59 N.Y.S. 396 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1899
This action was brought to recover the damages caused by what was alleged to be a breach of warranty upon the sale of certain French peas, the complaint as originally served alleging that the defendants represented and warranted the said peas to be of extra fine quality, and that, relying upon such representation and warranty, the plaintiffs’ assignor agreed to purchase the same and pay therefor; that the said goods were not of extra fine quality, as represented and warranted by the defendants, but were- of an inferior grade, and that by reason of their being of an inferior grade and not as represented and warranted by the defendants, the plaintiffs have been damaged in the sum specified; and judgment is demanded for that amount. Upon this complaint the cause came on for trial, and after a great amount of testimony had been taken the court stated that the counsel for the plaintiffs wanted to amend his complaint so as to allege that the defendants warranted the peas in question at the time of the sale to be merchantable as “ Talbot Extra Fine Peas, Sieve 23-24; ” that the goods were not merchantable when they arrived —as “ Talbot Extra Fine Peas, Sieve 23-24.” Counsel for the defendants vigorously opposed this motion as changing the cause of action, but the amendment was allowed and the trial then proceeded, the testimony introduced- under the pleadings, before the amendment being allowed to stand.
From the- testimony it appeared that Lea, one of the plaintiffs, who are a firm of importers in the city of New York, in March, 1893, entered into a contract with the defendants, who are engaged in business in Bordeaux, France, as packers of food products, for the pur
It is clear, I think, that this was an executory contract for the sale of goods. By it the defendants agreed to deliver to the plaintiffs upon the dock in New York certain canned peas of a specified quality at a future time.. The contract would have been complied with upon the delivery by the defendants to the plaintiffs of the number of cases of the goods described at the time specified. No specific cases of peas and no part of any specified lot. of cases of peas were sold. There was simply an executory contract of sale, whereby the defendants agreed to deliver to the plaintiffs, upon a day named, on the dock in the city of New York, a certain number of cases of peas of the crop of 1893, and of a certain quality.
None of the cases cited by .counsel for the plaintiffs are authority for holding that there was a completed sale of any particular peas when this contract was. made; for in this contract there were no specific goods described or identified as those included within the contract, and there was no general mass of goods from which the goods sold were to be separated. There are no present words of sale, but the defendants agreed to deliver to the plaintiffs, duty paid, on the dock
This being, therefore, an executory contract of sale, without express warranty, and the articles contracted to be sold having been delivered to and received by the defendants, the question presented is, whether the plaintiffs could recover for any damages that they sustained in consequence of the articles not being up to the quality provided for by the contract; or, in other words, whether an acceptance of the articles as a compliance with the contract precluded the plaintiffs from holding the defendants responsible for any lack of quality in the goods so sold and delivered. There has been much confusion in the cases as to what has been called an implied warranty of quality upon the sale of an article of a particular description, but the modern cases tend to consider such a description of
Assuming that, there was evidence tending to show that the articles were not as described in the contract, and not such as the plaintiffs were bound to accept, what was the right of the plaintiffs after the delivery and acceptance of the articles sold ? “The maxim of the common law, caveat emptor, is the general rule applicable to sales, so far as quality is concerned. The buyer (in the absence of fraud) purchases at his own risk, unless the seller has given an express warranty, or unless .a warranty be implied from the nature and 'circumstances of the sale. * * * So far as an ascertained specific; chattel already existing, and which the buyer has inspected, is concerned, the rule of cameat emptor admits of no exception by implied warranty of quality.” (Benj. Sales, § 644.)
In the case of Couston v. Chapman (L. R. [2 Sc. App.] 250) the rights of the vendee were discussed. In that case there was a sale of wine by sample, and Lord Chelmsford, in speaking of the right of the vendee to rescind the sale, said: “In England, if goods are sold by sample, and they are delivered and accepted by the purchaser, he cannot return them, but if he has not completely accepted them,, that is, if he has taken the delivery conditionally, he has a right to keep the goods for a sufficient time to enable him to give them a fair trial, and if they are found not to correspond with the sample, he is then entitled to return them. * * * With regard to the wine not corresponding with' the sample, there can be no doubt-whatever that large quantities of the wine in both lots were utterly bad, and could in no way whatever be said to conform to the sample; and, therefore, upon the discovery of that fact, the appellants had a clear right not, as appeared to be contended in the course of the argument, to retain the good wine and return the bad, but to reScmd the cont/ract for those lots altogether. The contracts being entire' for each lot, the only way in which the appellants could discharge them
In Reed v. Randall (29 N. Y. 362) the rule is recognized and. applied as follows : “ In cases of executory contracts for the sale and. delivery of personal property,v the remedy of the vendee to recover damages, on the ground that the article furnished does not correspond with the contract, does not survive the acceptance of the property by the vendee after opportunity to ascertain the defect, unless, notice has been given to the vendor, or the vendee offers to return the property. The retention <of the property by the vendee is an assent on his part that the contract has been performed. * . * The latter (the vendee) is not bound to receive and pay for a thing-that he has not agreed to purchase; but if the thing purchased is found on examination to be unsound or not to answer the order-given for it, he must immediately return it to the vendor, or give him notice to take it back, and thereby rescind the contract, or he will be presumed to have acquiesced in its quality. He cannot, accept the delivery of the property under the contract, retain it after an opportunity of ascertaining its quality, and recover damages, if it he not of the quality or description called for by such contract.” ' The same rule was applied in Gurney v. Atlan. & G. W. Ry. Co. (58 N. Y. 364), where the court says: “ The general rule is, when articles are sold upon an executory contract like the one in question, that the delivery and acceptance of the articles after examination, or an opportunity to examine them, is a consent or. agree
This duty to at once rescind the contract and offer to return the goods being a condition precedent to the right of the plaintiffs to recover, it would, seem, upon the evidence in this case, that the plaintiffs not only failed to prove such a rescission and offer to return the goods, but proved such a' course of dealing with the goods, after the discovery of a defect,' as to preclude them from maintaining any action against ,the defendants, either for the damages sustained because of the failure of the goods to comply with the contract, or to recover back the consideration money paid. We will assume that the mere acceptance of the -peas when delivered upon the dock was not such an acceptance as would preclude the plaintiffs from subsequently, rescinding the contract, when it appeared that the goods were not of the quality called for by the contract, and that the, plaintiffs would have reasonable time to examine and ascertain whether, the goods were of the quality called for by the contract, as it was impossible to tell of the condition of the peas without opening the cans, and that each can opened was
The iudgment appealed from should be affirmed, with costs.
Van Brunt, P. J., Barrett and McLaughlin, JJ., concurred; Patterson, J., concurred in result.
Judgment affirmed, with costs.