper used in printing the plates was equal in quality and color to the sample furnished by the plaintiff; that the defendants' testator fulfilled and performed his contract with the plaintiff, and that the plaintiff accepted such performance, and ordered judgment dismissing the complaint. The referee also found that there were no latent defects or imperfections in the prints of the three thousand edition, and that every difference between them and the original sketches and prints was discernible on inspection and comparison of the prints with said sketches. The only difficulty in the case arises over the additional findings of the referee made upon request of the plaintiff, which are now claimed by the appellant to be inconsistent, in some respects, with the original findings. Among other things, it is claimed that, inasmuch as the referee *323 has found that the best eastern plate paper was not used by the defendants' testator in making the plates, that there has been a breach of the contract in that respect. This contention proceeds, we think, upon a misconception of the meaning of the contract, which requires only "best eastern plate paper equal to sample furnished;" and it is expressly found that the paper used was equal to the sample. This finding is amply supported by the evidence. The apparent discrepancy is further explained by the referee's finding that the best plate paper is especially adapted to printing steel plate engravings and is not the best plate paper for printing colored lithographs, and that the paper used was the best plate paper used for the purpose contemplated by the contract.
We are of the opinion that the contract called for the best plate paper adapted to the purpose for which it was to be used, and that the paper furnished was a compliance with the meaning and intent of the contract as properly construed.
The referee, in addition to his finding that the contract was fulfilled and performed by the defendants' testator, also found "that said plates, as printed by said defendants under said contract, were not correct in every detail to portray the birds in general design and effect as provided in said contract, and that they were not such a reproduction of the original sketches furnished by Studer, under said contract, as were required thereunder, and were not fair or good reproductions." These findings are expressed in quite general terms, and do not assume to specify the defects alleged to exist. It does not appear from them but that they arose from imperfections in the plates which were furnished by the plaintiff, and for which the defendants' testator was not responsible; or from some other cause.
The findings are not inconsistent with the facts appearing in evidence that the imperfections complained of were confined to a few plates in the edition of the first thousand prints, and were quite slight and trivial in character; but, notwithstanding this fact, it would, we think, be improper for a court to ignore the apparent inconsistency existing between the *324 several findings of the referee in respect to this subject, were there not some controlling reason for doing so. The referee's decision evidently proceeded upon the theory that the acceptance of the prints by the plaintiff precluded him from raising any objection to the performance of the contract, in respect to such defects as were visible and capable of discovery upon inspection. The judgment of the referee was affirmed at General Term upon the same ground, and we are inclined to agree with both tribunals in the view they have taken of the case.
The general rule that acceptance of property manufactured under an executory contract by the vendee precludes him from subsequently claiming damages for defects in such property is elementary. It is also well settled that a warranty, even in an executed contract, does not extend to known defects. (Schuyler
v. Russ, 2 Caine's Rep. 202; Jennings v. Chenango Co. Mut.Ins. Co., 2 Denio, 75; Bennett v. Buchan,
We have before seen that this claim cannot be supported in respect to the quality of the paper used, as that fact has been found by the referee adversely to the claim of the appellant upon evidence which we regard as sufficient to support his finding.
The action must, therefore, be supported, if it can be held to lie at all, upon the claim of warranty to be implied from the description of the work contained in the contract. We *325 entertain no doubt but that this was an executory contract for the manufacture and sale of personal property; which, upon performance by the vendor, entitled the vendee to an opportunity of inspection and the right to accept or reject such property as he should determine after examination. The parties have obviously so treated the contract and should now be held to the interpretation which they have put upon it.
An acceptance by the vendee of personal property manufactured under an executory contract of sale, after a full and fair opportunity of inspection, in the absence of fraud, estops him from thereafter raising any objection as to visible defects and imperfections, whether discovered or not, unless such delivery and acceptance is accompanied by some warranty of quality manifestly intended to survive acceptance. (Reed v. Randall,
It was said in Gurney's Case that "the general rule is when articles are sold upon an executory contract * * * that a delivery and acceptance of articles after examination, or an opportunity to examine them, is a consent and agreement that the articles compared with the contract and precludes a recovery for any defects which may exist." The rule stated in Norton v.Dreyfuss, assuming that there was no fraud inducing the acceptance, was "that the acceptance by the vendee of articles manufactured for him under an executory contract, after an opportunity to examine them, precludes him from raising any question as to defects or imperfections which were visible and capable of discovery on inspection, unless there is a warranty of their quality which was intended to survive their acceptance and give the vendee further time for trial and examination. InCoplay Iron Co. v. Pope it is said: "The representation as to kind and quality of iron was part of the contract of sale itself, descriptive simply of the article to be delivered in the future, and clearly within the cases cited, an acceptance of the property * * * without any offer *326 to return the same at any time, deprives the person so accepting of any right to make complaint of its inferior quality."
The opinion of Chief Judge CHURCH in Dutchess County v.Harding (
We think the authorities are uniform to the effect that a deliberate, intelligent and intentional acceptance of property *327 manufactured under an executory contract of sale after inspection precludes the vendee from claiming damages for any visible or discoverable defect in the property sold.
The acceptance disclosed by this case is not one to be inferred from the receipt of the property without objection, but is founded upon an actual inspection made with the view of determining the question whether the property should be received as a performance of the contract or not. We think the acceptance was unequivocal, with a full understanding on the part of the plaintiff of its design and effect. The inspection of the goods was invited for the purpose of obtaining authority to deliver the goods on behalf of the plaintiff to the parties who had contracted to print, and bind the plates into books for him. The goods were clearly accepted for this purpose, and they were immediately handed over to those parties for the performance of the work they had contracted to do upon them. The plaintiff well understood this purpose and treated the contract of the defendants' testator as having been performed, by assuming the ownership and control of the property thereafter, directing the style and mode of binding, and making sales of the books thus bound, and requiring their delivery to his vendees during a period of nearly a year after such acceptance. Under such circumstances he is not at liberty to claim that there was no acceptance of the property sold, or claim damages for defects in the articles so accepted. (Brown v. Foster, supra; Lillywhite v. Devereux, 15 M. W. 285.)
The facts of this case bring it clearly within the authorities cited. The ground upon which any claim of warranty can be founded relates solely to the description of property contained in the contract of sale. It refers only to those qualities which were readily discernible upon inspection, and was not collateral to, but a necessary part, of the contract of sale, and affords no ground for the inference that any warranty was intended which should survive the acceptance of the property.
The judgment should, therefore, be affirmed.
All concur.
Judgment affirmed. *328