Moskowitz v. Flock and Flock

171 A. 400, 112 Pa. Super. 518, 1934 Pa. Super. LEXIS 75
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedDecember 14, 1933
DocketAppeal 431
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 171 A. 400 (Moskowitz v. Flock and Flock) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moskowitz v. Flock and Flock, 171 A. 400, 112 Pa. Super. 518, 1934 Pa. Super. LEXIS 75 (Pa. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

Opinion by

Parker, J.,

This action in assumpsit grew out of an alleged breach of warranty on a sale of yarn by the defendants, Sol M. Flock and Emanuel Flock, partners trading as the Flock Manufacturing Company, to the plaintiff, Ernest Moskowitz, trading as Ermos Hat Company, and involves the right of the buyer to rescind the contract without returning all the goods delivered to the buyer.

We will summarize the allegations of the statement of claim. On May 24, 1930, plaintiff purchased by sample from the defendants twenty-five pounds of a “very fine grade of imported angora yarn” and thereafter received and paid for the same. On June 4,1930, he orally contracted for an additional two hundred pounds of the same quality of yarn at $15.50 per pound, to be shipped in two lots in one and two weeks respectively and to be paid for cash on delivery. When he placed the order he informed the defendants that he was in the millinery business and wished to use the yarn in the manufacture of berets; that he had taken orders for the hats by submitting samples of the yarn from the former order; and that he was relying upon the yarn being of the same quality. On June 14, 1930, seventy-two pounds of yarn were delivered to the plaintiff, for which plaintiff paid cash on delivery. On June 14th, immediately after the de *521 livery, the plaintiff examined the yarn and found it was wet with dye which made it impossible to determine the quality of the yarn, but on the same day he sent thirty pounds of the yarn to his contractor to manufacture into hats. On June 14, 1930, the defendants shipped an additional one hundred ten pounds of yarn to the plaintiff, and on June 15,1930, the plaintiff received from the contractor the hats made of the thirty pounds of yarn, when upon inspection he discovered that the yarn was defective and inferior to the samples submitted and was neither imported angora yarn nor a very fine grade of angora yarn. On June 15th, plaintiff offered to return the remaining forty-two pounds of yarn to the defendants, and the defendants refused to accept a return thereof. On delivery of the one hundred ten pounds of yarn shipped on June 14, 1930, plaintiff refused to receive that shipment, but by an arrangement satisfactory to, and with the cooperation of, both parties, a purchaser was found for the one hundred ten pounds who was willing to pay the price thereof, and so did.

Alleging that the yarn was of such an inferior quality that he was obliged to sell the berets, at a reduced price and as a consequence thereof lost the sum of $500, the plaintiff made claim for consequential damages in the amount of $500 on account of the yarn used in the manufacture- and claimed the right to rescind the contract as to the balance of the purchase and receive return of a proportionate .amount of the consideration paid, to wit, forty-two pounds at $15.50 per pound.

The defendants, in their affidavit of defense, alleged that the second purchase of yarn was not made from sample but was made after an examination of yarn in stock and that the yarn shipped was of the precise kind contracted for. They also denied that the plaintiff had offered to return any portion of the seventy- *522 two pounds originally shipped except ten and one-half pounds on the ground that it was not of a color specified. It was also denied that the defendants had anything to dc with the resale of the second shipment of one hundred ten pounds, but that the same was received and paid for by plaintiff without objection.

The ease was called for trial in the municipal court before a judge without a jury, when the parties offered proofs corresponding in general with their respective allegations in the pleadings. The court, after making certain findings of fact, rejected the claim of the plaintiff for consequential damages, relying on the case of Quaker City S. Mills v. Lipman, 99 Pa. Superior Ct. 12. Neither party has complained of this ruling and that portion of the claim is therefore eliminated from present consideration, leaving the claim for a return of the consideration paid for the forty-two pounds, part of the order of seventy-two pounds first shipped. As to this claim, the lower court held that the plaintiff could not rescind the contract by reason of the fact that he retaified some of the goods, relying upon the case of Elzea v. Brown, 59 Pa. Superior Ct. 403, but awarded damages for breach of the warranty, saying: “The plaintiff, however, may keep the goods which were shipped him, and set up against the seller the breach of warranty by way of recoupment in diminution of damages or in extinction of the price.”

For two reasons the judgment cannot be sustained. The claim as .set forth in the pleadings is based on a rescission of the contract while the court allowed the claim “by way of recoupment in diminution of damages or in extinction of the price. ’ ’ For a breach of warranty by the seller, there are two remedies, rescission of the contract under certain circumstances, and holding to the contract and claiming damages by way of recoupment and in diminution of or extinction of the price. The plaintiff alleged an election to re *523 scind and therefore cannot recover on proofs based on a holding to the contract. The allegations and proofs must agree. There is a more serious difficulty in that the plaintiff has failed to prove any damages. There was not any evidence produced from which it could be found that the yarn which plaintiff offered to return was valueless, and in that respect this case differs from that of Quaker City S. Mills v. Lipman, supra. In, fact, such evidence as was given furnished a basis for an inference that it had some value, for one hundred ten pounds of this same quality of yarn was resold at the contract price. It was incumbent upon the plaintiff to prove his damages, the measure of which was not the price paid.

Did the) fact that the plaintiff retained a portion of the goods prevent him from rescinding the contract? Prior to the Sales Act there would have been an affirmative answer to this question. Counsel have not called to our attention, nor have we been able to discover, any decisions in this State which have considered the effect ofj the Sales Act on this rule, but the weight of authority in other states under the Uniform Sales Act is to the effect that ordinarily where a portion of the goods is retained by the buyer, he may not rescind as to the balance for breach of warranty. This rule, however, has been held to be subject to certain exceptions. The trial court disposed of the question on the theory that the rule is invariable. The precise facts relied upon to bring the case within any of the recognized exceptions are in dispute and have not been found by the court below, and we cannot infer the findings from the conclusion reached. Without such findings we cannot say as a matter of law whether the plaintiff in the present case had the right to rescind. All that we can now do is to call attention to what we believe are the controlling principles of law involved.

*524 Prior to the adoption of the Sales Act, rescission for breach of warranty after receipt of the goods was not allowed unless stipulated in the contract, or there was fraud or an agreement to take the goods back: Kase v. John, 10 Watts 107; Freyman v. Knecht, 78 Pa. 141; Eshleman v. Lightner, 169 Pa. 46, 32 A. 63; McKnight v.

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Bluebook (online)
171 A. 400, 112 Pa. Super. 518, 1934 Pa. Super. LEXIS 75, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moskowitz-v-flock-and-flock-pasuperct-1933.