Judges: Maltbie, Wheeler, Beach, Curtis, Keeler, Mambie
Filed Date: 7/30/1925
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/3/2024
On September 13th, 1920, the defendants, who are engaged in business in Stamford, purchased of the plaintiff six hundred and sixty barrels of flour, to be delivered at the rate of fifty barrels each week. The plaintiff thereupon purchased the flour of a milling company in Wisconsin, directing the immediate shipment to it at Stamford of one carload of three hundred and thirty barrels. Upon the arrival of this carload, on October 25th, 1920, the plaintiff called upon the defendants to make some definite arrangement for payment for the flour included in it, and the defendants agreed to and did give to the plaintiff six trade acceptances, to fall due a week apart, sufficient in amount substantially to cover the purchase price of the three hundred and thirty barrels. The plaintiff then made two weekly deliveries of fifty barrels each to the defendants and these were accepted by them without objection. When the third weekly delivery was tendered, the defendants informed the plaintiff that they could not take it at that time because business was slow and their warehouses were crowded, and they requested the plaintiff to hold up deliveries of the two hundred and thirty barrels then in its possession and keep them in its warehouse, the *Page 174 defendants to call for them in quantities to suit their convenience. The plaintiff tendered no further weekly deliveries, but between that time and May 2d 1921, it requested the defendants to take the flour in its possession, and they did call for some of it on a few occasions and consented that the plaintiff resell some of it for them. The trade acceptances given by the defendants to the plaintiff were paid as they fell due. On May 2d 1921, the defendants finally took the barrels remaining in the plaintiff's possession. On this occasion, for the first time in the whole transaction, the matter of the delivery of the other three hundred and thirty barrels purchased was discussed, and the representative of the defendants stated that they would not accept or pay for them, and that the plaintiff could do as it pleased about tendering a delivery, but, if it was tendered, it would not be accepted, saying: "Now after seven months I say I am going to refuse; I don't take this flour after seven months." Thereafter the plaintiff directed the milling company to forward the remaining three hundred and thirty barrels of flour to it, and after they had arrived at Stamford, twice offered to deliver them to the defendants, but the defendants refused to accept them. The plaintiff resold the flour and brought this action to recover its damages by reason of the failure of the defendants to accept it.
The defendants ask to have corrected the finding of the trial court that the plaintiff at all times prior to the defendants' refusal to accept delivery was ready, able and willing to carry out its contract obligation. The case as made upon the pleadings, tried and here argued, indicates a failure to appreciate the nature of the several causes of action which may arise under such circumstances as those detailed. The conduct of the defendants' representative at the meeting on May *Page 175
2d was such as to justify the plaintiff in regarding the contract as repudiated and in suing upon that basis; but that was not the only course open, for the plaintiff still had its option to proceed in an attempted performance of its own contract obligations, tender delivery, and, upon its being refused, sue for the nonacceptance of the goods. Belisle v. Berkshire Ice Co.,
Substantially the position of the defendants is this, that the contract of purchase called for a delivery of the flour in weekly instalments of fifty barrels each, that there was an entire failure to comply with this condition as regards the barrels which they refused to accept, and that the facts in no way justify the plaintiff in failing to tender delivery in accordance with it. The vice of their argument lies largely in regarding the adventitious separation by the plaintiff of its own purchase from the milling company into two shipments as constituting a similar separation of the contract obligation of the plaintiff to them, so that, despite a request for delay as regards the weekly deliveries from the three hundred and thirty barrels first received, such deliveries should have proceeded as regards *Page 176 the other three hundred and thirty barrels. The defendants made one purchase of six hundred and sixty barrels, all to be delivered at the rate of fifty barrels a week, and had those deliveries proceeded until the first shipment had been delivered, the plaintiff would have been under no obligation to begin deliveries from any subsequent one. The request of the defendants that the plaintiff hold up deliveries and keep the flour on hand in its warehouse subject to defendants' call could not reasonably have been interpreted by the plaintiff as being anything other than the expression of a desire on their part that all further weekly deliveries were to be held up, and that the contract be modified by substituting for the stipulation for such deliveries, at least for the time being, an agreement that deliveries be made at the call of the defendants; indeed, it would be little short of ridiculous to say that because specific reference was made in the conversation to the flour then in the hands of the plaintiff and nothing was said about the remainder of the order, the plaintiff ought reasonably to have understood that only the former was within the scope of the defendants' desire. To the desired change in the contract obligations the plaintiff by its acts signified its assent.
The case so made for the plaintiff is even stronger than was that of the defendant in Remington ArmsU. M. C. Co., Inc. v. Gaynor Mfg. Co.,
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.