Dr. Shoop Family Medicine Co. v. Davenport

79 S.E. 602, 163 N.C. 294, 1913 N.C. LEXIS 170
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedOctober 15, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 79 S.E. 602 (Dr. Shoop Family Medicine Co. v. Davenport) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dr. Shoop Family Medicine Co. v. Davenport, 79 S.E. 602, 163 N.C. 294, 1913 N.C. LEXIS 170 (N.C. 1913).

Opinion

Walker, J.,

after stating .the case: The court properly rejected the evidence as to the parol agreement of the plaintiff’s agent. The contract could not be contradicted or varied in this way. Medicine Co. v. Mizell, 148 N. C., 384, and cases cited. *296 But defendant relies upon the principle that when the plaintiff sold the -goods to him, it impliedly represented that they were fit for the use for which they were intended,' or that they were merchantable, and that this representation turned out to be untrue, for they were not only not merchantable, but worthless, to the knowledge of the plaintiff. Mr. Benjamin states the rule on this subject, in substance, to be that in all sales by sample there is an implied warranty that the bulk shall be of equal quality to the sample. Where goods are sold without an opportunity for inspection, there is also an implied warranty that they shall be at least “merchantable” — not that they are of the' first quality, or even of the second, but that they are not so inferior as to be unsalable among dealers in the article. This is especially true where, as in this case, the vendor is the manufacturer of the articles sold. Benjamin on Sales, 683, 686, and cases cited in notes. “If a man sell an article, he thereby warrants that it is merchantable; that is, that it is fit for some purpose. If he sells it for a particular purpose, he thereby warrants it to be fit for that purpose.” Jones v. Bright, 5 Bing., 544. The principle was clearly expressed by Lord Ellenhorough in Gardiner v. Gray, 4 Campbell, 143, where he denied the application of the rule as to sales by sample : “I am of opinion, however, that under such circumstances the purchaser has a right to expect a salable article, answering the description in the contract. Without any particular warranty, this is an implied term in every such contract. Where there is no opportunity to inspect the commodity, the maxim of caveat emptor does not apply. He cannot without a warranty insist that it shall be of any particular quality or fineness, but the intention of both parties, must be taken to be that it shall be salable in the market under the denomination mentioned in the contract between them.- The purchaser cannot .be supposed to buy goods to lay them on a. dunghill. The question then is, whether the commodity purchased by the plaintiff be of such a quality as can be reasonably brought into the market to be sold as waste silk. The witnesses describe it as unfit for the purposes of waste silk, and of such a quality that it cannot be sold under that denomination.” See, also, Mc- *297 Clung v. Kelley, 21 Iowa, 508; Gaylord Manufacturing Co. v. Kelly, 53 N. Y., 518. The principle, as stated, bas been recognized and tbe above authorities approved in Main, v. Field, 144 N. C., 307. See, also, Manufacturing Co. v. Davis, 147 N. C., 267; Rogers v. Niles, 11 Ohio St., 518; Fitch v. Archibald, 29 N. J. L., 160; Murchie v. Cornell, 155 Mass., 60; Tiffany on Sales, p. 260. Defendant, therefore, had the right to return the goods if they were unsalable and worthless. But it appears that the plaintiff received and kept that part of the goods reshipped to him by the defendant. There was ample evidence of this fact (35 Cyc., pp. 193 and 321), which the court fairly submitted to the jury, and they have found with the defendant. Surely it is not just that plaintiff should retain the' goods and recover their value from the defendant. If he had refused to receive the goods or had returned them after discovering what they were, a different case might be presented, upon which, though, we express no opinion.

We do not think there was a sufficient tender of the $8.45 to stop interest and costs. To have this effect, the tender must be kept good, by being always ready to pay and by producing the money and paying it into court. Bilzell v. Haywood, 96 U. S., 580. In a recent case, Justice Allen, referring to this plea of tender and its sufficiency, says: ■ “The plea of tender is defective in that, in addition to alleging that he tendered the amount due, the defendant fails to allege that he has at all times since the tender been ready, able, and willing to pay, and in failing to accompany the plea by payment of the money into court; and the evidence in support of the plea is equally defective.” Lee v. Manley, 154 N. C., 247. And, again, quoting with approval Dixon v. Clark, 57 N. C. L., 376: “The principle of the plea of tender, in our apprehension, is that the defendant has been always ready (toujours .prist) to perform entirely the contract on which the action is founded; and that he did perform it, as far as he was able, by tendering the requisite money, the plaintiff himself precluding a complete performance by refusing to receive it. And as, in ordinary cases, the debt is not discharged by such tender and refusal, the plea must not only go on to allege that the defendant is still ready *298 (uncore prist), but. must be accompanied by a prof art in curiam of the money tendered,” citing, also, Bank v. Davidson, 70 N. C., 122. In Soper v. Jones, 56 Md., 503, it was held that “a plea of tender, not accompanied by profert in curiam,, is bad.” The same was said in DeBruhl v. Hood, 156 N. C., 52. This plea of tender applies peculiarly to actions of debt and assump-sit, the present action being assignable to the latter class, if. we were proceeding under the former system of pleading. The tender does not pay or satisfy the demand. In this view it may be well to reproduce what this Court said (by Hodman, J.) in Bank v. Davidson, 70 N. C., 118: “We have recently said in several cases that contracts such as that now before us have ■ been always regarded by the Legislature, and by this Court, as contracts to pay money, and not as contracts to deliver specific articles (Wooten v. Sherrard, 68 N. C., 334), and that consequently the effect of a tender refused is not to discharge the debt, but merely to stop the interest. That this is the law of contracts to pay money ordinarily is settled. It is so laid down in all the text-books, and must follow from the rule that á plea of tender must aver that the defendant has always been ready and willing to pay, and must be accompanied by a payment of the money into court for the use of the plaintiff. An omission to pay the money into court makes the plea a nullity, and plaintiff may sign judgment. Bray v. Booth, 1 Barnes, 131; Kether v. Shelton, 1 Stra., 638.” The rule is thus stated in 38 Cyc., 162, 169, 170: “Ordinarily a tender of money does 'not operate as a satisfaction of the debt, and is no bar to an action thereon; the effect, when the tender is maintained, being to discharge the debtor from a liability for interest subsequent to the tender, or damages that would accrue by reason of nonperformance,' and costs afterwards incurred. . .

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Bluebook (online)
79 S.E. 602, 163 N.C. 294, 1913 N.C. LEXIS 170, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dr-shoop-family-medicine-co-v-davenport-nc-1913.