Proctor v. Spratley

78 Va. 254, 1884 Va. LEXIS 4
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJanuary 10, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 78 Va. 254 (Proctor v. Spratley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Proctor v. Spratley, 78 Va. 254, 1884 Va. LEXIS 4 (Va. 1884).

Opinion

Fatjetleeoy, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The appellant, Proctor, a merchant and dealer in peanuts in the city of Petersburg, some time in August, 1879, sent a message, or messages, to the appellee, Stith Spratley, a farmer and grower of peanuts in the county of Surry, with reference to buying his peanuts, who not long thereafter—viz: about 10 o’clock in the morning on the 17th day of September—came into Proctor’s office and exhibited to him samples of his two lots of peanuts, and told him that his crop, then in his barn in Surry, consisted of about 500 bags- of the best peas, and about 100 bags of the low grade of nuts.

As to whether there was any offer for the purchase of the peanuts made at that time, the evidence was conflicting, but upon the return of Spratley, the appellee, to the [260]*260office of Proctor, the appellant, about 3 o’clock. P. M., on the same day—Proctor having in the meantime received a letter from his consignees in New York, giving unfavorable information as to the state of the peanut market—agreed to buy both lots of peanuts—the best lot at $1.26 per bushel, and the low grade lot at 85 cents per bushel, both lots of peanuts to be delivered at Moss’ tramway, in the county of Surry, on James river.

In pursuance of the express terms of the sale, the peanuts were delivered, weighed, and marked with Proctor’s stencil, at Moss’ tramway, by Stith Spratley, and shipped, as directed by Proctor, in Proctor’s name, to the parties in New York to whom he directed they should be sent, viz: Messrs. Garlick & Phillips, his own commission merchants. Three hundred bags of the peanuts were received by Gar-lick & Phillips on the 3d or 4th of October, who at once compared the bulk with the sample by which Proctor claimed to have purchased, and which he had previously sent to them by mail and they found that the bulk was not as good as the sample sent. They telegraphed this fact to Proctor the same day, and sent to him a sample of the bulk. With this full knowledge of the non-conformity between the sample and the bulk, Garlick & Phillips, as the agents of Proctor, sold that day 200 bags of the peanuts.

On the 6th of October, the balance of the whole bulk of nuts arrived in New York—the good lot consisting of 564 bags, and the poor lot consisting of 30 bags. Garlick & Phillips at once sampled the good lot again, and on the same day (October 6th) reported again to Proctor the nonconformity of the bulk with the sample, and-sent to him a second sample drawn from the good lot, by the Old Dominion Steamship Company, on the 7th or 8th of October, there never having been any objection whatsoever made to the poor lot. The letter from Garlick & Phillips to Proc[261]*261tor, giving to him this second notification of the non-conformity between bulk and sample, and advising Mm that they had sent to him a sample from the bulk by the O. D. S. Co., was received by Proctor on the 8th of October, and, about 3 o’clock P. M. October 9th (next day), with a full knowledge of the non-conformity between the bulk and the sample, twice communicated to him by his commission merchants, he settled with Spratley for both lots of peanuts, at the contract price, giving him his check for $3,146.47 in payment. Spratley proposed, as an accommodation to Proctor, not to draw the money out of bank for some days; but finding, after parting with Proctor, that he would need some of it, he gave the check to his nephew, John Spratley, and told him to see Proctor the next morning, and get him to give Mm (Spratley) two .checks in its stead—one for $2,500, and the other for $646.47; and to collect the smaller check, and let the other remain uncollected.

On the morning of the -next day (October 10th), Proctor received the sample sent to him by Garlick & Phillips on the 7th or 8th of October by the O. D. S. Co.; and, subsequently, on the same day, assured as he now was of the nonconformity between the bulk and the sample by which he claims that he purchased, not only by two communications received from his commission merchants, but by personal inspection of the sample sent to him from the bulk of the peanuts in the hands of his agents and consignees in New York, he received back from John Spratley his (Proctor’s) check for $3,146.47, which he had given the day before in payment for the peanuts to Stith Spratley, and gave in its stead, as. requested by Stith Spratley, two checks, one for $2,500.00, and the other for $647.46.

Proctor subsequently stopped the payment of the $2,500 check, which Spratley, to accommodate him, had not collected, and forced Spratley to pay Mm back the $647.46, which he had collected, and to take an order on Garlick & [262]*262Phillips for the peanuts, which Spratley did, telling him at the time that he would give him back the money, take the peanuts and sell them, and sue him for the loss upon the resale.

The loss upon the resale (which was for the best price that could be obtained on the New York market, after a rapid and heavy decline in the price of peanuts), was $1,620.00, for which sum Spratley obtained judgment in the hustings court of the city of Petersburg. Proctor moved the court to set aside the verdict of the jury, as being contrary to the law and the evidence; which motion the court overruled, and Proctor excepted to the opinion of the court; and the case is in this court by writ of error and supersedeas to the judgment of the said hustings court of the city of Petersburg.

The appellant, who was defendant in the court below, asked the court to give to the jury three instructions, which the court refused to do, and gave, instead thereof, four instructions of its own.

As to instruction No. 1, given by the court, and the refusal to give the first instruction asked for by the defendant, an inspection and comparison of the two shows that instruction No. 1 was certainly not to the prejudice of the defendant, whilst the first instruction asked for by the defendant and refused by the court is manifestly untenable in law, in that it instructs the jury to assume that, although there was no express or implied understanding between the contracting parties that the bulk of the goods should correspond with the portion exhibited, yet, if there was a sample "exhibited, the sale was a sale by sample, unless the. vender both declined to sell by it and also required the purchaser to inspect the bulk at his own risk; and that, in some cases, the jury may assume, where a sample is exhibited, that the sale is a sale by sample, even although the vender may expressly decline to sell by it, and may require the purchaser to inspect the bulk at his own risk.

[263]*263That a jury can never assume that a sale is a sale by sample, the court in Beirne v. Dord, 1 Seld. (N. Y.) Rep. 98, say, “ to authorize a jury to find such a contract, the evidence must satisfactorily show that the parties contracted solely with reference to the sample exhibited.” See also Benj! on Sales, page 564, and section 564, and note (e); Day et als. v. Raquet et al., 14 Minnesota, 277; Bernard v. Kellogg, 10 Wall. 383; Warren v. Mason, 18 Wend. 425, and Story on Contracts, § 540.

The instruction Ro. 2 given by the court, instead of the second instruction asked for by the defendant and refused, is stronger in his favor than the one asked for and refused.

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Bluebook (online)
78 Va. 254, 1884 Va. LEXIS 4, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/proctor-v-spratley-va-1884.