D. M. Osborne & Co. v. Van Atten

13 P. 242, 3 Wash. Terr. 53, 1887 Wash. Terr. LEXIS 3
CourtWashington Territory
DecidedJanuary 19, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 13 P. 242 (D. M. Osborne & Co. v. Van Atten) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Territory primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
D. M. Osborne & Co. v. Van Atten, 13 P. 242, 3 Wash. Terr. 53, 1887 Wash. Terr. LEXIS 3 (Wash. Super. Ct. 1887).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Turner

delivered the opinion of the court.

This was an action to recover the contract price of a self-binding harvesting machine shipped by appellants from Portland, Oregon, to the appellee, at New York Bar, in Washington Territory. The important question in the cases arises on the construction of the agreement of sale, which is as follows:—

“June 23, 1882.

“Mr. D. M. Osborne & Co.,

“Please order for me and ship July 1, 1882, marked *H. H. Van Atten, at New York Bar,’ one number nine (9) twine self-binding harvesting machine manufactured by D. M. Osborne & Co., of Auburn, New York, which said machine I hereby agree to receive, pay freight and [56]*56charges thereon from Portland, Oregon, and purchase the same on your advertised terms of purchase, sale, and warranty, for the sum of three hundred dollars, and pay therefor as follow: Note for three hundred ($300) dollars due October 1, 3883, with interest at ten per cent per annum from October 1, 1882, until paid.

“warranty.

“All our machines are warranted to be well built, of good material, and capable of cutting, if properly managed, from ten to fifteen acres per day. If, on starting a machine, it should in any way prove defective, and not work well, the purchaser shall give prompt notice to the agent of whom he purchased it, and to D. M. Osborne & Co., Portland, Oregon, and allow time for a person to be sent to put it in order. If it cannot then be made to de good work, the defective part will be replaced, or the machine taken back, and the payment of money or notes returned. Keeping the machine during harvest, whether kept in use or not, without giving notice as above, shall be deemed conclusive evidence that the machine fills the warranty.

(Signed) “H. H. Van Atten,

“F. G. Hanna, Traveling Agent.”

The appellee insists that the intention of the parties-to the above agreement, as evinced by its terms, was that the vendor should deliver the machine at New York Bar, and that the vendee should then have the-option of accepting or not, as he pleased, subject to an action for damages if he failed to accept without good cause. This we understand to be the position of counsel, but it must be confessed that the admission by counsel of the right of the vendor to sue for damages-if the failure to accept be without justification, renders his contention somewhat obscure. If the sale be one on trial or approval, as it is technically called, failure to accept could in no event inflict legal damage or con[57]*57fer a right of action. If the agreement be to accept th& machine on condition that it be of the kind and quality described, then on the delivery of the thing answering the description the vendee cannot by an arbitrary refusal to accept avoid his obligation to pay under the contract. The vendee is not clothed with an option to drive one who has complied with all the conditions precedent to entitle him to receive a fixed sum of money to an action for unliquidated damages. Is the agreement, then, one for the sale of a harvesting machine on trial or approval? The particular clause of the contract which counsel for appellee relies on to-sustain his contention is the following: “Which said machine I hereby agree to receive, pay freight and charges thereon from Portland, Oregon, and purchase-the same on your advertised terms of purchase,” etc. These words differ but little in meaning from the-meaning which is implied in the common and usual order for merchandise dispatched by one merchant to another at a distance. The implied undertaking of the vendee in such cases is always that he will pay freight and charges, and that he will purchase the goods ordered, — that is, the goods being of the kind and quality ordered; that he“ will receive and accept the same as a compliance with his order. We do not think that the word “purchase” was-used in any other sense in this agreement. The insertion in the agreement of the warranty negatives the idea of -a sale on approval, and indicates that the vendee intended to rely on the contract of the vendor as a guaranty of the kind and quality of the machine, rather than a trial or inspection. The agreement speaks of the appellee as the purchaser of the machine, and speaks of the agent who made the sale as “the agent of whom he purchased it.” The kind and quality of the machine is particularly described, and the amount to be paid, together with the terms of payment specifically agreed [58]*58on, thus leaving nothing undetermined except the specific machine to be delivered. This particularly argues something more than a mere proposition for sale. Pointing in the same direction is the fact that the agreement was executed in duplicate, signed by the vendee and the agent of the vendor, a copy being kept by each. Another significant fact is the provision made for the payment of freight and charges one way. If this were intended as consideration for the privilege of inspecting or trying the machine, with liberty to purchase or not at pleasure, the agreement would have been to pay freight and charges both ways in case of failure to purchase. The agreement, we think, was an executory contract for the sale of a' machine, subject to become a binding sale on the performance of the condition that a machine of like kind and quality to that ordered should be individualized and segregated from the mass of its fellows in the manner contemplated by the agreement,’ and that said machine be delivered to the vendee.

Mr. Benjamin, in his work on Sales, says, concerning the selection of the property to pass under such an agreement: “The rule on the subject of election is, that when, from the nature of an agreement, an election is to be made, the party who is by the agreement to do the first act, which from its nature cannot be done till the election is determined, has authority to make the choice, in order that he may be able to do that first act, and when once he has done that act, the election has been irrevocably determined, but till then he may change his mind.” (Benjamin on Sales, 3d Am. ed., sec. 359.) The same author, continuing the subject in the succeeding section, .says: “It follows from this, says Blackburn, J., that when from the terms of an executory agreement to sell unspecified goods, the vendor is to dispatch the goods, or to do anything to them that cannot be done till the goods are appropriated, he has the right to choose what the [59]*59goods shall be; and the property is transferred the moment the dispatch or other act was commenced, for then an appropriation is made finally and conclusively by the authority conferred in the agreement. (Id., sec. 360.) The learned author in the positions above quoted is well sustained by authority in this country and in England, and undoubtedly presents the law correctly. It follows that the title to the harvesting machine vested in the vendee when the machine was delivered to the common carrier at Portland to be transported to New York Bar, and that thereupon the right of the vendee to rely on the contract for the payment of the purchase price agreed on became fixed.

The various authorities cited by counsel for the appellee, to the effect that acceptance by a common carrier of goods shipped on order is not acceptance by the vendee, do not militate against the position here taken.

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Bluebook (online)
13 P. 242, 3 Wash. Terr. 53, 1887 Wash. Terr. LEXIS 3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/d-m-osborne-co-v-van-atten-washterr-1887.