Slattery v. Carroll
This text of 70 Pa. Super. 578 (Slattery v. Carroll) 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.
Opinion
Opinion by
The appellant purchased from the appellee a carload of anthracite egg coal. At the trial she endeavored to show that the coal received would not burn and could not be used as coal. She admitted it was received on the car at Darby and she engaged a man to haul the coal to her residence. The court below held that her right of inspection began when the coal arrived on the siding and that she must exercise this right before she attempted to remove the coal to her home. If it was so removed and it afterwards turned out the coal was not merchantable coal, or, in fact, not coal as that term is known, she would be compelled to pay the contract price. The coal was ordered f. o. b. cars at the mine and the appellant was required to pay the freight charges before it could be delivered. She could only determine whether the coal could be used when it was tested. She was not shown to be an expert and like many other persons depended for her knowledge as to whether the article was coal, slate, “boney,” or some other substance on the results obtained when it was used for the purpose purchased. It was tried on two days in her furnace and would not burn. She afterwards mixed it with other coal purchased to take the place of this coal, with no better result. She promptly notified the appellee of this condition. He replied that it was too bad. The court below erred in applying the rule of law as to the duty of inspection. It gives to the vendee,'purchasing by description, the right to determine within a reasonable time, in the mode ordinarily used, whether the goods [580]*580delivered were in quality the goods purchased. “When he once knows of the inferior quality, or has had reasonable opportunity to know, he must either promptly notify the vendor and return the goods, or place them where the vendor may take them away, or be liable on the contract. This the appellant did. While it is true that the vendor does not impliedly warrant the quality of the particular kind of a chattel or merchandise purchased, there is an implied warranty in all such sales that the vendee shall have the right to inspect before acceptance, and when after such inspection, knowing the inferior quality of the goods sold, he accepts and uses the goods, he will be liable for the contract price: Luella Coal & Coke Co. v. Gano, 61 Pa. Superior Ct. 37; Samuel et al. v. Delaware River Steel Co., 69 Pa. Superior Ct. 605. In this case the appellant had not exercised her right of inspection.
Furthermore, in the sale of a chattel by description or sample, there is always an implied warranty that the article shall be of the kind ordered or purchased. It is apparent from the testimony of the appellant that the case goes beyond one of the quality and makes it one of kind. What was ordered was coal that would burn; this she did not get. That she used a little part of it in testing would not affect the result. She got no benefit from such use.
The court was in error in refusing to admit the evidence complained of in the first and second assignments of error and was in error in its charge to the jury, set out in the fourth assignment of error; also in the third assignment, in giving binding instructions for the plaintiff. The assignments are sustained. The judgment of the court below; is reversed and a venire facias de novo awarded.
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70 Pa. Super. 578, 1919 Pa. Super. LEXIS 10, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/slattery-v-carroll-pasuperct-1919.