Burlington Grocery Co. v. McGreggs

122 A. 479, 97 Vt. 63, 1923 Vt. LEXIS 216
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedOctober 3, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 122 A. 479 (Burlington Grocery Co. v. McGreggs) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Burlington Grocery Co. v. McGreggs, 122 A. 479, 97 Vt. 63, 1923 Vt. LEXIS 216 (Vt. 1923).

Opinion

*66 Watson, C. J.

The plaintiff seeks to recover the purchase price of 100 cases of canned apples which, through its salesman, Clarence L. Jeffrey, it claims to have sold to defendant at St. Albans, on July 28, 1920. Defendant was the keeper of the depot restaurant at that place. The plaintiff’s only evidence of the terms of the contract of sale was that given by Jeffrey who testified to the conversation with defendant on the day named, which led up to the latter’s ordering 100 cases of canned apples. Then being asked what was said about the price and time of shipment, answered, "They were to be shipped in the fall and my price was sis dollars; I told him inasmuch as he was buying a hundred eases I would make the price $5.75 f. o. b. Burlington, and he said ‘All right.’ ” The contract was wholly verbal, and no note or memorandum of the bargain was made in writing, nor anything given in earnest to bind the bargain, or in part payment. The contract shown by plaintiff’s evidence contained no provision as to how the apples should be shipped, nor by what instrument of transportation, nor by which party the instrumentality or carrier should be selected or designated. Defendant denied any verbal agreement of purchase, and further claimed that in any event he neither received nor accepted the goods and, under Statute of Frauds, was not liable to pay for them. His evidence tended to support his position in each of these respects. All parol evidence tending to show such a contract was objected to by him on the ground of the statute. A trial was had by jury, resulting in a special finding that the oral agreement of sale was made as claimed by plaintiff, and a general verdict for the *67 defendant. Judgment was passed for defendant, to which exception was saved.

It appeared that without any previous notice to defendant the plaintiff shipped the apples from Burlington over the line of the Central Vermont Railway Company on November 12, 1920, and they arrived at St. Albans on November 15, and that on the next day a truckman, one McGrath, to whom the railway company was requested by defendant on July 8, 1920, to deliver any freight consigned to the latter, paid the freight, trucked the goods to defendant’s cellar, and stored them there; that defendant came to the cellar while the last load was being put in, and then first learned that the apples had been shipped from the plaintiff; that on learning this defendant, asserting that he never ordered them, at once directed the truckman to stop unloading them, to reload those already unloaded, and take them all back to the freight-house, but the latter said he could not take them out of-the cellar that night because the freight-house was closed; that defendant then told him to draw them back the first thing the next morning. Defendant’s evidence tended to show that he did not receive any invoice of the apples before they were put into the cellar, and did not see an invoice until two or three days later; that he undertook to communicate with Jeffrey (who also lived in St. Albans) at his house by telephone that evening, but not then succeeding in getting him, called him the next morning by telephone, telling him to come right down as defendant wished to talk with him about these apples; and he said he would come, but he did not at that time; that in three or four days defendant telephoned Jeffrey again and the latter said he would be there, but he did not come for three or four days more, then he came; that defendant told him he never ordered those apples and would not keep them, further telling him to take them out of the cellar, and Jeffrey said he could not do anything about it; that after this interview defendant went to Burlington to see the plaintiff, to explain that he never ordered the apples and would not keep them; that the manager was away, so he left word with the head clerk, telling him that if they did not get the apples away defendant would ship them back; that they were shipped back December 23, 1920, the delay in so doing being due to the want of a warm car by the railroad company in which to ship them to prevent their freezing; at first defendant wanted to return the apples to the railroad company as refused *68 freight; but this was refused. Then he offered them as a shipment to Burlington, and because of the severity of the weather was asked to hold them until there was a warm car from Burlington returned.

Plaintiff contends that its delivery of the goods to the common carrier for transportation to the defendant, passed the title to the latter, subject only to the right of stoppage in transitu and the right of rescission if the goods failed to be in accordance with the order, neither of which rights was exercised; that such delivery took the case out of the Statute of Frauds, and was sufficient, in view of the special verdict, to support this action for the purchase price. But these propositions can not stand critical analysis as applied to the circumstances of this case. If it be granted that at common law, the effect of such delivery of the goods for that purpose would be to pass the title, yet to take the contract'of sale, found by the special verdict, out of the Statute of Frauds there must have been a compliance with its requirements.

In support of its position touching the Statute of Frauds, the plaintiff makes reference to several reported decisions of this Court, two of which, Spencer v. Hale, 30 Vt. 314, 73 A. D. 309, and Strong, Whitney & Co. v. Dodds, 47 Vt. 348, require more than passing notice. The Spencer Case, an action of book account, was to recover the price of a quantity of fence posts sold by the plaintiff to the defendant, and by the contract to be delivered by the plaintiff upon cars to be furnished by the defendant for that purpose at the depot at Shaftsbury. They were so delivered on board cars so furnished; which by the station agent were forwarded by defendant’s direction-to his place of residence in New York. The plaintiff had nothing to do with the conveyance, either in selecting the carrier or otherwise, and it did not appear that he knew to what particular place the posts were to be forwarded, or by what instrumentality. Before making the verbal purchase, the defendant saw the plaintiff’s pile of posts, of which those in question were a part, examined them, and agreed to take of the lot shown him at least ten thousand at a price then agreed upon. As to quality, the posts delivered were in compliance with the contract. The Court states that nothing in the case shows that the parties contemplated a delivery or acceptance at any other place than Shafts-bury, and there is every reason to presume they did not; and that *69 later, being informed by the plaintiff of the time when the posts were forwarded, the defendant promised to send the money for the price, and gave no intimation of dissatisfaction for some ten days more, and never returned the posts. It was held that the delivery and acceptance were perfected at the time the posts were sent from the station at Shaftsbury.

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Bluebook (online)
122 A. 479, 97 Vt. 63, 1923 Vt. LEXIS 216, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burlington-grocery-co-v-mcgreggs-vt-1923.