Grosjean v. Hiyama

28 Haw. 211
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 24, 1925
DocketNo. 1555.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 28 Haw. 211 (Grosjean v. Hiyama) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hawaii Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Grosjean v. Hiyama, 28 Haw. 211 (haw 1925).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT BY

PERRY, J.

On August 3, 1920, tbe defendants, co-partners doing business in Honolulu under tbe firm name of Hiyama Slioten, sent an order to M. S. Cowen & Company, tbe brokers and agents of tbe plaintiff in San Francisco, *212 California, for 2500 bags of “fancy clean uncoated Calif. Japan seed rice,” at a price stated, accompanied by the following specifications: “Rice must equal to or better than samples sent in sealed envelope. Must not contain grass seeds burned, yellow or stones. This shipment must arrived in Honolulu within November, 1920. Otherwise will not accept.” Plaintiff’s reply, purporting to be an acceptance, contained the additional term that “San Francisco Chamber of Commerce certificate final as to weight, grade, quality and condition at time of shipment.” By letter of September 14, 1920, addressed to Cowen & Company, the defendants said:

“If you are unable to fulfill exactly our order and agreement as given to your representatives we will decisively refuse to accept it. We would kindly ask that you look up our order which your representatives sent you when we placed the order; and if you may be able to carry out this order please advise us. But we will not sign any contract and accept the rice if you are unable to execute our order and instructions.”

“Hoping that this will explain our trouble and hope hear from you by return mail,” (signed by the parties).

From September 27 to October 19, 1920, one O’Connor, an agent of the plaintiff, had several conferences in Honolulu with J. Arai, manager of the defendant firm, and with W. W. Thayer, attorney for the defendants. The purpose of O’Connor’s visit to Honolulu and of his conferences was to endeavor to persuade the defendants to enter into a contract for the sale and purchase of the rice with the additional condition, which had been suggested by the plaintiff, that the San Francisco chamber of commerce should he the final judge of the weight, grade, quality and condition of the rice at the time of its shipment. Arai and Thayer consistently refused to enter into any contract with this new term included. The evidence of Arai and Thayer is, in effect, that at these interviews the defend *213 ants declined to purchase the rice on any terms whatever. On the other hand, the testimony of O’Connor and of one King who testified that he attended one or more of the conferences was to the effect that at every interview with Arai the latter said that, if the plaintiff would send the rice in strict accordance with the specifications named in the .defendants’ original offer, the defendants would accept the rice and that in the interviews with Thayer the latter, while declining to enter into the contract as modified, did not at any time say that the defendants would not take the rice under any circumstances. Upon this, the sole disputed issue of fact (the evidence was undisputed as to all of the other facts in the case), the trial judge, sitting without a jury, found, in favor of the plaintiff, that at these interviews, extending from September 27 to October 19, the defendants repeatedly stated to O’Connor, the plaintiff’s agent, that they would accept the rice if it was forwarded by the plaintiff in strict accordance with the requirements of their original offer of August 3, 1920. By wire and by letter O’Connor informed ' the plaintiff of the substance of what was said and done at these interviews. The plaintiff thereupon, on October 29, 1920, wrote to the defendants as follows:

“Referring, now, to your order of August 3rd, 1920, signed by your Mr. Hamaishi, for 2500 bags of fancy uncoated clean California Japan seed rice * * * we beg to advise you that we have submitted this order to our attorney who advises us that the same taken in connection with contract of M. S. Cowen & Co. of this city, * * * necessarily makes this contract binding on us and in the same way a binding contract on you.

“We, therefore, beg to say that we will make shipment during the month of November * * * and we shall insist upon your acceptance and paying for this rice in accordance with the terms of your order.”

The defendants received this letter on November 6, *214 1920, and on the same day wrote to the plaintiff as follows:

“On September 14th, 1920, we wrote to M. S. Cowen & Company, San Francisco, Calif., who we understand are your San Francisco brokers, stating that we were unáble to agree to the terms of the contract offered to us to be signed, such contract, we understand, referring to the proposed contract with you, and we stated that we could not accept the contract in its form and refused to enter into the same. * * * Under the circumstances, therefore, we beg to notify you that if you choose to ship rice to our account as you say you intend to do in your letter it will be at your own risk, as we shall absolutely refuse to accept the same.”

This reply reached the plaintiff on November 17, 1920. On November 15, 1920, the 2500 bags of rice were delivered by the plaintiff to the Matson Navigation Company for transportation to Honolulu and it was loaded on that company’s steamship “Maui” which sailed from San Francisco on November 17 and arrived in Honolulu on November 23, 1920. The defendants refused to accept the rice and to pay for it. Thereupon, by order of the plaintiff, the rice was sold in Honolulu, the net realizations from the sale, after deducting freight, commissions and other charges, being $12,271.09. The present action is for the difference between the amount realized at this sale and the amount of the agreed purchase price. Judgment in the court below was for the plaintiff for substantially the amount of the claim together with interest at seven per cent, per annum from December 15, 1920, the date of the sale in Honolulu.

The plaintiff’s reply to the defendants’ original offer was not an acceptance of that offer since it contained an additional term. The defendants, however, by their letter of September 14 in effect renewed the original offer.. Whether the offer .as renewed by the letter of September *215 14, 1920, was accepted by the plaintiff within a reasonable time or within the terms, if any, relating to time contained in that letter need not be determined because there was ample evidence to support the finding of the trial judge that the defendants’ offer of August 3, 1920, Avas repeatedly reneAved by the defendants at the various inteiwiews Avith O’Connor, the agent of the plaintiff, extending from September 27 to October 19, 1920. There Avas also direct eA’idence tending to support the vieAv that in the conferences with O’Connor the original offer was not reneAved or repeated; but this court is not at liberty to weigh the evidence or to pass upon the credibility of the Avitnesses who testified. Under our statute relating to Avrits of error (L.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
28 Haw. 211, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grosjean-v-hiyama-haw-1925.