Ex Parte A. Z. Bailey Grocery Co.

77 So. 373, 201 Ala. 79, 1917 Ala. LEXIS 67
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJune 28, 1917
Docket8 Div. 30.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 77 So. 373 (Ex Parte A. Z. Bailey Grocery Co.) 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
Ex Parte A. Z. Bailey Grocery Co., 77 So. 373, 201 Ala. 79, 1917 Ala. LEXIS 67 (Ala. 1917).

Opinions

SAYRE, J.

[1] This court holds that the opinion of the Court of Appeals (74 South. 749 1 ) has correctly stated the law of inter-pleader under the Code. However, the Court of Appeals, making concrete application of its ascertained law to the case before it, tests the right of the original defendant to interplead, by the facts stated in the affidavit which it sets out in verbis in its' opinion, and the writer, looking to the affidavit, but looking no further, because, in the first place, the method of review adopted by this court in such cases will not permit him to look further, and because, in the second place, the question appears to have been determined on the face of the affidavit, is 'unable to see that the interpleading bank was guilty of any “wrong which should have been allowed to cut it off from an interpleader: It does not appear in the affidavit, so far as I can see, that the bank breached any duty it owed the drawer of the draft by withholding the remittance of its proceeds at the plaintiff’s request. I would therefore award the writ.

In view of the conclusion reached by the Court of Appeals to the effect that the Schrader Company could not, over its objection, be brought into the case by interpleader, its determination on that ground to reverse the judgment of the trial court and the concurrence of a majority of this court, it may be suggested that what else the Court of Appeals had to say needs no consideration. But the Court of Appeals at the conclusion of its opinion said that the appellant, the Schrader Company, was entitled to the general affirmative charge. Considering the conclusion in connection with the statement by the Court of Appeals of the tendencies' of the evidence on which it was based, a majority of this court, consisting of MAYFIELD, SOMERVILLE, GARDNER, and THOMAS, JJ., and the writer, is of the opinion that in this matter the Court of Appeals was in error, and that, in view of what will be the peculiar posture of the case on its return to the trial court, we, the majority last aforesaid, think the reasons for our opinion on this point should be briefly stated.

[2, 3] The Court Of Appeals, after stating the evidence and its tendencies, says that, by accepting the shipment after inspection, the purchaser waived noncompliance on the part of the seller with his warranty, and in lieu thereof accepted the assurance of Lyle, the broker, that the seller would adjust the matter, and further, says the Court of Appeals':

“On the undisputed evidence, Lyle was without authority to bind the seller, and though his assurance of adjustment afforded the purchaser no indemnity, it could not hinder appellant’s recovery.”

It is true, of course, that if the purchaser accepted the rotten oranges a.s a compliance with the contract between himself and the seller, he could not recover the purchase money which he had paid to the bank. But the receipt of goods in a case of this sort does not necessarily amount to an acceptance. It must be borne in mind that, as there may be an acceptance without any actual receipt, so there may be a receipt without an acceptance, and that, so' long as the buyer can, without self-contradiction, say that the goods have not been taken in fulfillment of the contract of sale, he has not accepted them (Benjamin on Sales [7th Ed.] pp. 140, 736, 737), and so long as there is no acceptance of the goods, such as will complete the execution of the contract of sale, the failure of the goods to conform to the description by which they are sold constitutes a breach of an implied condition precedent (Tiedeman on Sales, §197; Benjamin on Sales, § 645). According to Prof. Wharton, where there has been a delivery, the condition precedent becomes a warranty by implication. He says (Whart. Contr. §564):

“A substantial, though partial (defective) performance of a condition precedent, followed by acceptance on the other side, transmutes the condition precedent into a representation (implying warranty) not barring a suit on the contract, though leaving ground for a cross-action for damages?’

In the case before us the plaintiff was suing to recover the money he had paid for rotten oranges, whereas he had contracted for good merchantable oranges. In McCaa v. Elam Drug Co., 114 Ala. 74, 86, 21 South. 479, 482 (62 Am. St. Rep. 88), this court said:

“A cause of action based upon the breach of the warranty is,not the same as the cause of action founded upon the breach of the contract of sale itself. If the vendor does not deliver the article he undertook and agreed to furnish, he is guilty of a breach of his contract, and the purchaser need not receive it; or, if delivered and used, the purchaser may set up a breach of contract unless he has waived his right of action for the breach.”

Tbe method of the ease just quoted differs from that of the authorities to which we have referred as dealing with the same subject, but in result it comes to the same thing. Now, in respect of the evidence of a waiver of the condition precedent or implied warranty — it is of little consequence what it *81 is called — we quote from the well-considered case of Morse v. Morse, 83 Me. 473, 22 Atl. 362, 13 L. R. A. 224, 23 Am. St. Rep. 783, as follows:

“The fact of acceptance [the court is here evidently using the word as the equivalent of ‘receipt’], however, as a matter of evidence, may have great weight on the question of satisfactory or sufficient performance. In the first place, it raises considerable presumption that the article delivered actually corresponded with the agreement. In the next place, it is some evidence of a waiver of any defect of quality, even if the article did not so correspond; evidence of more or less force according to the circumstances of the case. If the goods be accepted without objection at the time or within a reasonable time afterwards, the evidence of waiver, unless explained, might be considered conclusive. But if, on the other hand, objection is made at the time, and the vendor notified of the defects, and the defects are material, the inference of waiver would be altogether repelled. But acceptance accompanied by silence is not necessarily a waiver. The law permits explanation, and seeks to know the circumstances which induced acceptance. It might be that the buyer was not competent to act upon his own judgment, or had no opportunity to do so, or declined to do so as a matter of expediency, placing his dependence mainly, as he has a right to do, upon the warranty of the seller. Upon this question the facts are generally for the jury, under the direction of the court.”

[4]

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Related

Cloud v. Dean
102 So. 437 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1924)
Commercial Savings Bank & Trust Co. v. A. Z. Bailey Grocery Co.
83 So. 11 (Alabama Court of Appeals, 1919)
Dishman v. Griffis
77 So. 961 (Alabama Court of Appeals, 1918)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
77 So. 373, 201 Ala. 79, 1917 Ala. LEXIS 67, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ex-parte-a-z-bailey-grocery-co-ala-1917.