Sawyer v. . Dean

21 N.E. 1012, 114 N.Y. 469, 23 N.Y. St. Rep. 906, 69 Sickels 469, 1889 N.Y. LEXIS 1118
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 4, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 21 N.E. 1012 (Sawyer v. . Dean) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sawyer v. . Dean, 21 N.E. 1012, 114 N.Y. 469, 23 N.Y. St. Rep. 906, 69 Sickels 469, 1889 N.Y. LEXIS 1118 (N.Y. 1889).

Opinion

Potter, J.

The action is brought to recover damages alleged to have been sustained by Eranklin Sawyer, assignor of the plaintiff, in consequence of the neglect and refusal of the defendant to accept and pay for a car load of five hundred *475 hides that he had ordered and purchased of said assignor and directed to be shipped from Chicago, where said Franklin Sawyer resided, and where the hides were, to Owego, in the state of iSfew York, where the defendant had a tannery in which he was conducting, on a more or less extensive scale, the business of tanning hides into leather. The bargain for the hides was made through correspondence, by letter and by telegraph communications between the parties.

After the arrival of the hides at Owego, and some correspondence by telegrams and by letter, and the sending an agent by the plaintiff to Owego to see the defendant, and after an interview with the gentleman so sent by the plaintiff with defendant’s agent at Owego, the defendant finally refused to receive the hides unless he had an opportunity of taking them from the depot to his factory and there opening and examining, if not testing and proving them. This the plaintiff refused to allow the defendant to do, and gave him notice, at the proper time and manner, that unless he accepted the hides in accordance with the contract, and especially if he refused after the offer which had been made to examine the hides at the railroad station upon a platform or in the car, that the hides would be returned to the seller in Chicago, on account of the refusal to receive and pay for the same, and would there be sold at the best price that could be obtained for them, and. defendant would be charged with the difference between the price brought on the sale at Chicago and the price agreed upon, together with the necessary expenses growing out of sending the hides to and return from Owego and other, incidental expenses occasioned by the refusal of the defendant to receive and pay for them in accordance with the contract.

This action is brought to recover that difference and those expenses; that is, the difference between the contract-price and the price at which they were sold at Chicago, and this recovery is based upon that difference in the price and these expenses.

This correspondence by telegram and by letter commenced on or about the 20th day of October, 1882, and was carried on *476 for a few days and culminated, as the trial court found, in an agreement to purchase, on the part of defendant, the five hundred hides, specifying the price per pound and quality of the hides, and that, in pursuance of such contract and purchase, the plaintiff’s assignor shipped the hides on the fourth of November to his own order, accompanied by a draft on the defendant sent through a bank at Owego, the hides to be delivered to the defendant upon payment of the draft, and the carrier, the railroad company, was directed to deliver them accordingly.

When the hides arrived at Owego, on or about the 11th of November, 1882, notice was given to the agent or person in charge of the defendant’s tannery, that they had arrived. ' And at this point the question in controversy arises, whether the defendant was bound, under the contract made between him and plaintiff’s assignor, to take the hides and pay the draft without any examination or inspection of them, or whether, under' the contract, he was entitled to an inspection of the hides before accepting the draft or paying the draft or acceptance of the hides." There had been nothing said in these negotiations or correspondence between the parties until after the hides were shipped on the fourth of November, as before stated, in respect to the time or manner of payment for the hides. The trial court found that this contract was consummated, and found the contract, by a modification or waiver, resulted- in giving to the defendant the right that he claimed, namely, to an examination of the hides before an acceptance of them or accepting the draft and paying it. The court should (I think, from the evidence) have found the correspondence between the plaintiff’s assignor and the defendant, commencing with the letter of inquiry on the twentieth of October, and the actual shipment on November fourth, that the defendant ordered of plaintiff’s assignor five hundred hides, the quality of which was specified in the correspondence at prices named per pound for the hides, and the same were to be selected by plaintiff’s assignor for the defendant; and the plaintiff’s assignor did ship the hides, accordingly, in his own name; *477 and the same were received at the railroad station near defendant’s tannery in good order and in due time. The law arising upon such finding is that the defendant had no right to test or prove the hides, and was not entitled to the possession of them for that or any other purpose until they were paid for. Upon the ordinary agreement to sell and to purchase personal property, in the absence of any agreement or provision in the agreement as to the time or manner of payment, delivery and payment are simultaneous acts, and, as a tender, is equivalent in law to performance; a tender of delivery or payment by one person to the other gives the person making the tender the right to enforce the performance of the contract against the other. (Hayden v. Demets, 53 N. Y. 426, 428, 429.) In the case under consideration defendant made no objection that the hides were not of good quality or of the quality specified in the terms of purchase or in the number of hides. He simply insisted that he had a right under the contract to an examination of the hides before acceptance and payment. Under such a contract, as I think, the trial judge might have well found, from the evidence in this case, it results as in the case of Higgins v. Murray (4 Hun, 565); and, as was in the opinion in that case expressed by Judge Daniels, the plaintiff by shipping in his own name was simply keeping the possession of the property, as he had the right to do, until it had been accepted and paid for by the defendant. By shipping in that manner he retained and kept the lien of possession as his security fo.r the payment of the property.

The effect of the contract was to transfer the title of the property from plaintiff’s assignor to the defendant, subject only to .the right of the assignor to retain possession until payment should be made as long as no credit was to be given or had been provided for by the terms of the agreement. After the making of the contract he became the agent of the defendant, save in retaining possession of the property as security for the payment of the purchase-money while title to the property was vested in the defendant. To the same effect *478 is the case of (Commercial Bank v. Pfeiffer (22 Hun, 327); also the case of Morey v. Medbury (10 Hun, 540). If the law in this case is not as above stated, the effect would be that a person who, under a valid contract, has sold his property, sent it to a distant place to the manufacturing establishment of the purchaser, has received no payment and has parted with the possession of the property, and that means of securing payment, must rely upon the responsibility of the purchaser and his disposition to pay for the property.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
21 N.E. 1012, 114 N.Y. 469, 23 N.Y. St. Rep. 906, 69 Sickels 469, 1889 N.Y. LEXIS 1118, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sawyer-v-dean-ny-1889.