Judges: Vorst
Filed Date: 12/15/1867
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/3/2024
The contract in this case was executory. The plaintiffs agreed to make and deliver to defendant, at a price determined, a number of mattresses of the best quality, and of a given weight each. They were to be delivered by a certain time. The mattresses were manufactured and delivered to the defendant. Subsequent to their delivery, the defendant claims to have discovered that they were deficient in weight, and of an inferior quality to that contracted to be
If an article agreed to be manufactured, sold and delivered, by one person to another, be found, on its delivery, to be different in quality from what it should have been by the terms of the contract, if the party means to insist that the contract has not been complied with, and that the article is not such as he was entitled to receive, he should at once return or offer to return the same. He cannot hold on to the article and convert it to his own use, and still insist on the defect. In this case, the deficiency complained of was in the quality of the article. It is true defendant complained that the weight was less than that agreed to be delivered. But it does not appear that the mattresses were purchased, or were to be paid for, by the pound. The whole number were to be paid for at the sum stated in the complaint. The character and quality of each mattress depended no less on its weight than the materials of which it was composed.
The case of an article ordered to be manufactured differs from that of the sale of a specific chattel in esse, accompanied by an express warranty. When one contracts to manufacture, sell, and deliver to another an article of a certain quality, or fit for a certain purpose, the purchaser may either refuse to receive or he may return the article as soon as he detects any deficiency, and may defeat an action for the price, provided he has done nothing more in the mean time than was necessary to give the article a fair trial (Street v. Blay, 2 Barn. & Ad. 456; Mondel v. Steel, 8 Mees. & W. 858). A mere objection to the quality of the article, unaccompanied by an offer to return, is not sufficient, and the force of the objection is lost where the vendee absolutely reduces the article to his use after the defect is discovered.
In Grimaldi v. White (4 Esp. 95), the action was brought by the plaintiff, a miniature painter, to recover the value of several pictures painted by him for the defendant. The pictures were
In Reed v. Randall (29 N. Y. R. 358), it was held, that a vendee is not bound to receive and pay for a thing that he has not agreed to purchase; but if the article delivered is found, on examination, to be unsound, or not to answer the order given for it, he must immediately return it to the seller, or give him notice to take it back, or he will be presumed to have acquiesced in its quality (Hargous v. Stone, 5 N. Y. 73).
But in this case, with a knowledge of them defects, the defendant insists that he was not bound to return the mattresses, for the reason that they were in use, and for the very purpose for which they were designed in the hotel. The plaintiffs were willing to receive them back, and refund what was paid, but this proposal the defendant declined. Under the circumstances of this case, the plaintiffs were entitled to have the goods returned, or be paid the agreed price for them, if the defendant would hold on to them. In regard to the goods having been delivered after the day agreed on, the acceptance without objection, on that account, is a waiver of any claim of damages from that source.
Judgment below affirmed.
And judgment is directed to be entered on the verdict in favor of plaintiffs, with costs.