Davis v. Adams

18 Ala. 264
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJune 15, 1850
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 18 Ala. 264 (Davis v. Adams) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Davis v. Adams, 18 Ala. 264 (Ala. 1850).

Opinion

DARGAN, C. J.

This was an action of assumpsit upon a contract, by which the plaintiff agreed that he would deliver to the defendant, at the Railroad Warehouse in Montgomery, fifty [266]*266bales of cotton of the first gathering and packing of his crop then* growing, being the crop of 1847, by the 15th day of Janaary 1848; the defendant agreeing to pay the plaintiff upon the delivery of the cotton at the rate of ten cents per pound. ) The-testimony introduced on the trial tended to prove the contract as alleged; and it was also shown that the plaintiff had fifty-five bales of cotton of the first packing of his crop grown in the year 1847, in the Railroad Warehouse in Montgomery, on the day appointed for the delivery of the cotton to the defendant, i It was further proved that the son of the plaintiff, acting as his agent, on that day called upon the defendant and told him he had come to deliver him the cotton. The defendant replied that the plaintiff ought to let him off from the contract, but they then wen® to the warehouse together, and the plaintiff’s agent pointed oni the cotton, in the presence of Mr. Maddox, the warehouse keeper, and showed the warehouse receipts, and told the defendant he was ready to deliver the cotton and settle, and that be might take choice out of the fifty-five bales. The defendant ■ replied he had “ made no contract with the plaintiff about any cotton.” j Maddox, the warehouse keeper, was also examined, and testified that previous to the 15th of January 1S48, the plaintiff delivered at his warehouse fifty-five bales of cotton, for which he gave him receipts; and that on the 15th January 1848, the son of the plaintiff, as his agent, showed the defendant the warehouse receipts and pointed out the cotton, and told him he was then ready to deliver him fifty bales and to settle, but the defendant refused to receive the cotton and denied the existence of the contract, saying the contract was incomplete. This witness also stated that upon the receipt of the cotton he had numbered the bales from one to fifty-five inclusive. On this portion of the evidence arises the question, whether the plaintiff was ready and able, at the time designated in the contract, to perform his part of the agreement, and whether the offer made by his agent, under the circumstances shown by the proof, is sufficient to authorise him tp recover of the defendant for a breach of the contract on his part.

It is a well settled rule of law, that when a contract is dependent, that is, when one agrees to sell and deliver and the other to pay on delivery, in order to entitle either party to sue for a breach, he must show that he was able and ready to perform hi3 [267]*267part of the agreement — (McGehee v. Hill, 4 Port. 170; Porter v. Rose, 12 Johns. 209, and cases there cited) — and if the contract be to deliver goods at a certain time, at a specified place, the party who is to deliver them, by himself or his agent, must be at the place on the day appointed, ready to deliver. — Story on Cont., § 967; Savory v. Goe, 3 Wash. C. C. R. 140; 5 Greenl. 192. If both parties be present gt the designated place, at the time appointed, the party who is to deliver the goods, if he wishes to put the party who is to pay for them in default, must offer to deliver them; for if the acts to be done are concurrent and are to be performed at the same time, and both the parties be present and able to perform their respective parts of the agreement, he, who would sue for a breach of the contract, must offer to perform his part, and thus force the other to perform his or refuse; otherwise, as neither party is bound to do the first act, if both be present at the time and place, able and ready to comply with the contract, and neither ¡offers to perform, the time would pass and the contract be annulled, because neither party olfered to perform his part.' — Chitty Pl. vol. 1, 321-2. Guided by these rules, we must determine, whether the acts of the plaintiff put the defendant in default, in not receiving and paying for the cotton. The plaintiff had fifty-five bales of his first packing at the designated place, at the time appointed for the delivery. By his agent, he offered to deliver fifty of them, and the option was given to the defendant to select the fifty out of the fifty-five. It did not appear that there was any material difference in the bales, either as to. the quality or quantity of the cotton. This being the proof, we are of the opinion that the plaintiff showed that he was ready, and that he offered substantially to perform his contract, and that the refusal of the defendant to accept the cotton was a breach of the contract on his part. This view shows that there is no error in the first instruction given by the court to the jury, nor in refusing the fourth instruction prayed by the defendant. Indeed, the court, under the evidence, might have instructed the jury that, if they believed it to be true, the plaintiff had shown a sufficient offer to perform the contract on his part.

The evidence, also, showed that the cotton was of the class known as good middling, which was worth in Montgomery on the 15th of January 1843, six and a quarter cents per pound, [268]*268but at the time of the trial, such cotton was worth nine and three quarter cents per pound. Under this evidence, the defendant requested the court to charge the jury, that if they believed the plaintiff retained the cotton, and if it had not been proved that the plaintiff had sold it, then the measure of damages was not the difference between six and a quarter and ten cents per pound. This charge the court refused. The rule is settled that in an action against the vendee for refusing to accept the goods agreed to be purchased at a specific price, the measure of damages is the difference between the price agreed to be given, and the market value of the goods at the time they should have been accepted according to the contract.-~-Dorman v. Nash, 9 B. & C. 145; Philpot v. Evans, 5 M. & Welsh. 475 ; Andrews v. Hoover, 8 Watts, 239; Clarke v. Perry, 7 Cow. 681; Shepherd v. Hampton, 3 Wheat. 200. This being the rule by which the damages are to be ascertained, the court did not err in refusing to give this charge, nor the next succeeding one requested by the defendant, which, though different in language, is the same in legal effect.

It also appeared that the fifty-five bales of cotton were of the average weight of five hundred and seventy-five pounds, and it was shown that the average weight of bales was about five hundred and fifty lbs. The defendant requested the court to charge that this was a breach of the contract, which the court refused. If the parties had agreed upon the exact weight of the bales, then a tender of bales, materially different as to weight, would not have been a compliance with the contract. But as the contract is silent as to the weight or the quantity of cotton that each bale should contain, we must infer that they intended the bales should be of the usual weight, without meaning to be exact. Unless, therefore, the weight of the bales so far exceeded ordinary bales or bales of the usual weight, as to show that the plaintiff intended to gain an advantage over the defendant by reason of the change in price, the court could not say that the bales did not correspond with the contract. The language of the witness is, that the average weight of bales is about five hundred and fifty pounds; there is, therefore, according to this proof, no exact, usual, or average weight, but bales weighing a little more or less than five hundred and fifty pounds would be considered bales of usual weight.

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Bluebook (online)
18 Ala. 264, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davis-v-adams-ala-1850.