74 Me. 475 | Me. | 1883
In the trial of the present case, the court was dealing with what at its date was an executory contract for the delivery of ice at a future time; and with the question whether the defendants had broken the contract by a failure to deliver ice of the quality and in the condition required. The few sentences from the charge which are contained in the bill of exceptions show the following ruling to have been given. "Where the purchaser has no sufficient and reasonable opportunity to inspect the goods before or at the time of the sale, and there are no circumstances, such as the smallness of price for example, to negative the presumption that goods of a merchantable quality of the kind bargained for were meant to be bought, the purchaser has a right to expect a salable article of the kind mentioned in the contract; and while the purchaser without special warranty cannot insist that the article shall be of any especially, particularly, good quality, there would be an implied warranty on the part of the seller that it is of fairly merchantable quality.”
No claim appearing to .have been made that the price was inadequate, or that other circumstances existed to negative the presumption to which the court referred, that qualification of the ruling need not be considered. In all respects to which the exceptions relate, the instruction is fully sustained by authority.
"The fundamental' undertaking is, that the article offered or delivered shall answer the description of it contained in the contract. That rule comprises all the others; they are adaptations of it to particular kinds of contracts of purchase and sale. You must, therefore, first determine from the words used, or the circumstances, what in or according to the contract is the real mercantile or business description of the thing which is the subject matter of the bargain of purchase and sale, or, in other words, the contract. If that subject matter be merely the commercial article or commodity, the undertaking is that the thing offered or delivered shall answer that description, that is to say, shall be that article or commodity, salable or merchantable.” Randall v. Nenson, 2 Q. B. Div. 102.
The principal objection urged in argument by the plaintiff relates not to the general principle stated to the jury and supported by the authorities cited, but to the use of the words, fair and fairly, in the charge and in the special finding, to modify the term merchantable. It is said that thereby the force of that term was reduced, when the plaintiff was entitled to the full effect of it. That there may be and are different grades of merchantable ice, as of other merchandise, is not denied. One quality may be purer and finer than another, and both be merchantable. Clearly under the authorities an executory contract for the delivery of ice to the plaintiff did not necessarily entitle him to the first quality. Various terms are used in the cases cited to define the word merchantable in the sense in which it is to be applied in such cases, "ordinary quality,” "marketable quality,
Of a manufacturer, it is said in Harris v. Waite, supra, "Under a general order, he is not bound to furnish the best goods of the kind ordered that can be or are manufactured. He is only required to furnish goods of the kind and quality usually manufactured and used, and such as are ’reasonably fit and proper for the purpose for which they are ordered.”
The received definitions of the word fair show that it is well adapted to convey this idea of mediocrity in quality, or something just above that. In Swett v. Shumway, supra, an action on a mitten contract for the manufacture and delivery of horn chains, the instruction was that "there being no stipulation in the contract that the horn chains were to be of the first quality, the law does not imply a warranty that they should be of the first quality, but does imply a warranty that they should be of fair merchantable quality and of good workmanshipand this ruling was approved as sufficiently favorable to the defendant, who was there, as the plaintiff is here, the party to receive delivery of the goods under the contract.
The rules of law applicable to other classes of cases, to the giving of which to the jury exception is taken, were correct in themselves and the cases to which they applied were correctly defined. It need not be said that to state other cases than that on trial and to illustrate the application of rules of law to them, is not in itself an error. To state the law of analogous or contrasted cases may be the readiest method of distinguishing and explaining its application to the case on trial. Where exceptions contain only a brief summary of the case, and but a small part of the charge, it is not strange if the direct bearing of some of the rulings fails to appear. But exceptions can be sustained only when they show an error, and one by which the excepting party has been aggrieved.
Exceptions to the form of a special finding submitted to the jury are not tenable, unless the rulings in connection with it
Exceptions overruled.