Waeber v. Talbot

43 A.D. 180, 59 N.Y.S. 396
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJuly 1, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 43 A.D. 180 (Waeber v. Talbot) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Waeber v. Talbot, 43 A.D. 180, 59 N.Y.S. 396 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1899).

Opinion

Ingraham, J.:

This action was brought to recover the damages caused by what was alleged to be a breach of warranty upon the sale of certain French peas, the complaint as originally served alleging that the defendants represented and warranted the said peas to be of extra fine quality, and that, relying upon such representation and warranty, the plaintiffs’ assignor agreed to purchase the same and pay therefor; that the said goods were not of extra fine quality, as represented and warranted by the defendants, but were- of an inferior grade, and that by reason of their being of an inferior grade and not as represented and warranted by the defendants, the plaintiffs have been damaged in the sum specified; and judgment is demanded for that amount. Upon this complaint the cause came on for trial, and after a great amount of testimony had been taken the court stated that the counsel for the plaintiffs wanted to amend his complaint so as to allege that the defendants warranted the peas in question at the time of the sale to be merchantable as Talbot Extra Fine Peas, Sieve 23-24; ” that the goods were not merchantable when they arrived —as “ Talbot Extra Fine Peas, Sieve 23-24.” Counsel for the defendants vigorously opposed this motion as changing the cause of action, but the amendment was allowed and the trial then proceeded, the testimony introduced- under the pleadings, before the amendment being allowed to stand.

From the- testimony it appeared that Lea, one of the plaintiffs, who are a firm of importers in the city of New York, in March, 1893, entered into a contract with the defendants, who are engaged in business in Bordeaux, France, as packers of food products, for the pur[182]*182chase by Lea of all of the defendants’ peas packed in the season of 1893. These goods, however, were not delivered, and Lea brought an action against the defendants to compel them to carry out their contract. That action was settled by a stipulation dated November 3,1893, by which the defendants agreed to deliver to the plaintiffs a certain number of cases Of peas, which included 183 cases “ Talbot Extra Fine Peas, Sieve 23-24,” at nineteen dollars per case, and 152 cases “ Talbot Extra Fine Peas, Sieve 23-24 ” at twenty-two dollars per case, which the defendants agreed to deliver to the plaintiffs, duty paid, on the dock in the city of New York, on or before December 8, 1893. In pursuance of this contract the defendants shipped to the plaintiffs the 335 cases of peas, which were received by the plaintiffs and paid for by them. The complaint as amended alleged, and there was evidence fending to show, that the said goods were not of extra fine quality, as warranted and represented, and were not at any time, since the delivery thereof, merchantable goods as “ Talbot Extra Fine Peas, Sieve 23-24,” but were of an inferior grade or quality, and that, by reason of the. said goods being of an inferior quality, the plaintiffs sustained damage. in the sum o,f $3,019.23. At the end of the trial the complaint was dismissed.

It is clear, I think, that this was an executory contract for the sale of goods. By it the defendants agreed to deliver to the plaintiffs upon the dock in New York certain canned peas of a specified quality at a future time.. The contract would have been complied with upon the delivery by the defendants to the plaintiffs of the number of cases of the goods described at the time specified. No specific cases of peas and no part of any specified lot. of cases of peas were sold. There was simply an executory contract of sale, whereby the defendants agreed to deliver to the plaintiffs, upon a day named, on the dock in the city of New York, a certain number of cases of peas of the crop of 1893, and of a certain quality.

None of the cases cited by .counsel for the plaintiffs are authority for holding that there was a completed sale of any particular peas when this contract was. made; for in this contract there were no specific goods described or identified as those included within the contract, and there was no general mass of goods from which the goods sold were to be separated. There are no present words of sale, but the defendants agreed to deliver to the plaintiffs, duty paid, on the dock [183]*183in the city of New York, on or before December 8, 1893, certain goods described. There was really no sale of goods, but a simple agreement to deliver goods in the future at a price named. Under this agreement, undoubtedly the defendants were bound to deliver to the plaintiffs-the goods specified on or before the day named, and were liable for damages in case of a breach of that contract. But as no specific goods were named, there were no specific goods the title to which passed to the plaintiffs upon the execution of this contract, or to which the plaintiffs would have been entitled. It being, therefore, a mere executory contract of sale, it is subject to the rules and principles that apply to such contracts. It is clear that there was no express warranty as to these goods. By the contract the defendants agreed to sell and deliver to the plaintiffs certain goods of a specified quality, at a specified price, to be in decorated tins and of the crop of 1893. This all related to the description of the goods sold, and the defendants’ obligation would have been fully performed if they had delivered to" the plaintiffs the goods as specified of the crop of 1893 in decorated tins. The contract in this case is not unlike that in Coplay Iron Co. v. Pope (108 N. Y. 232), where the plaintiffs sold and agreed to deliver to the defendants 900 tons of No. 1 extra foundry pig iron at the price of twenty-seven dollars per ton. It was held that such a contract was an executory sale, and that there was no collateral warranty or agreement as to the quality of the iron ; that the representation as to the kind and quality of iron was part of the contract of sale itself, descriptive simply of the article to be delivered in the future.

This being, therefore, an executory contract of sale, without express warranty, and the articles contracted to be sold having been delivered to and received by the defendants, the question presented is, whether the plaintiffs could recover for any damages that they sustained in consequence of the articles not being up to the quality provided for by the contract; or, in other words, whether an acceptance of the articles as a compliance with the contract precluded the plaintiffs from holding the defendants responsible for any lack of quality in the goods so sold and delivered. There has been much confusion in the cases as to what has been called an implied warranty of quality upon the sale of an article of a particular description, but the modern cases tend to consider such a description of [184]*184articles contracted to be delivered as descriptive words, a part of the description of the goods sold. As was said by Judge O’Brien, in delivering the opinion of the court in Carleton v. Lombard, Ayres & Co. (149 N. Y. 148): “The tendency of the recent decisions in this court is to treat such words as part of the contract of sale descriptive of the article sold and to be delivered in the future, and not as constituting that collateral obligation which sometimes accompanies a contract of sale and known as a warranty.”

Assuming that, there was evidence tending to show that the articles were not as described in the contract, and not such as the plaintiffs were bound to accept, what was the right of the plaintiffs after the delivery and acceptance of the articles sold ? “The maxim of the common law, caveat

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Bluebook (online)
43 A.D. 180, 59 N.Y.S. 396, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/waeber-v-talbot-nyappdiv-1899.