Court Opinion

ID: 7109327
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-24 12:24:36.186243+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:13:41.060555
License: Public Domain

Ladd, J.
1 The memorandum of the goods purchased, signed by the plaintiff’s agent, was in no sense a written contract. Nor is plaintiff in a situation so to claim, as this would inevitably defeat his action, based solely on an oral sale. The defendant pleaded that in ordering the jackets he exacted a guaranty that they would fit his custo*581mers. If so, then this could not be obviated by headlines in. plaintiff’s bill of the goods demanding notice at once if they did not conform with the terms of purchase. See Becker v. Calderwood, 102 Iowa, 532. Without defendant’s assent the conditions of the agreement could not be changed by such a communication. As no time was fixed, defendant was entitled to a reasonable opportunity of inspecting the jackets, and it is not perceived how this could well have been accomplished without the test of trying them on. That this was customary the evidence tended to show, and with the jury’s conclusion that there was a guaranty, and that the jackets were tested and returned within a reasonable time, we cannot interfere. That he might elect to rescind the contract, and return the goods, is too well settled for discussion. There was no evidence of an estoppel, and the instructions were correct. —Affirmed.