Lyon v. Bertram

61 U.S. 149, 15 L. Ed. 847, 20 How. 149, 1857 U.S. LEXIS 440
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedFebruary 18, 1858
StatusPublished
Cited by43 cases

This text of 61 U.S. 149 (Lyon v. Bertram) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lyon v. Bertram, 61 U.S. 149, 15 L. Ed. 847, 20 How. 149, 1857 U.S. LEXIS 440 (1858).

Opinion

Mr. Justice CAMPBELL

delivered the opinion of the court.

This suit was commenced by the defendants in error, to recover the price for- a cargo of flour, bargained and sold to the plaintiff in error, in the city of San Francisco. The judgment of the Circuit Court was rendered upon a special verdict in favor of the plaintiffs in that court. The verdict finds that on the 13th January, 1853, the plaintiffs, and Flint, Peabody, & Co., were, jointly, the owners of a .cargo of flour, consisting of two thousand barrels, branded, and which were in fact Gallego, then being on the barque Ork, lying at a public wharf in San Francisco, and composing its entire, cargo of flour, which inspécted 1,771 barrels superfine, and 229 bad.'

The firm of Flint, Peabody, & Co., as agents and part owners, on the day aforesaid, concluded the following agreement with the defendant:

*151 San Francisco, January 13, 1853.

Sold this day to Joseph H. Lyon, Esq., a cargo of Haxall flour, now on board the barque Ork, lying in this harbor, being about two thousand barrels, on the following terms and conditions, viz: Joseph H. Lyon, Esq., agrees to pay Messrs. Flint, Peabody, & Co., thirty dollars per barrel for such as shall inspect superfine, and twenty-seven dollars per barrel for such as shall inspect bad; payment to be made as it may be delivered, and to be received and paid for on or before the expiration of three weeks from date.

If Messrs. Flint, Peabody,'& Co., elect, they can land and store the flour at the expiration of one week, or so much as may remain on board at that time, Mr. Lyon paying storage and drayage expenses: J. H. Lyon. ’

Flint, Peabody, & Co.

On the 25th January, 1853, the defendant applied to Flint, Peabody, & Co., for fifty barrels of flour, so purchased by him, by a written order, as follows:

San Francisco, January 25, 1853.

Messrs. Flint, Peabody, & Co., will please deliver Mr. William R. Gorham, or bearer, fifty barrels of flour, out of the lot purchased from the ship Órk, and oblige J. H. Lyon.

Paying them therefor the contract price, Amounting to the sum of $1,500,- and received from Flint, Peabody, & Co., the following order:

Captain of Barque Ork: Please deliver the bearer fifty barrels superfine flour, and oblige Flint, Peabody, & Co.

Fifty barrels of Gallego flour, inspecting superfine, being part of said cargo of flour on-hoard the barque Ork, was delivered from the barque to William R. Gorham, a baker, to whom the defendant had sold and transferred the delivery order and the said flour. When the order was made for William R. Gorham, the defendant represented that the flour was Haxall. On the 29th January, 1853, the defendant sold to Dunne & Co. fifty barrels of flour, which heTepresented to be Haxall, and gave the following order, bearing date on that day:

Messrs. Grey & Doane will please deliver Messrs. Dunne & Co. fifty barrels of Haxall flour from Ork. J. H. Lyon.

The said Dunne & Co., on discovering that the flour was not *152 Haxall, but Gallego, refused to take it, and so notified tbe defendant. On the 31st of January, 1853, the defendant made further application for one .hundred barrels of flour; being part of the flour so purchased as aforesaid, and gave his check on his bankers for the price, and received- the following delivery order from Flint, Peabody, & Co., bearing that date:

'

Capt. Hutckings, Barque Oak: Please deliver to J. H. Lyon, or to the order of Grey & Doane, one hundred barrels superfine flour, and oblige, &c.

The check was not paid on presentation. Upon the refusal of Dunne & Co. to take the flour, the defendant, on learning the fact, notified the plaintiffs that he would hot take the flour, and countermanded the payment of the check he had given for the one hundred barrels last mentioned.

On the 3d of February, 1853, the plaintiffs informed the defendant that they were prepared to deliver the remainder of the cargo, and requested the defendant to receive it. And subsequently, on the same day, they.addressed him a note, in which they advised him they would sell the flour on the 5th February, at public, auction, for his account, and would hold him responsible for the difference there might'be in the net proceeds of the proposed sale and the contract price, and for charges and expenses, he (Lyon) having declined to take’the flour under the contract. All the flour on the barque was of the brand known as Gallego, and the barrels were branded Gallego in printed characters from two to two and one-half inches in length, on both heads. In the opinion of some experts, there existed no difference in the quality of price of the flour of either brand, (Haxall and Gallego,) each inspecting superfine; but, in the opinion of other experts, there, was a difference, some preferring the oné brand and some the other.

Subsequently to the sale, and up to and including the 28th January, 1853, Gallego and Haxall flour had advanced to $35 per barrel in San Francisco; and between that and the 5th of February the price of both declined to $18 per barrel. On the 5th of February the plaintiffs caused the remainder of the cargo to be sold at public auction, áccording to their notice tO’ the defendant, for' his account, and at a great reduction of price.. The verdict does not find any fact to impugn the fairness of this sale. Before this suit was commenced, Flint, Peabody, & Co., assigned their interest in this suit to the plaintiffs, of which the defendant had notice.

The verdict is silent in reference to the negotiations .tliat preceded the contract, and does not inform us whether the *153 cargo was at any time visible to the defendant; nor does it discriminate with- exactness the qualities of Haxall and Gallego flour, or affirm that there is any specific difference between them.

It is evident, from the verdict, that the error in the description of the cargo did not bear oh the substance, or on any substantial quality of the subject of the sale. The subject of the sale was a cargo of flour of about two thousand barrels, on board of a vessel lying at a wharf in the city; of a.quality to be. ascertained by an inspection; and from that inspection, and not from the brand, the price was to be ascertained. • The brands Haxall and Gallego are understood to refér to different mills in Richmond, Virginia, at which flour is manufactured. The verdict sufficiently determines that the difference between them in the market of San Francisco is inappreciable, at least by the mass of purchasers and consumers. The case clearly does not belong to that class in which the subject-matter of the contract was of a nature wholly different from that concerning which the parties to the contract made their engagements. The brand on the exterior of the barrels of flour was certainly not of the substance of the contract. (Young v. Cole, 3 Bing. N. C., 724; Gompertz v. Bartlett, 2 Ell. and B., 19 Verm. R., 202.)

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Bluebook (online)
61 U.S. 149, 15 L. Ed. 847, 20 How. 149, 1857 U.S. LEXIS 440, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lyon-v-bertram-scotus-1858.