59 So. 746 | Ala. Ct. App. | 1912
The action Avas brought by appellant against appellee in the city court of Selma to recover damages' for an alleged breach of a contract of sale, averred to have been made between the parties on the 17th day of February, 1910. Under the contract of sale the appellee agreed to sell and deliver to the.appellant two cars, 39,128 pounds, of Johnson grass hay, at and for the price of $11.25 per ton. At the time the contract Avas made the hay was in Birmingham, Ala., in two cars upon the track of a common carrier.
It appears that the appellee had shipped to Norwood & Co., Avhose place of business Avas in Birmingham, Ala., the hay in question; that Norwood & Co. had refused to accept the hay, and had so notified appellee; and that appellee then turned over the sale of said hay to one Roy Peace and instructed him to sell it. It also appears that, AAdien appellee shipped said hay to said Norwood & Co., it took a bill of lading in the name of said Nor-wood & Co., Avhich bill of lading appellee attached to a draft drawn by it on said Norwood & Co. for the purchase price of the hay; that appellee placed said draft in a Selma bank for collection in Birmingham.
The fifth count of the complaint contains an averment of a demand made by appellant on appellee for
The case of McGehee v. Hill, 4 Port. 170, 29 Am. Dec. 277, a leading case upon the principle there decided, is cited by appellant in support of the sufficiency of his pleading; that is, of the fifth count of said complaint. Under the contract presented in the McGehee Case, the defendant bound himself “to deliver to the plaintiff, at his stable in Montgomery, 5,000 bushels of corn and 50,000 pounds of fodder, as early next fall as the same will be dry enough to house, unavoidable accidents only excepted.” And under said agreement the plaintiff bound himself “on the delivery of said corn to pay 50 cents per bushel, and $1.25 per hundredweight for the fodder.” The contract was pleaded in the McGehee Case, and the averments of the complaint show the foregoing provisions.
It will be observed that under the terms of the contract in the McGehee Case no duty rested upon ITill to do anything until there was a delivery of the corn and fodder by McGehee; there the act of payment was conditioned by the terms of the contract upon the delivery of the articles purchased. This is true of every contract
The averment here presented is that the defendant bargained and sold the hay to plaintiff, to be delivered next day. Nothing is said about the time or manner of payment, or that it was conditioned upon delivery of the hay. There is no aArerment that any credit was extended in the matter of the sale by the defendant to the plaintiff, and in the absence of such an averment it will be presumed that the sale was for cash. This rule is thus stated in the case of Robbins v. Harrison, 31 Ala. 164: “When no credit is agreed upon, a sale of chattels will be regarded as having been made for cash; and the purchaser will not be entitled to delivery, as a matter of right, without making payment.”
The allegations of the fifth count of the complaint, therefore, bring the vendee under the contract, therein set out directly within the rule announced in the case of Offut v. Wells, 42 Ala. 199, Avhere it was said: “If an article is contracted to be sold at a certain place, that is the place of delivery, in the absence of any express stipulation in the contract; and in the absence of any express stipulation therein the law does not impose upon the vendor the duty of a delivery of the article sold, before payment of, or an offer to pay, the purchase money.” And further: “So, on the other hand, if the Avendee brings suit to recover damages for a failure to deliver goods sold for cash, at the place and within the
At the request of appellee the court gave to the jury the following written charge: “(1) If you believe from the evidence that the defendant did not deliver the hay to some other than Veitch on February 17 or 18, 1910, then you must find for defendant.” The correctness of this charge is raised under the second assignment of error. In deciding the question here raised, it becomes necessary to consider the averments of the seventh count of the complaint. ' In the said seventh count it was averred, after setting up the contract of sale, as follows: “(1) Plaintiff further avers that although he was ready, willing, and able to receive said hay and pay for the same at the agreed time and place of delivery, defendant did at the time for the delivery disable itself from complying with said contract by selling and delivering said hay to another person. (2) Plaintiff further avers that although at the time for payment and delivery under said agreement he did offer to receive said hay and pay the .agreed price therefor, and was then ready, willing and able to receive said hay and pay for same, defendant failed to so deliver.”
It will be observed that this count of the complaint avers a readiness, willingness and ability upon the part of appellant coupled with a disability upon the part of the appellee in the one instance, and an offer of performance, or an offer to pay, upon the part of the appellant, coupled with a failure to deliver upon the part of the appellee in the other.
Under each of the allegations of the seventh count a separate and distinct cause of action is presented; they are as independent and separate as though averred in different- counts. The burden was on the appellant to prove that the appellee had disabled itself, at least to the extent of malting out a prima- facie case of disability, by selling the hay and delivering it to another person, and that appellant was then ready, willing and able to receive and pay for the hay and that the appellee failed to deliver it. — Johnson v. Collins, 17 Ala. 325, 326. Upon proper proof, to the extent herein indicated, the appellant was as much entitled to recover in one case as the other.
The evidence in this case shows that the two cars of hay were purchased by appellant from Peace, the agent of appellee, on the 17th day of February, 1910; that appellant and the said agent Avent down and inspected the hay about 3 o’clock of the afternoon of that day, that appellant told the agent to call and get his money the next day; that the agent agreed to call at the office of the appellant the next day and bring with him the bill of lading and invoice and get the check of appellant for the amount due for the hay; that the agent did call at the office of appellant the next morning, and brought Avith him the invoice, but not the bill of lading; and that said agent then stated that he was not able to deliver the hay. The • evidence further shows that the agent testified that appellant was to give him 'a check for the purchase price of the hay, and that the agent Avas to take up the draft with bill of lading attached. The agent stated that he did not deliver the hay and
This charge is objectionable upon another theory: It predicates a verdict for appellee upon the theory that the appellee had to deilver the hay to another person. A sale and delivery by some other person, than the appellee, if duly authorized, would have been sufficient. The charge appears to ignore the relationship of principal and agent entirely, and was therefore misleading, and, as we understand the evidence, probably misled the jury.
It is unquestionably the law that if the appellee, at the time and place of delivery, had disabled itself from carrying out the contract of sale by selling and delivering the hay to another person, then there was no necessity for the appellant to offer to perform his part of the contract. The law does not require the observance of a vain ceremony. If the appellee had disabled itself from delivering the hay to appellant, in the manner set out in the complaint, then appellee was liable to appellant notwithstanding the failure of appellant to offer to perform his part of the contract, if as a matter of fact the appellant was ready, willing and able to carry out his part of the agreement. — Johnson v. Collins, 17 Ala. 318; Read v. Walker, 18 Ala. 322; Root v. Johnson, 99 Ala. 90, 10 South. 293; Hawkins v. Merritt, 109 Ala. 261, 19 South. 589.
The evidence shows that the appellant was ready to receive the hay, that he was willing and able to receive
The evidence in this case shows that the appellee, when he shipped the hay, took a bill of lading therefor, in the name of Norwood & Co., from the carrier, and attached the same to a draft on Norwood & Co., for the purchase price of the hay. The appellee placed this draft in a Selma bank for collection in Birmingham, Ala. There is no doubt that the Birmingham bank receiving the draft with bill of lading attached from the Selma bank was the agent of the appellee. — Eufaula Gro. Co. v. Missouri Nat. Bank, 118 Ala. 408, 24 South. 389.
In the case of Robinson & Ledyard v. Pogue & Son, 86 Ala. 257, 5 South. 685, it was said: “Where goods have been sold, and are delivered by the vendor to a common carrier, consigned without reservation to the vendee, the question as to whether the title, eo instanti, passes to such consignee, depends upon the intention of the vendor, to be gathered from all the circumstances of the case. There is no doubt as to the correctness of the general rule that Avhere the bill of lading shows a consignment by the vendor to the vendee, in ordinary form, and ño other circumstances appear as to the intention, the prima facie legal presumption is that an unconditional delivery to the consignee is contemplated. But this presumption of fact may be rebutted by evidence showing a contrary intention. — Jones v. Sims, 6 Port. 138 (1837), and other cases cited. The title of the goods is commonly retained in the consignor by talcing the bill of lading to his own order, or in blank, or by draAving on the consignee with the bill of lading attached to the draft, or other like procedure, indicating an intention to retain in himself a jus disponendi over
It is true that Norwood & Co., as shown by the evidence, had refused to accept the hay before the same was placed in the hands of Peace for sale, if in fact he ever had any custody thereover. This act of refusal did not preclude said Norwood & Co., from again purchasing it if they so desired, and the vendor was willing to sell. It nowhere appears that any demand had ever been made upon Norwood & Co., by the bank for the payment of said draft, or that Norwood & Co. had refused to pay it or accept it; it does not appear that said
“When a consignor draws upon the consignee for the purchase money, and the draft with bill of lading attached is accepted and paid by the consignee, the title
It is evident that both Peace and Veitch contemplated that the delivery of the hill of lading should be the symbolical delivery of the hay. The delivery by the bank of the draft, with bill of lading attached, to Nor-wood & Co., was never repudiated by appellee, and such delivery was sufficient to vest in the consignee the title to the goods in question. By that act the appellee is bound. — Allen Bethune & Co. v. Maury & Co., 66 Ala. 10, 18, 19.
The appellee, before the time for the delivery of the hay under the contract of purchase had expired, disabled itself from complying with its contract by selling- and delivering the hay to another person than appellant, and at a time when the appellant was ready, willing. and able to receive it and pay for it. It is therefore apparent that the trial court erred in refusing to' give the general affirmative charge in behalf of the appellant as requested by him.
Reversed and remanded.