Court Opinion

ID: 6277910
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-02-18 16:06:40.98403+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:00:07.172540
License: Public Domain

Opinion by
Henderson, J.,
The plaintiff sold a piece of land to the defendant on September 27, 1911. The consideration was $1,125, $325 of which amount was to be paid in clothing and dress goods to be furnished to the plaintiff or on her order from time to time within a period of four years from the date of the sale. The balance of the purchase money was secured by a bond and mortgage payable in four years from date with interest at six per cent payable semiannually. Judgment was duly entered on the bond. On April 27, 1912, the plaintiff filed a suggestion of breaches, default in the payment of interest due March 27, 1912, being alleged. The defendant’s petition to open the judgment *240set forth that clothing to the amount of $343 had been ordered by the plaintiff and that on March 23, 1912, he gave the plaintiff a check for $12.00 to apply on the interest. When the last order for clothing was given by the plaintiff to the defendant the latter alleges that the price of the garment was $65.00 which with the price of the clothing theretofore furnished overran the amount to be paid by the clothing account to the extent of $18.00 which the defendant says the plaintiff agreed to apply on the interest accruing on the bond. According to the defendant’s contention, therefore, the interest was overpaid at the time the execution was issued and nothing was due on that account. The plaintiff alleges that one of the items charged for clothing, $40.00 for a velvet coat, is an error — that a velvet dress and coat were bought by her but that they were to cost $110, whereas the defendant’s account charged the plaintiff with $110 for the dress and $40.00 for the coat. She further alleges that the item of $65.00 charged for a gray suit is incorrect— that she never ordered nor received the garment for which she is charged. The defendant’s reply is that the velvet , coat was ordered after the velvet dress was purchased; that it was a separate garment and that the price charged was agreed on between him and the plaintiff. With reference to the gray suit the defendant says that this was ordered by the plaintiff from goods selected by her; that a time was fixed when she was to return to be fitted; that the dress was cut to her measure and prepared for fitting when she returned; that she never came to have it fitted and that the garment remained in the defendant’s store to be finished when she returned to have it fitted. All of the defendant’s allegations are corroborated by the testimony of other witnesses, and while there is a dispute of fact between the parties we cannot say that the court exercised an unwarranted discretion in opening the judgment. It is urged by the learned counsel for the appellant that the plaintiff is not liable for the price of the gray suit inasmuch as she never received it *241and that the measure of damages on the assumption of a contract as set forth by the defendant is the difference between the price agreed to be paid and the market value where such price exceeds the value. This is a correct statement of the rule as applied to the sale of goods not specifically set apart and appropriated to the vendee, but it does not fix the measure of damages where a thing is specially made under the direction of the purchaser for a particular use. A distinction is made between sales of merchandise having a market value and articles manufactured according to a special design or pattern for a particular use and therefore not having a ready sale in the market. Ballentine v. Robinson, 46 Pa. 177, and Henderson v. Jennings, 228 Pa. 188, are cases discussing this principle. If Mrs. Larkin selected a specific piece of cloth and directed the defendant to make it into a dress for her and agreed to return to be fitted in order that the dress might be completed and the defendant acting on her instructions cut the cloth and the trimmings into a garment according to her measure and advanced its manufacture to the stage where it was ready to be fitted the transaction amounted to an appropriation by the vendor and an acceptance by the vendee and vested the property in the bargainee. The defendant has done all he could do, and all that remains to be done is that the plaintiff permit him to fit the garment. He has parted with his property for all marketable purposes and invested his labor therein. He stands therefore in the position of one who has performed his part and is entitled to recover the contract price. If the agreement was that credit was to be made on the interest for the excess of the value of the clothing over the amount to be paid in clothing the defendant was not in default at the time when the execution was issued. The court below found a conflict of competent evidence on the disputed questions, and an examination of the testimony leads us to the conclusion that the discretion exercised in opening the judgment was not erroneous. As suggested by *242the appellant’s counsel relief might perhaps have been obtained by setting aside the execution, but the point in controversy is that there was less due on the judgment than is claimed by the defendant and the rights of the parties can be worked out in the form adopted by the court.
The order is affirmed and the appeal dismissed.