C.O. Bashaw Co. v. A. U. Pinkham Co.

246 P. 1064, 77 Cal. App. 591, 1926 Cal. App. LEXIS 439
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 28, 1926
DocketDocket No. 5063.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 246 P. 1064 (C.O. Bashaw Co. v. A. U. Pinkham Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
C.O. Bashaw Co. v. A. U. Pinkham Co., 246 P. 1064, 77 Cal. App. 591, 1926 Cal. App. LEXIS 439 (Cal. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

KNIGHT, J.

This is an appeal by defendant from a judgment awarding plaintiff damages in the sum of $731.-50 and costs for an alleged breach of contract for the sale of peanuts.

It appears that on September 7, 1923, C. O. Bashaw Co., the respondent, with offices in San Francisco, agreed to buy from A. U. Pinhham Co., the appellant, which operates in Seattle, 770 bags of Chinese shelled peanuts in bond to be delivered out of a warehouse in Seattle. The sale was negotiated through a brokerage firm in San Francisco named Lilienthal-Williams Co., hereinafter referred to as agents; and it was stipulated during the trial that all communications from said agents to respondent be considered as communications from appellant, and that all communications from said agents to appellant be likewise considered as communications from respondent. Respondent agreed to buy said peanuts after having examined samples drawn by Laucks & Co., public inspectors and industrial chemists in Seattle, from part of the lot sold, a few weeks prior to the date of the sale, while the peanuts lay on the dock at Seattle before being placed in the warehouse. After respondent agreed to buy the peanuts, the agents, on September 8, 1923, acting under authority from respondent, telegraphed appellant to draw on respondent against negotiable warehouse receipt for the agreed price. Pursuant to these *593 instructions • appellant, about a week later, through a San Francisco bank, tendered a warehouse receipt calling for the delivery of the peanuts, accompanied by a draft representing the amount of the purchase price, and demanded payment. Respondent did not pay the draft at that time, however, upon the ground that before accepting delivery it was entitled to make an inspection of the peanuts in bulk in the warehouse at Seattle, to ascertain whether they conformed to the quality of the samples previously examined. After waiting until September 25, 1823, for respondent to make such inspection and to accept or reject the peanuts, during which time much correspondence passed between the interested parties, as will hereinafter appear, appellant canceled the sale. Respondent thereupon commenced this action for damages.

The decision of the trial court in respondent’s favor was evidently based upon the proposition that although respondent had approved the samples previously submitted and had authorized appellant to draw upon it for the payment of the purchase price, it was entitled, under the law, within a reasonable time thereafter to make an inspection of the ' bulk of the peanuts in the warehouse before accepting and paying for the same. In this regard the court found that respondent had used reasonable effort to obtain such inspection prior to the cancellation of the sale.

Appellant contends that the transaction constituted a sale by sample, and that the contract was so interpreted by respondent when it authorized appellant to draw upon it on tender of a warehouse receipt; that therefore, under the law pertaining to such sales, respondent was entitled to inspect the goods for comparison either at the time of delivery or within a reasonable time thereafter, but not before; and as a condition precedent to such inspection was obliged to pay the draft upon its presentation, receive the goods, and thereafter to reject the same if they proved to be inferior to the samples submitted. The position taken by respondent is that the transaction did not amount to the ordinary sale by sample because representative samples of the subject matter of the sale were never submitted, those approved being drawn from only part of the lot sold and being taken while the peanuts were on the dock some weeks previous to the sale; that consequently respondent was en *594 titled to inspect the bulk of the goods in the warehouse before paying for the same'in order to ascertain if they were of the quality represented by the samples submitted and approved. (Puritas Coffee Co. v. De Martini, 56 Cal. App. 628 [206 Pac. 96]; Newmark & Co. v. Smith, 26 Cal. App. 339 [146 Pac. 1064]; Civ. Code, secs. 1766 and 1785.)

Respondent concedes, however, that it was required to exercise such right of inspection and to either accept or reject the goods within a reasonable time after the same were tendered. It would therefore appear that aside from the legal question presented, if it be shown by the evidence that respondent failed to exercise such right within a reasonable time after tender, appellant was justified in canceling the sale and respondent should not recover. What is a reasonable time is usually a question of fact and must be determined from all the circumstances of the individual case, but where the facts are not disputed or the matter can be ascertained from the language of the contract, it may be determined as a matter of law. (2 Mechem on Sales, secs. 1129 and 1132.) In mercantile contracts it is generally held that the parties have intended to make time the essence (Jensen v. Goss, 39 Cal. App. 427 [179 Pac. 225] ; Coats & Williamson, Inc., v. Moran & Co., 67 Cal. App. 46 [227 Pac. 213]; Condley v. Consolidated Lumber Co., 53 Cal. App. 8 [200 Pac. 69]; 13 Cor. Jur. 688); and the same is true where the character of the property is likely to fluctuate in value. (6 Cal. Jur. 356.)

The evidence without conflict established these essential facts: That respondent approved the samples on September 7, 1923; that on the day following it agreed to purchase the peanuts and authorized appellant to draw on it against negotiable warehouse receipt. It further shows that at the latest the bulk of the peanuts was tendered on September 17, 1923, but that respondent made no effort to obtain an inspection thereof until September 21, 1923, when it telegraphed Laucks & Co., to make such inspection; that notwithstanding respondent received reports from said company after tender and prior to cancellation to the effect that the peanuts tendered compared favorably with the samples approved, it did not up to and including the morning of September 25th, indicate to appellant whether it was going to accept or reject said peanuts, but, on the contrary, *595 at that time wired Laueks & Co. instructions to make other and more elaborate tests which necessarily would have required additional delay. In the meantime, the evidence shows, appellant, having acquired the peanuts from the importer thereof, was repeatedly demanding that respondent either accept or reject the peanuts and warning respondent that unless it acted at once in the matter the sale would be canceled, stating in this connection that at that particular time the market was strong and the supply of peanuts limited.

The evidence upon this subject consisted entirely of correspondence and was as follows: After examining and approving the samples on September 7, 1923, respondent, through said agents, wired appellant that it “definitely confirms and accepts” said peanuts, and on the following day, September 8, 1923, • authorized appellant to draw i on it against negotiable warehouse receipt. The draft and the warehouse receipt were tendered at the latest on September 17th.

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Bluebook (online)
246 P. 1064, 77 Cal. App. 591, 1926 Cal. App. LEXIS 439, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/co-bashaw-co-v-a-u-pinkham-co-calctapp-1926.