McAfee v. Dix

101 A.D. 69, 91 N.Y.S. 464
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJanuary 15, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 101 A.D. 69 (McAfee v. Dix) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McAfee v. Dix, 101 A.D. 69, 91 N.Y.S. 464 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1905).

Opinion

Jenks, J,:

■On January 11, 1900, Fisher and the defendant , made an agreement in writing whereby Fisher was to sell and deliver -to" the defendant iron of certain qualities at certain prices, as required by specifications of the defendant. This action is to recover a price -named in the contract for one shipment of 32,537 pounds delivered to the defendant on or .about April 12,1900, and used' by him, less 3,079 pounds returned in July, 1900. The defendant answers that this iron was rejected by him as not .up to the standard 'of, the •contract; that Fisher acquiesced in such rejection and promised to [71]*71replace the shipment, but did not; and also that ■ it was subsequently agreed between them that the defendant should use such part of the shipment as he wished and return the remainder, and that the defendant should pay only the reasonable worth of the iron used; also that defendant thereafter used 29,458 pounds and returned 3,079 pounds, and that the reasonable value of the part used was $476.59, which the defendant had offered, and was willing to pay. The jury returned a verdict for the contract price and the defendant appeals.

The appellant relies upon only two errors, disavowing any attack upon the rulings admitting or rejecting testimony or upon the charge as to the burden of proof, or upon-the respondent’s contention as to the effect of defendant’s omission to renew the motion for dismissal at the close' of the case. First, it. is contended that there was error in this instruction to the jury :x “ The 'question for you to decide between these two sets of witnesses is, was this iron what the contract called for? If it was, then the defendant must pay what the price stated in this contract is.”. The learned and able counsel for the appellant says that this instruction was properly excepted to, but he fails to refer to any specific exception and I cannot find one. On the contrary, I read in the colloquial part of the charge that the counsel said: “ Then your Honor did .say this, in which I think you left out something. You said if the iron was ordered and if the defendant received it and kept it he was bound to pay the price agreed upon. The Court: If it were equal to the contract. Mr. Benedict: Your Honor left that out when you first said it. The Court: I think I said it again and again ‘if the iron was the same.’ The jury understood me as meaning that, if the goods were as called for ■ in the contract.” There was neither exception nor objection taken to this statement. Nevertheless I will consider the instruction. The court had first discussed the testimony as to the quality of- the iron delivered in comparison with that ordered. The instruction is susceptible of the construction that if the jury decided that the iron was of a quality called for by the contract the defendant must pay the price named in the contract for such iron. But this did not necessarily follow. For the defendant contended that he had rejected the iron under the contract; that Fisher had accepted that rejection [72]*72and that thereupon they made a separate 'agreement or at least a modification, of the contract to the effect that the defendant should use-so much of the iron as he wished and should pay but the reasonable price for it. Assume that the jury should find that the defendant’s version was-true. He was not bound in such event to pay the price named in the contract for iron of this quality, but only the reasonable price therefor. The price named in the contract for such iron may have been far different from the reasonable price. If the two prices were identical then the instruction could not be criticised, but it would escape simply through the coincidence. The rule is, however, that if the charge as a whole con veyed to the jury the correct rule of law on a given question the judgment will not he reversed, although detached sentences may be erroneous. (Caldwell v. New Jersey Steamboat.Co., 47 N. Y. 282; People v. McCallam, 103 id. 587; Hickenbottom v. D., L. & W. R. R. Co., 122 id. 91.) Despite this expression, did the charge as a whole convey to the jury the rule that the defendant was only bound to pay the contract price if he accepted the iron under that contract? -The court proceeded to state clearly and accurately the two contentions, and then charged as follows : “ He {i. e., the plaintiff) says that the evidence, both oral and documentary, all tends • to show that this original contract was never qualified. If' it was not qualified or altered, then the defendant must pay the contract price. If the goods did not come up to the requirements- of the contract, and were delivered to the defendant, the defendant was justified in - refusing to receive them, and could have stopped there and not paid anything. The fact that he used the goods after saying, they were not up to the contract, and used them with the acquiescence of the plaintiff, agreeing that a new price should be -established, does not - bind the defendant to pay the contract price.” And again:, after the court had stated the two theories, and that the version of the plaintiff was that the evidence, both oral .and documentary, all tends to show that the -original contract was never qualified, and that if not, then the defendant must pay the contract price, the court finally charged ■: “ There is but- one question in the case. * * * If the plaintiff is entitled to recover on his theory, he is entitled to $810.-53. with interest, which will be agreed upon.. If he is not entitled to recover the contract price, lie is entitled to recover fat [73]*7332,500 pound's of iron less 3,098 pounds "which were returned, at whatever the market price of the iron was in the locality where it was used and at the time of its use.” I think in view of the entire charge, and in the absence of any specific exception or request, the error of the earlier instruction is not capital. I may add that there was a possibility of prejudice to the plaintiff in the instruction. Assume that the jury had accepted the latter’s version that the iron was delivered through an order under the contract, and finally was accepted by the defendant as delivered under that order, yet the jury might have thought that the plaintiff could not recover the contract price for this iron, although it was ordered to be of a certain quality and shipped to meet that order and accepted thereunder, unless in point of fact the plaintiff now established that the iron was of that quality. This is not the law. (Brown v. Foster, 108 N. Y. 387.)

But the point of the appellant’s contention is different. He insists that the court by this instruction permitted the jury to award the price of the contract for iron of a quality inferior to that required by the specifications of the contract. If, hoAvever, the jury found that the plaintiff delivered this iron ordered under the contract, and the defendant finally accepted it under the contract, the plaintiff was entitled to the contract price for iron of the •kind which the defendant ordered and which the plaintiff shipped to fill that order, irrespective of its actual inferiority. (Brown v. Foster, supra.) But the appellant’s contention is based upon the proposition that his contention that this iron was rejected under the contract, that such rejection was accepted by Fisher, that a second list was sent to Fisher to replace the iron thus condemned, and (if I do not mistake, notwithstanding an allegation in the answer) that it was replaced, is undisputed.

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Bluebook (online)
101 A.D. 69, 91 N.Y.S. 464, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcafee-v-dix-nyappdiv-1905.