43 Pa. Super. 69 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1910
Opinion by
In this action of assumpsit the plaintiffs sought to recover damages for the breach of a certain contract made in May, 1907, whereby the plaintiffs agreed to deliver, and the defendants agreed to accept and pay for, twenty-five cases of cambric at the price of seven and five-eighths cents per yard. A memorandum of the terms of the contract was made by the plaintiffs and delivered to the defendants, by which it appears that the goods were to be delivered in the following September, October, November and December, and that the defendants were to have sixty days after delivery for payment and were
The principal controversy arises out of what took place at a conference on the afternoon of February 10, 1908, between James Bryson, one of the plaintiffs, and Morris Stone, one of the defendants. The testimony on the subject was in conflict and the court submitted to the jury the determination of the question whether the version given by Bryson or that given by Stone was the correct one, but instructed them that if they found the latter to be correct their verdict should be for the defendants. It is important, therefore, to see what his version was. He says that he made the proposition that if the plaintiffs would extend the time to take the remaining cases of
Upon the question of the right to recover commissions on a resale, the learned judge instructed the jury that the proofs were insufficient to sustain the claim, and in that conclusion we concur.
• We have not gone into as full discussion of the case as might be warranted, because we think it is very clearly stated in the opinion of the learned judge refusing a new trial. We have endeavored to point out the reasons for our inability to agree with him as to the legal effect of the agreement entered into on February 10, 1908, assuming the defendants’ version of what took place in the afternoon of that date to be correct.
The judgment is reversed and a venire facias de novo is awarded.