Gentilli v. Starace

27 Jones & S. 449, 39 N.Y. St. Rep. 343, 59 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 449
CourtThe Superior Court of New York City
DecidedJune 1, 1891
StatusPublished

This text of 27 Jones & S. 449 (Gentilli v. Starace) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering The Superior Court of New York City primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gentilli v. Starace, 27 Jones & S. 449, 39 N.Y. St. Rep. 343, 59 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 449 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1891).

Opinion

By the Court.—McAdam, J.

The plaintiff, through a broker, sold to the defendant 169 cases of Prosperi’s Chianti wine, which had just arrived, and was to be delivered on the steamer’s dock. The contract is in writing, in the form of a bought and sold noté, and contains the following provisions : All to be delivered in merchantable order. The said goods to be approved by buyer within three days after delivery. Terms, payment by notes, for one-half the amount each at 60 and 90 days respectively.” The goods were delivered, and five days afterwards the defendant gave the notes called for thereby, the first of which was paid at maturity. The present action is on the second note, and the defence is breach of warranty, and a counterclaim of $654.69 over and above the amount of the note sued upon, which is $1,515. The referee adopted ■the defendant’s theory of the case, and gave him [451]*451a judgment for the ' entire counter-claim, less $30.69. The only warranty alleged is that supposed to be contained in the contract, i. e., that the goods were to be delivered in merchantable order, a phrase which means that at the time of delivery the goods were saleable and fit for market. Web. Dic. ; Hamilton v. Ganyard, 34 Barb. 204; Benjamin on Sales, § 983 ; Notes by Corbin. The defendant was not to be concluded on this subject by the mere delivery, receipt or inspection of the goods, for the contract gave him three days within which to approve or reject them, that is to satisfy himself in any manner he desired, whether the goods were merchantable ■ or not. If he rejected them within the three days there was to be no sale, and if he failed to reject within the specified time, the sale was to become binding. Story on Sales, § 249 ; Benjamin on Sales, § 911; Notes by Corbin. The so-called warranty of quality, did not survive the final approval and acceptance of the goods, and this was the intention of the parties to the contract.

As the contract was made before the defendant had an opportunity to examine the goods it was conditional upon their delivery in merchantable order, and the law would have implied this, if the contract had been silent upon the subject. The defendant upon receiving the goods, whether this condition was expressed or not, was entitled to a reasonable opportunity to inspect them, and if found to be unmerchantable reject them. The evident purpose of the contract was to limit the time to three days, so that unless the goods were sooner rejected, the defendant was to be concluded as to their merchantable character. The time was definitely fixed as . the reasonable period within which the defendant was to ascertain, by tests or otherwise, whether the goods delivered were equal to the description of them given by the contract, in which case the defendant [452]*452would be bound to accept if they did answer it, whether he was satisfied in other respects or not. Clark v. Rice, 46 Mich. 308. That this was the intention is evident from the phraseology of the contract,. as well as the acts of the parties, viewed in the light of the surrounding circumstances. The plaintiff was not the manufacturer of the goods and presumably only knew of them as any one engaged in selling similar goods might reasonably be expected to know. It will not be inferred, therefore, that he intended to warrant against latent defects of which he had neither knowledge nor notice, in the absence of language clearly indicating that he did so intend. In order to give rise to a warranty, the buyer should not have knowledge of rehibitory defects at the time of the contract. Bennett v. Buchan, 76 N. Y. 386. The examination afforded in this case, was to give the defendant the opportunity of obtaining all the knowledge respecting the merchantable condition of the goods and their rehibitory defects that it is possible for a dealer or persons other than the manufacturer to discover, and this examination was to precede the sale. The term warranty is riot used in the contract, nor is there any positive information or representation as to the quality contained therein. In short, there is nothing but a mere executory agreement to deliver in merchantable order, and that the defendant have three days to determine whether the goods answer that requirement or not. Properly interpreted the various provisions of the contract mean substantially this. The plaintiff was to deliver to the defendant 169 cases of wine, and it was left to the latter to determine within three days whether it was in merchantable order. If he decided it was not, he was at liberty to reject the wine and there was no sale, and if he did not decide that the wine was unmerchantable, within the time specified, the transaction was to be regarded as an executed sale, with an acceptance of the property at the vendee’s risk. The [453]*453contract fixed the price, mode of delivery and all other details with particularity, and there was but one subject left open, and that was the merchantable character of the wine, which could be rejected, but only on the ground of being unmerchantable. The plaintiff evidently did not mean to leave the question of merchantable order of the goods to the decision of the defendant, and then insure or warrant the correctness of his decision. A vendor may obligate himself in that unbusinesslike manner, but he should riot be held to have done so, except where the intention so to do definitely appears, and it does not so appear in this case. It was not the sale of a commodity in respect to which the vendor possessed any knowledge, which the defendant could not by his examination have readily obtained. The plaintiff and defendant are both merchants and dealers in the commodity, so that neither possessed any advantage over the other in respect to the subject matter of the sale, both stood on the same footing, and the contract indicates that the examination afforded the defendant was to be the crucial test as to whether there was to be a sale or not. The thing sold was not' a patented, complicated or intricate device of which the plaintiff had special knowledge, but an ordinary article of trade, the merchantable character of which is discoverable by familiar tests employed by those engaged in the business, by means of which transactions of like character with “ merchantable condition ” as the basis, are consummated almost daily in this city.

The decision or the question of merchantable order was left wholly to the defendant to be determined in any manner most satisfactory to himself. There was no fraud or concealment on the part of the vendor, and he made no effort to influence the defendant in coming to a conclusion.

Sixty days after the approval of the goods, the defendant voluntarily paid the first note given for half the purchase price, and by the judgment rendered in [454]*454his favor, he avoids the second note (the one in suit), and recovers back $615 of the amount paid on the first ■ note, and keeps the goods as well. There are cases holding that a warranty of quality, even where the vendee has the option of returning the goods, unay survive their acceptance. While some of the distinctions drawn are narrow, it is nevertheless apparent in those cases from the phraseolgy of the contract, and: the nature of the transaction, that a continuing warranty was intended, and the court simply gave effect to the evident intention of the parties. Day v. Pool, 52 N. Y.

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Bluebook (online)
27 Jones & S. 449, 39 N.Y. St. Rep. 343, 59 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 449, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gentilli-v-starace-nysuperctnyc-1891.