United States v. Koplin

24 F.2d 840, 1928 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1024
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Georgia
DecidedMarch 8, 1928
DocketNos. 855, 932, 933
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 24 F.2d 840 (United States v. Koplin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Koplin, 24 F.2d 840, 1928 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1024 (N.D. Ga. 1928).

Opinion

SIBLEY, District Judge.

These are suite at law to recover balances alleged to be due for goods sold and delivered. Motions are made to strike certain portions of each answer. The answers are similar, and the questions involved may be dealt with in one opinion. The answers, as amended, are argumentative, more full of general conclusions than of definite facts, • and do not disclose with clearness what it is contended really happened; but for present purposes the cases may be thus stated:

An auction sale was had in Eebruary and March, 1922, at Candler Warehouse, Atlanta, Ga., of vast amounts of surplus army supplies belonging to the United States, stored at Atlanta and other points in the Southeast, under the direction of Capt. Roy W. Hem, Surplus Property Control Officer for the Southeastern Area. The sale was advertised to be held under terms and conditions fully set forth in a) printed catalogue of the goods to be sold. The presently material terms provided for an auction sale at Candler Warehouse of the listed property “as is, where is, without warranty or guaranty as to quality, character, condition, size, weight, or kind,” and stated that no representative of the government is authorized to make any statement or representations as to those matters, and that the large lots would be subdivided, so as to give opportunity to smaller buyers. Inspection was invited by the bidders for one week before the sale, and was to be relied on in lieu of warranties. Samples, where practicable, were to be exhibited at the auction, but it was stipulated:

“While samples of the property are believed to be representative and will be exhibited at the time of sale, prospective buyers are urged to make an inspection of the property at its place of storage prior to the sale. This is specially enjoined, owing to the fact that the government will not entertain claims [841]*841of any nature whatsoever, should the property bought not come up to the standard of the sample or the expectations of the purchaser in any particular whatsoever.”

Portions of large lots of shoes, hats, undershirts, brushes, and other articles were bid in by the several defendants, and separate written memoranda of each purchase were issued upon what is known as “Form SB No. 13,” signed by Capt. Hern, and acknowledged by the signature of the purchaser. When the goods here involved were delivered, they were rejected as not being those sold. Thereupon, having been inspected by a representative of the United States, the matters were severally laid before the local board of sales control, which, in each case, found the goods not to be those sold, and canceled the memorandum of sale and issued another memorandum, redeseribing the property and fixing a lower adjusted price, which was paid by the purchasers and presumably covered into the treasury of the United States.

The answers set up that prior to the sale such was the immense quantity of goods that it was impossible to inspect them, and that the defendants and others were, in effect, refused an inspection on the ground that the packages were mostly inaccessible and could not be suffered to be broken and the contents scattered around, so that in fact there was not a sale under the catalogue terms and conditions, but one by oral description and sample exhibited. The contention is that, if the action of the local board of sales control was not valid, the articles delivered did not in fact correspond to those sold, and that the purchasers are liable only for the fair value of those delivered and accepted, and have paid that. There are other contentions, but the present motion to strike presents but these questions: (1) Can the purchasers claim the sales to have been made otherwise than under the catalogue terms? (2) If not, could the goods tendered be rightly rejected? (3) Had the local board of sales control authority to adjust the dispute?

1. It is not pretended that Capt. Hem, who put out the catalogue and authorized the sale, was present at the auction. No authority in the auctioneer is specially pleaded. The sales memoranda, signed afterward by Capt. Hem and the purchasers, each recite that- “the property here awarded to you is sold in accordance with the terms and conditions set forth in the catalogue of the sale at which the property was sold at Atlanta, Ga.” By most elementary rules respecting written contracts, unless this writing be impeached for fraud, accident, or mistake in its making, all the representations and negotiations that may have occurred at the auction go for naught. The written agreement merges them. In the face of the writing it cannot be contended that the sale was by sample, or by oral description or representation or warranty, because in that writing it is agreed otherwise. The catalogue terms, which by reference are incorporated, and the memorandum itself signed by the parties, contain the contract of sale. The impossibility of inspection and the consequent difficulty of intelligent bidding, except by sample or the representations at the auction, does not alter the result. The catalogue, which was the authority for the auction, expressly stated that there was no power in those con-' ducting it to make representations or sales by sample. If bidders were not afforded a reasonable inspection of what they were .invited to buy, their remedy was to refuse to bid until such inspection was had or other terms of sale authoritatively proposed.

2. But from the allegations of the answer it is clear that the lots severally bid off were small fractions of large masses catalogued, and not specific articles identified beforehand to seller and purchaser. They were typical sales by description of unascertained goods. The bidding and the memoranda afterwards signed did not make executed sales, but only executory contracts, to be fulfilled by ascertainment and delivery thereafter of the goods. Goods tendered, which on inspection did not correspond to the description of the contracts, might rightly be rejected. Warranties of various sorts were excluded by the catalogue terms of sale; but this is not a matter of warranty, but goes to the identification of the thing sold.

“When the subject-matter of a sale is not in existence or not ascertained at the time of the contract, an undertaking that it shall, when existing or ascertained, possess certain qualities, is not a mere warranty, but a condition, the performance of which is precedent to any obligation upon the vendee under the contract, because the existence of those qualities, being part of the description of the thing sold/becomes essential to its identity, and the vendee cannot be obliged to receive and pay for a thing different from that for which he contracted.” Pope v. Allis, 115 U. S. 363, 6 S. Ct. 69, 29 L. Ed. 393.

The catalogue and the sales memorandum described several of these lots as being “new,” and the answers show that they were not, and were rejected for that reason. Such a [842]*842failure to fulfill the description would be a valid ground of rejection.

3. But the goods are alleged to have been finally accepted and paid for underi other contracts made through the local board of sales control. What authority had it in the premises? All authority to dispose of surplus war supplies is derived from the Acts of May 10, 1918 (40 Stat. 548), and July 9, 1918 (40 Stat. 845), providing that the President, through the heads of departments, is authorized “in his discretion, and upon such terms as he shall deem expedient” to sell any supplies, etc., purchased for use in prosecuting the war.

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24 F.2d 840, 1928 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1024, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-koplin-gand-1928.