Avery v. . Willson

81 N.Y. 341, 1880 N.Y. LEXIS 243
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 8, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 81 N.Y. 341 (Avery v. . Willson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Avery v. . Willson, 81 N.Y. 341, 1880 N.Y. LEXIS 243 (N.Y. 1880).

Opinion

Miller, J.

The plaintiffs made an oral contract with the defendants, by which they agreed to sell to the defendants, at a price named, 699 boxes of glass, which were to be delivered together at one and the same time. They delivered a portion (365 boxes) of the glass, and the referee found that the defendants received and accepted the same, without objecting or intimating to the plaintiffs that it was received and accepted upon any conditions whatever; and without any notice that they would not thereby consent to become liable to pay for the glass so delivered and accepted, unless and until the residue should be delivered, and the defendants have not offered to return the same or any part thereof. He also found that the defendants thereby waived the condition that the whole quantity *344 of boxes should be delivered before they should become liable to pay for the part delivered, and only reserved the right and insisted, from time to time thereafter, that the residue should be delivered, or that the plaintiffs should pay the damages sustained by reason of the omission or neglect to deliver the same.

The question presented is whether the defendants are liable to pay for the boxes of glass actually received and retained by them, without the delivery of the remainder. The general rule in this State is that no action lies upon a special contract for the price agreed upon, until performance of such contract. This rule, however, has been somewhat qualified in its application, as will be seen by a reference to some of the reported cases.

In Smith v. Brady (17 N. Y. 173), it was held that where, in a contract for the erection of a building upon the land of another, performance is to precede payment and is a condition thereof, the builder, having substantially failed to perform ou his part, can recover nothing for his labor and materials, notwithstanding the owner has chosen to occupy and enjoy the erection. It was laid down by Comstock, J,, who delivered an opinion which was concurred in by all of the judges, after t ully discussing the subject, that a party may retain, without compensation, the benefits of a partial performance, where, from the nature of the contract, he must receive such benefits in advance of a full performance, and by its terms or just construction is under no obligation to pay until the performance is complete. The ease of a contract to sell and deliver goods at different times, to be paid for when the whole are delivered, is considered' and it is said: “ If the vendor refuses to perform entirely, without good cause, the purchaser is neither bound to pay for nor to return the goods received in part performance; ” and the case of Champlin v. Rowley (13 Wend. 258), in error (18 id. 187) is cited. It may be remarked that in the -latter case the contract was for the sale of hay, which was not to be delivered at one and the same time, on account of which $100 was paid in advance, and the balance was to be paid when the whole quantity was delivered. In the case at bar the glass was not *345 to be delivered in parcels at different times, and there was to be only one and a single delivery. The remarks of Judge Comstock appear to confine the rule to the cases mentioned; and the authorities which hold that a recovery cannot be had where the contract has been but partially performed are, I think, within the principle laid down. While, then, the defendants were not bound to accept a delivery of a portion of the boxes of glass, and had a right to reject or retain the same as they saw fit, yet if they elected to receive the part delivered, appropriated the same to their own use, and by their acts evinced that they waived this condition, they became liable to pay for what was actually delivered. This rule is established in numerous reported cases, and the question of waiver is frequently one of fact to be determined by the circumstances and the evidence. (Vanderbilt v. Eagle Iron Works, 25 Wend. 665; Corning v. Colt, 5 id. 253; Krom v. Levy, 3 N. Y. Sup. Ct. [T. & C.) 704; 6 id. 253; Flanagan v. Demarest, 3 Robt. 173; Normington v. Cook, 2 N. Y. Sup. Ct. [T. & C.] 423; Welch v. Moffat, 1 id. 575.)

The cases which are relied upon to uphold the doctrine that an action will not lie for the price of goods sold, where there has been an acceptance of part, do not go to the extent claimed, and are not adverse to the doctrine of waiver, where a portion has been received and retained and the acts of the vendee evince an intention to waive a delivery of the whole at one and the same time. In Catlin v. Tobias (26 N. Y. 217), the goods were received and used by the vendee under a contract for the delivery of specified quantities at different times, and the quantity delivered being less than that required by the contract, was held that the breach was a bar to an action for the price, and the vendee was not bound to wait to see whether the vendor would fully perform his contract. This rule does not affect the principle that where there is to be a single delivery at one and the same time and only part of the goods have been received, the vendee may waive the right to insist upon such delivery and become liable to pay for the portion actually accepted and appropriated. Pratt v. Culick (13 Barb. 297) *346 sustains the doctrine that where a special contract is entered into, which is entire, for the sale and delivery of property, a full performance by the vendor is a condition precedent to his right of action against the vendee for the price of the property delivered hy the vendor under the contract. There can be no dispute as to this rule, and it in no way interferes with the ruling of the referee that a delivery of the entire quantity may be waived and the vendee become liable for what actually was delivered. McKnight v. Dunlop (4 Barb. 36, on appeal, 5 N. Y. 537) bolds, that where there is a verbal agreement for the sale of personal property, part of which has been delivered and a part refused, that the contract was a valid one, and the plaintiff was entitled to recover damages for the non-delivery of the residue. This case does not bear directly upon the question whether there may he an acceptance and a waiver of an entire delivery, so as to render the defendants liable for what was received, by them. The case of Mead v. Degolyer (16 Wend. 635 was an action brought to recover the price of a quantity of timber sold and delivered upon a special contract; and it was held that the vendor was not entitled to recover under a gucmtum meruit for a portion less than the whole quantity agreed to be delivered, notwithstanding that the vendee has consented -to a variation of the contract as to price and time of performance. It is manifest in this case that the original contract was only modified and not abandoned; and we do not perceive that it affects the question of acceptance and of waiver which arises in the case at bar. In Paige v. Ott (5 Den. 406), the contract was for the delivery of a quantity of timber upon a given day at a price to be paid upon delivery.

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Bluebook (online)
81 N.Y. 341, 1880 N.Y. LEXIS 243, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/avery-v-willson-ny-1880.