Court Opinion

ID: 3854256
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 08:38:09.258036+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:36:17.232149
License: Public Domain

Re-Argued April 15, 1925.
This is a suit in assumpsit to recover for merchandise sold and delivered to defendants. The facts are not in dispute. On May 28, 1920, defendants ordered from plaintiff, and plaintiff agreed to sell and ship to defendants by express to Ford City, Pennsylvania, sixty pairs of shoes of certain definite kinds, material, numbers and quality. They were to be shipped in plain white cartons "at once." They were not shipped from Chicago until June 28, 1920, and did not arrive in Ford City until about July 1st. There was a shortage in the shipment, only fifty-seven pairs being shipped and these were not in plain white cartons. Some of the shoes were not of the quality ordered. When they arrived at Ford City, the shoes were in a damaged condition and defendants refused to receive them. Suit was brought to recover the price of the fifty-seven pairs of shoes shipped. The learned trial judge directed a verdict for plaintiff, but subsequently entered judgments for defendants notwithstanding the verdict. This appeal followed.
The ground upon which the judgment for defendants was entered was that plaintiff failed to sustain the burden resting on him of proving a delivery of goods to the carrier in accordance with the terms of the contract. Following Meyercord Co. v. P.L. Butler Co., 79 Pa. Super. 473, the learned judge held that there is no constructive delivery to the purchaser where the seller delivers to the carrier goods differing in kind, quality or quantity from those described in the contract, or otherwise not in accordance with the order. The contract prescribes the scope of the carrier's authority to accept goods as the agent of the buyer. Under the uncontroverted facts and the law applicable thereto, the delivery to the carrier was not a delivery to defendants. Proof of delivery to the carrier in accordance with the terms of the contract was an essential part of plaintiff's case. Such a delivery *Page 299 
was not proved. Appellant concedes in his written argument the correctness of the rule of law above stated, but contends that the rule has no application here because the letters written by defendants to plaintiff show that the refusal to accept the goods from the express company was upon the sole ground that the goods were in a damaged condition when they reached their destination and that by refusing to accept on that specific ground defendants were estopped from setting up any other ground for their refusal. Haney v. Hatfield, 241 Pa. 413, and United Fruit Co. v. Bisese,25 Pa. Super. 170, are relied upon as ruling the point in appellant's favor.
But there is oral evidence in the record by one of the defendants that immediately after the shoes arrived at the express office, he wrote a letter to plaintiff, stating not only that the goods arrived in a damaged condition, but that they were not as ordered, and that they were not shipped in plain white cartons. In this state of the record the question whether defendants waived their right to reject the shoes should have been submitted to the jury and that tribunal should have been instructed as to the effect of the letters on the question of waiver. For these reasons we conclude that this was not a case for binding instructions for either plaintiff or defendants.
The judgment is reversed and a new trial awarded.