Court Opinion

ID: 3864132
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 08:57:44.526293+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:41:29.926585
License: Public Domain

We see no error in the charge of the Court which will justify us in directing a new trial to be had in this case.
If the plaintiffs handed out box No. 25, which did contain 8 1-6 doz. filled and chased soft solder rings, and put it up at auction calling it No. 24 which did contain 14 1-6 dozens filled and chased hard solder rings, and *Page 173 
it was bid upon and finally struck off by them to Mathewson 
Allen, it cannot be pretended that the purchasers would be required to take it as their bid. The minds of the parties never met. No contract was made between them. The plaintiffs were selling one thing and Mathewson  Allen purchasing or rather bidding upon another.
So, too, if plaintiffs did set up box No. 25 and strike it off to Mathewson  Allen at their bid for it, they could not compel M.  A. to take box No. 24, and that simply because M. 
A. never bought it, and never bid anything for it. The supposed purchasers in both instances, would deem it very hard to be compelled to take what they did not purchase nor bid for, nor want, an article of inferior quality and value to that contained in box No. 24. If that supposed purchaser could not be compelled to fulfil his supposed bargain under these circumstances, neither could the plaintiffs, where box No. 24, the box of greater value, was by mistake substituted for box No. 25, one of less value. The same reason would govern both cases, and that is one named in the charge excepted to by the defendant, the mistake of the parties.
When the plaintiffs set up box No. 24, it was box No. 24 on their catalogue, the sale being by catalogue and the number having reference to it. It was No. 24 with the contents described in No. 24 on the catalogue. If box No. 25 on the same catalogue were exhibited as box No. 24 and so bid upon and purchased, still the purchaser would have a right to box No. 24, and no other. That was the box which the plaintiffs set up at auction, and that the one the purchasers bid upon and bought. If any other box should afterward be delivered or offered to the purchaser, he would of right turn to his catalogue *Page 174 
and require the box No. 24 of the catalogue with its contents, as he would not be bound to take as box No. 24, one which was of less value and contained different articles from the catalogue No. 24. So he could not legally keep them, if they proved of greater value. If on calling for his purchase the plaintiffs should offer him the true box, No. 24, which they sold, but which in fact was not the box which they exhibited, and which he bid for and bought as box No. 24, he could refuse to receive it on the ground of mistake, as he supposed he bought one and the plaintiffs supposed they had sold another. Neither the one nor the other was sold, but the title to each remained unchanged.
New trial refused. *Page 175