Keller Tailors Trimmings Co. v. Burke Rugby, Inc.

126 N.E.2d 551, 308 N.Y. 441
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 21, 1955
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 126 N.E.2d 551 (Keller Tailors Trimmings Co. v. Burke Rugby, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Keller Tailors Trimmings Co. v. Burke Rugby, Inc., 126 N.E.2d 551, 308 N.Y. 441 (N.Y. 1955).

Opinion

Van Voorhis, J.

The complaint has been dismissed after a trial by the court sitting without a jury, in an action brought by a purchaser for breach of warranty of quality in the sale of linen cloth. Judgment has been entered in favor of the defendant-seller upon the ground that neither notice of defects in the goods nor any offer to rescind the sale was presented to the seller within a reasonable time after the purchaser knew or should have known of the breach of warranty. The defects in the cloth were discoverable upon inspection, and were held by the trial court to have been patent upon evidence that they were so. The opinion of the trial court states that it was held both in fact and in law ” that timely notice was not given to the seller. We need not decide whether the complaint should have been dismissed upon the facts or upon the law, inasmuch as the trial court found the facts in favor of the defendant, and the Appellate Division has affirmed. The judgment must be [443]*443affirmed in this court unless there were errors of law which would change the result. The question before the Court of Appeals is whether it must be held as matter of law that the seller waived timely notice that this merchandise was defective. The facts on which waiver is claimed are as follows:

In May, 1947, six months after delivery of this merchandise, a conversation occurred between representatives of the buyer, the seller (which is a jobber), and the manufacturer of this linen cloth. Plaintiff-buyer complained of the quality of the goods, and the manufacturer said to send it for examination to the Mutual Adjustment Bureau of the Cloth and Garment Trades, Inc. This bureau reported January 5, 1948 (fourteen months after delivery to plaintiff) that in certain respects the cloth was defective. Thereafter another conversation occurred, in which the manufacturer agreed to replace through seller whatever merchandise plaintiff claimed to be defective. Plaintiff replied that it no longer wanted any of this linen cloth, but wished to have gabardine substituted for the entire shipment. Seller offered to sell gabardine to plaintiff, and to credit upon the purchase price whatever linen cloth of the original shipment might be returned by plaintiff. Plaintiff refused to resolve the controversy on this basis, after examining the varieties of gabardine which seller had in stock, stating that the quality was not satisfactory. That was the extent of the conversations between these parties which the buyer contends constituted waiver of notice of defects or of rescission.

The buyer’s (plaintiff-appellant’s) contention is, as stated in its brief, that “ Where the seller acts on the notice received and undertakes to remedy the defects in the goods sold or receives and accepts the goods or a portion thereof back, he waives all right to assert that the notice or return was defective or not timely.” For that reason, it is argued that the judgment appealed from should be reversed upon the law.

At the beginning is the circumstance that, at the time of this alleged waiver, the purchaser of the goods had lost all rights to avail itself of breach of warranty due to the finding of fact that more than a reasonable time had elapsed before giving notice of defects or offering to return the goods. It is, of course, axiomatic that if a seller accepts the return of goods, even after the lapse of a reasonable period of time, it constitutes a rescis[444]*444sion at least to the extent of the merchandise which has been taken back. That is as far as the courts went in Portfolio v. Rubin (196 App. Div. 316, affd. 233 N. Y. 439). It was there decided that, regardless of whether a purchaser had the right to rescind the sale respecting part of the shipment and to retain the rest of the goods, where a buyer has, in fact, returned a portion of the goods and these have been accepted back by the seller, the seller is precluded from contending that the buyer is liable for all of the goods for the reason that he has elected to retain some of them. The effect of the Portfolio decision is that respecting those goods which have been returned and accepted by the seller, the seller cannot be heard to assert either that the contract was entire or that the goods which were accepted in return were not proffered back in time. Where that occurs, it amounts to a kind of novation; part of the goods are received back, whether early or late, by consent of both parties, and by mutual agreement the sale is cancelled pro tanto and confirmed regarding the rest. If the goods are all received back, then by mutual consent the sale is cancelled in toto. In Brewster v. Wooster (131 N. Y. 473), the usual principles of law were held not to control where an action is based on a rescission of a contract by a defendant and an acceptance of the rescission by plaintiff. That is not this case. The Portfolio case (supra) holds, in effect, that where a supplemental agreement is entered into between seller and buyer whereby the seller accepts the return of a portion of the goods, the seller cannot base any cause of action upon the portion of the shipment which it accepted back, even though the goods were accepted back from the buyer at a time when it would have been too late for the latter to have rescinded. The Portfolio case does not go so far as to hold that there is a waiver of punctual notice of rescission in respect of goods which are not received back into the seller’s possession. It is based more upon the formation of a new agreement than it is upon the performance of the old one.

The most that this record discloses is that the seller through the manufacturer offered to replace goods that were claimed to have been defective. That is a different offer on the part of the seller from acceptance of a rescission proffered by the buyer. In this instance, neither seller nor manufacturer expressed willingness to cancel the sale, either in whole or in part. The seller [445]*445merely offered to replace defective merchandise, requiring the buyer to pay according to the existing contract on the same basis as though the substituted merchandise had been included in the original shipment. That was an offer to make a new agreement to modify the original contract in that manner. When the buyer refused the seller’s offer to enter into this proposed agreement of modification, the seller’s unaccepted offer to do so fell by the wayside and became of no effect. The undisputed evidence is that in response to this offer by the seller, the buyer replied that it did not want any of that kind of goods regardless of their condition, but insisted that the entire transaction be cancelled since he wished to purchase a different kind of material (gabardine) in place of that which had been ordered. When given the opportunity to substitute gabardine, the buyer replied that it was not good enough gabardine. This amounted to a complete rejection of the seller’s offer to settle the dispute.

If the offer to rescind had been made within a reasonable time, the buyer would have been entitled to insist upon its rights. The buyer cannot successfully contend, however, that the untimeliness of its demand for rescission was waived by the seller, by acceding to a rescission, whereas the seller did no such thing but insisted upon the contract’s being carried out through the substitution of satisfactory goods for those which had proved to be defective. If the buyer had been willing to take the replacements offered by the seller, the effect would have been that the contract would have been performed as thus modified but not rescinded.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
126 N.E.2d 551, 308 N.Y. 441, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/keller-tailors-trimmings-co-v-burke-rugby-inc-ny-1955.