Richardson v. . Woodruff

100 S.E. 173, 178 N.C. 46, 1919 N.C. LEXIS 385
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedSeptember 17, 1919
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 100 S.E. 173 (Richardson v. . Woodruff) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Richardson v. . Woodruff, 100 S.E. 173, 178 N.C. 46, 1919 N.C. LEXIS 385 (N.C. 1919).

Opinions

The action is to recover damages for failure to deliver 100 barrels of seed potatoes, pursuant to a contract of defendant with plaintiff, J. W. Richardson, and in which coplaintiff had acquired an interest pending negotiations. The amount of $5 per barrel had been paid by plaintiff making order, on "deposit," to be applied towards the purchase money, pursuant to the terms of the agreement.

There was denial of liability by defendant and a counterclaim for balance of the purchase money alleged to be due defendants, claiming that the potatoes were in all respects up to contract specifications.

On the issue as to damages, the court restricted plaintiff to recovery at most of the $500 made on deposit, as stated.

As ancillary process in the cause, plaintiffs had sued out an attachment and caused same to be levied on the potatoes that were shipped and after plaintiffs had declined to receive same.

The jury rendered the following verdict:

1. Did the defendants contract to sell to the plaintiffs 100 barrels of Irish potatoes at the price of $12.50 f. o. b. New York, for shipment August the first, upon the terms set out in the correspondence offered in evidence? Answer: "Yes."

2. Did the defendants fail to comply with the terms of said contract? Answer: "Yes."

3. What damage, if any, are the plaintiffs entitled to recover therefor? Answer: "$500 and interest."

4. What amount, if any, are the defendants entitled to recover of plaintiffs by reason of their counterclaim set up in the answer? Answer: __________

There was judgment on the verdict for plaintiff and (48) both sides appealed, assigning errors.

DEFENDANT'S APPEAL. The facts in evidence tended to show that, in answer to a letter of plaintiff, doing business in Elizabeth City, N.C. of date 7 June, 1917, seeking to purchase a lot of "Peach Blow" "cold storage" seed potatoes, and making inquiry as to price of 100 bags and per carload, defendants, doing business in New York City, wrote *Page 51 in reply from that place on 8 June as follows: "We are in receipt of your letter of the 7th asking us to give you prices on some Peach Blow cold storage potatoes, but we have no Peach Blow, and we promptly wired you that we had 40 bags of Cobblers and 100 bags of Spaulding Rose No. 4. Spaulding Rose No. 4 is very similar to the Peach Blow. We quote you these at $12.50 per barrel f. o. b. New York, for shipment August 1. If you order, we shall expect deposit of $5 a barrel at once, the balance draft attached to bill of lading. Any shrink to be stood by you after they go into cold storage. Goods are sound and a No. 1 now in every matter. We await response to this matter.

Yours very truly, S.D. WOODRUFF SONS."

On 11 June plaintiff wrote from Elizabeth City, N.C. accepting offer 100 barrels Spaulding Rose at price of letter, and on 12 June sent a telegram to plaintiff, accepting offer, and on 20 June sent the $500 as required, etc. It was admitted that on 2 August Woodruff Sons shipped from New York to their own order 86 barrels of Irish potatoes, bill of lading attached, order notify New Bern Produce Company, and same arrived at Elizabeth City on 8 August. There was testimony on part of plaintiff to the effect that the potatoes so shipped, on arrival at Elizabeth City, were utterly unfit for the purpose for which they were ordered, and were at the time they were put in cold storage and at the time same were shipped out of cold storage on 2 August. "That the barrels were about one-half to two-thirds full; that they were sprouting, with sprouts one-half to three inches long; they were soft, shrivled [shriveled] up, and a great many of them rotten." That plaintiff declined to accept the potatoes and thereupon instituted the action for damages, and had issued and levied an attachment on same as property of defendants.

Plaintiff's testimony further tended to show that the term, "Any shrink to be stood by the purchaser after they (49) go into cold storage," as contained in letter of defendant proposing sale, signified only "that when the barrels are filled they will stretch and cause the potatoes to shrink," and had no reference to the condition of the potatoes except perhaps as to weight, but in other respects, potatoes, if up to specifications, should have continued sound to time of arrival in Elizabeth City, and that the market value of seed potatoes at said time of arrival was from $18 to $25 per barrel.

The testimony of defendants tended to show that the potatoes were sound and fully up to specifications when put in cold storage, 20 June, 1917; were properly cared for there, and were sound and all *Page 52 right when shipped; that the natural effect of taking potatoes out of cold storage, exposing same to the temperature then existent, from 2 August to 8, would cause them to shrink and make them soft, etc., etc.; that the term "shrinkage to be stood by you" covers both sprouting, rotting and softening, and "was put in there to protect the defendants," etc.

Upon this, the evidence chiefly relevant to the inquiry, it is insisted for the defendant that the facts showed an executed contract of sale at the time the potatoes were put in cold storage on 20 June, and any damage by reason of such storage or which thereafter followed must be properly borne by the purchaser, but we do not so interpret the agreement. It is undoubtedly true, as defendant contends, that present physical delivery of the goods is not always required to an executed contract of sale but that title will pass without it if that be the intent of the parties as expressed in the agreement. In the last case on the subject, Teague v.Grocery Co., 175 N.C. 195198, a proper application of the principle is given as follows:

"On the present record there are facts in evidence tending to show that this transaction was an executed contract of sale, having reference to designated and specific pieces of property, and if these facts should be accepted by the jury, it is well understood that present physical delivery of the property is not necessary to the transfer of the title but that the same passes according to the intent of the parties as expressed in the contract between them; and further, that in the absence of specific agreement on the question the presumption is that the title passed at the time of the purchase and without such delivery," citing Richardson v. Ins. Co., 136 N.C. 314;Jenkins v. Jarrett, 70 N.C. 255; Tiffany on Sales, pp. 82-83; Benjamin on Sales (7th Ed.), p. 728. But while such a position is fully recognized, in sale of specified articles, we concur in the view of his Honor that, by the terms of the agreement, this contract continued executory till the goods were shipped on 2 August, and beyond that, the same having been shipped to defendant's order, and the question of whether the goods were up to specifications was (50) properly submitted to the jury in that aspect, leaving it to them to say what was the significance of the terms, "shrinkage to be stood by the purchaser," these terms being sufficiently ambiguous to permit of explanation by parol testimony. McMahan v.R. R., 170 N.C. 456, and authorities cited. Nor on the record, as now constituted, can the objection be sustained or properly considered that no attachment lies in this case for that defendant had no attachable interest in the potatoes. Defendant having appeared and answered and defended generally, this question is no longer *Page 53

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Bluebook (online)
100 S.E. 173, 178 N.C. 46, 1919 N.C. LEXIS 385, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/richardson-v-woodruff-nc-1919.