Czarnikow-Rionda Co. v. West Market Grocery Co.

21 F.2d 309, 1927 U.S. App. LEXIS 2718
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedAugust 1, 1927
Docket364
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 21 F.2d 309 (Czarnikow-Rionda Co. v. West Market Grocery Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Czarnikow-Rionda Co. v. West Market Grocery Co., 21 F.2d 309, 1927 U.S. App. LEXIS 2718 (2d Cir. 1927).

Opinion

SWAN, Circuit Judge

(after stating the. facts as above). The main question presented on this writ of error raises an interesting point of law, but before reaching it the sufficiency of the evidence to prove one essential fact must be considered. The defendant contends that the plaintiff entirely failed to prove that the sugar of which it complains was defective in quality when loaded on the . cars at the refinery. The question is properly raised on this record, under the doctrine recently stated in Thompson-Starrett Co. v. La Belle Iron Works, 17 F.(2d) 536 (C. C. A. 2).

We are satisfied, however, that the proof is adequate to sustain the referee’s finding that the 3,599 bags of sugar were not of the quality called for by the contract. There is overwhelming testimony that the sugar was off color and not up to standard at the time it rea'ched Chicago. But the defendant contends that there is no proof it was in the same condition when delivered f. o. b. ears, except the testimony of the plaintiff’s expert food chemist. This testimony defendant contends should have been stricken out, because the witness gave an erroneous answer to a question on cross-examination asking for the chemical composition of sucrose. This he corrected by letter to the referee before the close of the trial. The witness had had extensive training and long experience as a food chemist. He had acted as consulting chemist, and had rendered professional services for numerous sugar refineries and plantations. His erroneous recollection of the formula for sucrose goes to the credibility, rather than the competency, of his testimony. The referee was right in denying the motion to strike out his entire testimony. He testified that he tasted molasses in the samples of the sugar offered in evidence; that this indicated insufficient, refining of the raw sugar and accounted for the off color of the sugar complained of.

Even without the expert’s testimony, we think the referee’s finding would have been justified. The sugar was not stained or off color in spots, but uniformly and throughout the whole mass of all the many bags sampled. It is common knowledge that standard fine granulated cane sugar remains white indefinitely, unless stained, spotted, or otherwise *311 operated upon by some external agent. The bags were clean, and showed no sign of wetting or damage. It is unbelievable that such uniformity of defect throughout the contents of so many bags could have occurred in transit, if the sugar was of standard quality when it left the refinery. See Joannes v. Czarnikow Rionda Co., 121 Misc. Rep. 474, 201 N. Y. S. 409, appealed 209 App. Div. 868, 205 N. Y. S. 930.

This brings us to the proposition upon which the defendant places chief reliance for reversal of the judgment, namely, that the plaintiff could not rescind its contract as to the 3,599 bags complained of without returning also the 600 bags previously shipped under the contract to plaintiff’s customer in Ohio. Argument has been ably presented by learned counsel to the effect that the contract for 4,200 bags was an entire and indivisible contract; that the common law of New York requires a buyer under such a contract to rescind in toto, if at all; and that the Uniform Sales Act (Consol. Laws N. Y. c. 41, art. 5), which is embodied in the Personal Property Law of the state, has not changed the common-law doctrine.

The plaintiff meets this argument by referring to section 125 of the Personal Property Law (Consol. Laws, e. 41) and the decision of Portfolio v. Rubin, 233 N. Y. 439, 135 N. E. 843. In that ease the buyer contracted to purchase four pieces of cloth suitable for manufacture into cloaks and suits. The price was at so much per yard. The seller delivered four pieces, of which the buyer rejected two, as nonconforming with the contract because shaded, and accepted two, tendering the computed price therefor. Suit was brought by the seller for the price of all four pieces. The Municipal Court decided that the contract was divisible, and that the defendant could reject the pieces which did not conform to the contract. The Appellate Term, holding that the contract was entire, and that the defendant in accepting part accepted'all, reversed the judgment. The Appellate Division (196 App. Div. 316, 187 N. Y. S. 302) reinstated the judgment of the Municipal Court, but rested its reversal of the Appellate Term, on a question of waiver and practice. On appeal to the Court of Appeals, the judgment for defendant was affirmed. Judge Crane, writing for the unanimous court, placed his opinion upon two grounds: (1) That the Personal Property Law had changed the common law of complete delivery; and (2) that the evidence sustained the conclusion of the Municipal Court that this was a divisible, not an entire, contract. If the decision is applicable to the case at bar, either ground would justify the judgment of the trial court.

The defendant contends, however, that section 125 and the Portfolio decision relate only to a single mixed delivery, of which part conforms to the contract and part does not, and that the statute and the decision have no bearing upon a contract which contemplates delivery in installments. It must be conceded that the Portfolio Case involved only a single mixed delivery. But that a different result would have been reached, had the four pieces of cloth been delivered at different hours of the day, and the first two pieces been accepted before the two defective pieces arrived, seems to us most unlikely. No adequate reason can be advanced for permitting rejection of the defective goods in the one ease, but not in the other.

Section 125 was held applicable to an installment contract in Guaranty Trust Co. v. Gerseta Corporation, 212 App. Div. 76, 208 N. Y. S. 270. In fact, an installment contract, particularly where it is contemplated that a largo total quantity shall be shipped at different times in carload lots, and to parties to whom the buyer may resell, as well as to the buyer himself, and that the seller shall draw drafts for the purchase price of each consignment as soon as shipped, seems to present a far stronger case for holding the contract divisible than did the facts in the Portfolio Case. That the doctrine there laid down should be so narrowly limited as to apply only to a single mixed delivery we cannot believe.

In this conclusion we are fortified by the English ease of Jackson v. Rotax Motor Co., [1910] 2 K. B. 937. The sellers (plaintiffs) were manufacturers of motor horns, in Paris. The buyers (defendants) were dealers in motor accessories in London. The buyers ordered from the sellers some 600 motor horns of various descriptions and prices. The order provided: “Delivery as requiiud, usual terms 2% per cent, franco franco London.” At the buyers’ request the goods were delivered to a particular firm of carriers. They were delivered in 19 cases at various dates in May and June, 1909. The first installment of four eases was accepted by the buyers, who had resold the goods in one of the cases. The cases shipped in subsequent installments wore rejected when inspection, on the arrival of the last consignment, disclosed that a largo portion were defective. The sellers sued for the full purchase price. The buyers paid into court the sum due for the first four cases. The trial court held for the plaintiffs, allow *312 ing a deduction to defendants for damages for the defective goods.

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Bluebook (online)
21 F.2d 309, 1927 U.S. App. LEXIS 2718, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/czarnikow-rionda-co-v-west-market-grocery-co-ca2-1927.