Karwacki v. Holtsberg

124 A. 410, 144 Md. 98, 1923 Md. LEXIS 159
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedAugust 3, 1923
StatusPublished

This text of 124 A. 410 (Karwacki v. Holtsberg) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Karwacki v. Holtsberg, 124 A. 410, 144 Md. 98, 1923 Md. LEXIS 159 (Md. 1923).

Opinion

*100 Pattison, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The appeal in this ease is from a judgment recovered by tbe appellees, manufacturers of children’s coats, in the City of Yew York, .against the appellant William Karwaeki, trading as William Karwaeki & Sons, a retailer of such goods, in |he City of Baltimore.

On Monday, 'the twenty-ninth day of March, 1920, Sylvan H. Spear, the salesman of the appellees, called at appellant’s place of business, and while there an agreement was reached by which tbe appellant, through Frances Karwaeki, his daughter and duly ¡authorized agent, agreed to purchase of the appellees, and the appellees, through their salesman, agreed to sell unto the appellant, a number of children’s coats1.

The salesman at the time wrote an order for the purchase and sale of said goods and handed a copy of it to Frances Karwaeki, though neither it nor the original order was ever signed by the appellant or by her on his behalf.

The order, which was upon a printed blank used by. Spear in taking orders., had printed therein these words:

“Examine this order Carefully, see that the Prices and Terms are Correct, as no changes will be made at time o£ settlement.
“This Order is not subject to Cancellation or return.”

In .addition thereto the salesman wrote in the order the name and address of the appellant, to whom the goods were to be shipped, -and the number of the coats, their lot numbers, sizes and prices.

The order was sent at once to the appellees with directions to ship promptly the goods by parcel post, that the appellant might get them for the Easter trade, Easter then being only a short while off.

Upon the receipt of the order by the appellees in Yew York on the 30th day of March, the day after it wás taken by their salesman, tbe appellees on tbe same day shipped a part of *101 the goods and, on the second day thereafter, shipped the balance.

The goods reached the appellant on the first and second days of April. The packages containing the coats were at once opened upon the receipt of them, and the coats examined, and Frances Karwaeki, acting for her father, finding them inferior, as she claims, both in quality and in work, to those ordered, the goods were, on the 19th day of April following, returned by the appellant to the appellees.

The appellees, however, refused to receive them, and after some correspondence between the parties, a suit was brought by the appellees in which they recovered judgment against the appellant for the price of the goods. It was from that judgment that the appeal in this case was taken.

The salesman of the appellees, who took the order, was not at the time of the trial in the employ of the appellees, and at such time was out of the city, and did not testify in the case. Therefore, what was said and done at the time the order was taken must be gathered from the evidence of Frances Karwaeki and other employees of the appellant, who- claim to have been present at the time the order was taken.

Frances Karwaeki testified she had been engaged in the grocery business for ,a number of years, but bad only been in the business in which she was then-employed by her father for a period of three or four months, and wias not at all familiar with that business; that Mr. Spear, the salesman of the appellees, who lived in the City of Baltimore, called at the appellant’s store and brought with him samples of children’s coats, and she, after examining them, agreed on behalf of the appellant to purchase of the appellees the coats mes tioned in the order, of the sizes and quality selected by her." That he then .and there wrote the order mentioned above and gave a, copy of it to1 her. But before .agreeing to make the purchase, she called Shear’s attention to her unfamiliarity with the business in which she was then engaged and said to him, “If I am not satisfied with the coats and the coats are not what I want, I will return them,” and he *102 said, “You can return them,” and when asked if she saw in the order the printed words; “This order is not subject to cancellation or return,” she said she did not, “I did not look for them, I looked at the Coats and the number, so* that I could get the same identical thing I ordered.”

It is evident, however, not only from Frances Karwa'cki’s evidence, but from tbe evidence of others offered by the appellant, that his right under the agreement ho return the goods was to be exercised only in the event of the goods shipped not conforming to the samples by which they were sold. For she, after testifying as above, said, in respect to the goods- shipped to the appellant, “I laid them on the counter, my -sister and I were in the store, and I said, 'Look at that; I bought by the sample and the sample Was as nice , a-s possible,’ ” and when she was asked upon cross-examination “What you meant to say was that if the merchandise wtis not upi to the sample you would return it?” and she replied “that is it.” Without stating more of her evidence or the evidence of other's upon this phase of the case, it is, .we think, clear from the evidence that, by the agreement between the parties, the goods which the appellant agreed to buy Were to conform to sample, .and it: Was only in tbe event they did not that he should be permitted to return them to the appellees.

Frances KarWacki further testified that, after examining tbe goods; she on the same day called Mr. Spear over1 the ’phone and told him she was not going to take the coats and requested him to bring the samples down that he might see that they were not the coats she ordered. In reply to which he told her to send them back at once, she says, but because of an embargo upon the express company by which she, wished to send them, she was prevented from doing so; although there was nothing to prevent her at that time from returning them by parcel post, by which they had been sent to her. On Monday following, -Spear, came -to the appellant’s place of business and she showed him the coats, and he again told her to send them back. She, however, did not send them back until the 19th of April.

*103 It is also in evidence that with each shipment an invoice was sent, showing the number, description and price of coats sent at such time. At the top of each of these invoices is found the following statement:

“If this bill is not correct in any respect we must be notified at once, as no change of price or terms will be allowed at time of settlement. All claims must be made within five days from receipt of goods. Goods ordered will not be taken back. All payments are to be made direct to the house.”

Section 22 of Chapter 346 of the Acts of 1910, known as the Uniform Sales Act, which is codified as section 25 of article 83 of the Code of Public General Laws of this State, provided that,

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Bluebook (online)
124 A. 410, 144 Md. 98, 1923 Md. LEXIS 159, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/karwacki-v-holtsberg-md-1923.