Katz v. Delohery Hat Co.

118 A. 88, 97 Conn. 665, 1922 Conn. LEXIS 121
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedAugust 4, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 118 A. 88 (Katz v. Delohery Hat Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Katz v. Delohery Hat Co., 118 A. 88, 97 Conn. 665, 1922 Conn. LEXIS 121 (Colo. 1922).

Opinions

Curtis, J.

It will simplify the consideration of this case to deal first with the question whether the defendant’s motion to set aside the verdict as against the evidence was properly denied.

A review of the evidence discloses that there are certain undisputed facts in evidence, among them the following: The plaintiff was engaged in the business of manufacturing and selling fur for use in manufacturing hats. The defendant was a manufacturer of hats. The plaintiff made and sold one kind of fur which was *668 designated by him as Y. C. Superior B. C. B. unpulled fur. This fur was cut from skins of rabbits imported from Australia.

On the 22d day of July, 1918, the plaintiff sold to the defendant 1,500 pounds of Y. C. Superior B. C. B. unpulled fur, at the price of $6.50 per pound. A memorandum of the contract and sale was made and signed by the parties, which reads as follows:—

Newark, N. J. July 22/18.
To The Delohery Hat Co.
Danbury, Conn.
Dear Sir: We hereby confirm your purchase of Five (5) cases of Y. C. Superior B. C. B. Unpulled @ $6.50 per lb. (Deliveries against this contract are liable to variation or cancellation on the part of the seller in case of strikes, breakdown, fires or delay or hindrance by reason of conditions occasioned by war or other circumstances beyond seller’s control.) on the following terms and conditions.
Bills to be payable 8% the 10th of the following month, less 1% for each month thereafter.
Delivery Oct. 22 or sooner if called. Unless otherwise instructed will ship by
Very respectfully yours, J. W. Katz.

Accepted by the deloheey hat co., M. Delohery, Pres.

This fur was shipped by rail to the defendant at Danbury, with its consent, about September 27th, 1918. The defendant received the fur, tried it late in October, 1918, and thought it was not the kind and quality contracted for, and on October 31st wrote to the plaintiff to that effect, and on November 1st the plaintiff replied that the fur was of the kind and quality contracted for; thereupon the defendant, on November 5th, reshipped the fur to the plaintiff at Newark, N. J. On or about November 13th, the plaintiff found the fur at his place of business. He immediately reshipped *669 the fur to the defendant and notified it by letter that he refused to accept the fur and had reshipped it to the defendant, and that if not paid at once he would begin suit for the contract price. On December 5th the plaintiff was notified by the railway company that the defendant refused to receive the fur.

The plaintiff thereupon served a notice upon the defendant by letter of December 5th, a copy of which is printed in the foot-note. *

The plaintiff ordered the railway company to return the fur to him at Newark, N. J. This was done and the fur was received by him on December 20th.

The plaintiff thereupon, after this notice to the defendant, undertook to sell the fur on the defendant’s account, and sold it in the month of May, 1919, at $3 per pound.'

This action was brought after the contract time for *670 payment had passed. The action set up in the complaint is an action for damages for nonpayment of the price, to wit, for the purchase price less the amount received on the sale of the fur by the plaintiff in behalf of the defendant.

The evidence shows that after November 11th the price of fur began to fall, and that late in December there was practically no market for the fur.

Upon the trial, among the contested issues, were (1) whether the fur shipped to the defendant was of the character and quality called for by the contract; and (2) whether the price, for which the plaintiff sold the fur, and which he credited on the purchase price, was such a price as he was justified in selling it for in the exercise of reasonable diligence, in view of the falling market conditions arising from the armistice on November 11th.

The defendant does not question that under the evidence the jury could have reasonably found, ás it did, that the fur was of the character and quality called for by the contract. It claims that under the evidence there was an. available market for the fur during November, 1918, and early in December, at a price substantially higher than the price received, and that by the exercise of due diligence the plaintiff could have secured a substantially higher price for the fur, and that the jury could not reasonably have found otherwise. This claim is based upon the assumption that the duty of the plaintiff, of using due diligence to procure the best available price for the fur, began either on November 5th, 1918, when the defendant shipped the fur back to the plaintiff, or on November 13th, when the plaintiff found the fur at his place of business. The fur was sold for $4,395 by the plaintiff, and the jury rendered a verdict for $5,355, that being the purchase price, $9,750 less the $4,395 received by the plaintiff for the *671 fur. The general verdict of the jury to this effect shows that they found that the fur delivered to the defendant by the plaintiff was fur of the quantity, character and quality called for by the contract, and that the price for which the plaintiff sold the fur was a price that he was justified in selling it for, in the exercise of reasonable diligence.

The defendant’s claim that the duty rested on the plaintiff of procuring the best available price for the fur early in November, 1918, leads us to consider the relations of the parties to this fur in November, 1918, under the undisputed facts and the law of sales.

When in September, 1918, fur of the quantity, character and quality called for by the contract, as the jury found this fur to be, was shipped to the defendant by rail and delivered to the defendant in Danbury, the plaintiff had executed the contract and title passed to the defendant. The payment of the purchase price by the defendant in accord with the agreement was then the only executory part of the contract. The defendant could not at will, by returning the fur, divest the plaintiff of his right of action for the purchase price and cast upon him only a cause of action for nonacceptance of the fur. When fur of the quantity, character and quality called for by the contract was delivered to the defendant, it was accepted in law; the fact that the defendant had the right to inspect the fur and refuse to accept it if not of the character and quality called for by the contract, did not entitle it to refuse to accept fur of the character and quality called for by the contract, title to which had passed to it by delivery, and thereby deprive the seller of his right of action for the purchase price and remit him to an action for damages for nonacceptance. The title of the defendant to the fur, which had accrued to it upon its delivery, was not divested by the return of the goods to the plaintiff *672

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
118 A. 88, 97 Conn. 665, 1922 Conn. LEXIS 121, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/katz-v-delohery-hat-co-conn-1922.