In 1902 the plaintiff made a contract with the defendant by which the defendant’s corporation agreed to furnish to the plaintiff a cemetery monument consisting of a Latin cross resting upon a Calvary of three steps “ to be executed in best white Westerly granite as per designs and lúodels seen and approved.” By oral contract between the parties the defendant was to furnish a double headstone according to a certain design and model which was to be of the same quality of granite. The contract price of this work was $1,375, $1,025 for the cross and $350 for the headstone. By the terms of the contract one-half was to be paid when the work was ready for shipment and the balance when the work was set. On December 29, 1902, on being notified that the goods had been shipped, Mr. Tompkins paid one-half of the purchase price of the cross. On or about January 26, 1903, the work was set in the cemetery at Elmira and demand was made for the balance remaining unpaid upon the contracts. Upon January thirty-first the plaintiff wrote to the defendant that he would comply with the wishes of the defendant as soon as he could find time to inspect the work which would be within a day or two. Upon April 1, 1903, the plaintiff sent his check for the balance due under both contracts. Upon April twenty-ninth the plaintiff wrote to the defendant that he had had information that the granite used was not the best white Westerly granite as provided by the contract but was of an inferior quality *368called the Troy white granite, and asked fori an explanation. The subsequent correspondence between .the parties is immaterial except that thereafter the plaintiff notified the defendant that lie rejected the monument and headstone, as not in accord with the contract, and that it was subject to its' order, and requested the defendant to remove the same. In the complaint in this action the request is repeated, the plaintiff, claiming no title thereto.
The complaint seems to have been- drawn in a twofold aspect, both for damages for breach of the contract and for a breach of warranty. While the cause of action' for the breach of warranty was perhaps more dominantly in themhid' of the pleader, névertheless there are numerous allegations in the complaint which state in explicit terms a cause of action for a breach of the contract.. In ■the 8th paragraph the plaintiff has alleged to have suffered special damages from the breach of said warranty and contract. The learned trial judge submitted tlié case to the. jury as though it were a case for a breach of the contract, although in .answer to a request to charge he inadvertently stated that he had charged as for a breach of warranty. Under the charge of the court, however, the jury found. that the contract was .not performed by the defendant in accordance with - its terms-; - that, the property was not accepted,- and was rejected within a reasonable time! after the plaintiff had had opportunity to examine the • same, and' has found the damage suffered • as the value of the monument and headstone contracted for, if the same has been delivered, less the present sale value of the .monument-and'headstone-furnished.
Upon a motion for á -new trial; the trial judged granted the. same and in the order specified’ that the. same was granted as matter of -law and "not in the exercise of discretion. - In his opinion accompanying such order he seems' to construe the complaint as a complaint upon a rescinded contract, and seems to be of the opinion that, plaintiff had only two remedies-r-an action upon a warranty or as upon a., rescinded contract. - He then states that in either, action tlie wrong measure of damages was allowed. He further specifies that errors were committed in receiving. certain letters sent by plaintiff to the defendant after the contract was made as sélf-serving declarations.
We cannot agree with the.-learned trial judge, that this is an,, action upon a rescinded contract in any event. While.there are *369some dicta in the books which give to a vendee upon an executory sale the choice between two remedies only, eith'er a breach of warranty, if one exist, or an action upon a rescinded contract, the law is well settled that there is a third right of action which such a vendee may have, to wit, an action for a breach of the contract to furnish the property contracted for. In that case the property attempted to be furnished is rejected as not in accordance with the contract. In an action, as upon a rescinded contract, the vendee can recover only the purchase price paid. In an action, however, as for a breach of contract, the vendee is entitled to recover the value of his contract, which includes not only the purchase price paid, but also the worth of his contract over and beyond such purchase price. In Wells v. Abernethy (5 Conn. 222) the head note in part reads: “ Where there is an express agreement open and. unrescinded for the breach of which an action is brought, the rule of damages is not the consideration paid but the value of the thing to be given or the act to be done at the time when, and the place where, it was to be given or done.” The opinion in part reads: “ The consideration of the contract is never the rule of estimating the damages for the breach of an express agreement. When by reason of a failure on the part of one of the contracting parties, Or other legal cause, the contract is rescinded, either absolutely or at the election of the party injured, he may bring his suit for the consideration and then it will be the measure of damages. But so long as the contract is open and the. action, as it necessarily must be, and as in this case it is, is brought upon it, the sum recoverable is the value of the thing stipulated at the time when and the place where it should have been performed.” The allegation in the complaint of the return or offer to return of the article furnished does not stamp the action as one upon a rescinded .contract. This offer to return was properly made in rejection of the property furnished. There is not one word in the complaint looking to a rescission of the contract. Further authority in support of the proposition to which the Connecticut case is cited may be found in Freeman v. Clute (3 Barb. 424), in which the head note in part reads: “ It is a general rule that the party complaining of a breach of an executory *370contract is entitled to indemnity for the loss which the non-performance of the obligation by the other party has occasioned him, and for the gain of which it has deprived him.” (See, also, to the same effect, Taylor v. Saxe, 134 N. Y. 67.)
It is strongly urged, however, that there has been in this case an acceptance which precludes the plaintiff from claiming that the contract has not been fulfilled. This offer to return was not made until nearly three months after the monument was set. If tlie failure to perform the contract had been ascertainable by ordinary inspection this time might well be deemed to be beyond a reasonable time that the law allows for an inspection and rejection. The quality of granite, however, is something of which the plaintiff had no knowledge whatever. This fact was presumably known to the defendant. The difference between the best Westerly granite and the Troy white granite, of which the monument and headstone were actually made, could only be ascertained by an expert who- had dealt in such articles, and even by an expert it was difficult of ascertainment by inspection. One of the expert, witnesses upon the stand was. unable' to distinguish between samples of Troy white and Westerly granite. It would seem that the plaintiff might, without penalty, assume that the defendant had furnished the granite which he had contracted to furnish. Plaintiff’s failure within the three months to call in an-expert to say whether he had this specific granite contracted, -for should not, in our judgment, forfeit to him' the right to reject the same and demand the performance of the contract made. The difference in the quality of the granite would be in the nature of a concealed defect a failure to ascertain which- at first inspection does not preclude the party, after ascertaining the fact,, from rejecting the property as not in fulfillment of the contract made. Immediately upon ascertaining that the monument was not of the quality of granite contracted for the plaintiff notified the defendant that he rejected the same. The jury have found, that he did so within a reasonable time; and this finding of fact, considering the difficulty in ascertaining wherein the contract' was improperly performed, we cannot say is against the weight of evidence. In Pierson v. Crooks (115 N. Y. 539) the rule is stated in the head note as follows: “ The vendee has, however, a reasonable time for examination, and what' is a reasonable time is generally a question of fact to be determined *371by a jury upon all the circumstances, including as well the situation and liability of injury to the vendor from delay as the convenience and necessities of the vendee.” In Norton v. Dreyfuss (106 N. Y. 90), after a vendee had refused to deliver up the property given in performance of a contract, it was still held to be a question of fact for the jury whether there had been such an acceptance as would preclude the vendee from returning the same and insisting upon a breach of the contract. In Crane Company v. Collins (103 App. Div. 480) the head note in part reads : “'Where articles of a particular description are agreed to be manufactured or sold and the articles are not of the kind specifically described, a retention of them after the defect can with reasonable diligence be discovered is a waiver of the defect and no cause of action survives the acceptance and retention of the articles so manufactured, sold and delivered.”
This statement of the principle of law governing the right of rejection will not be challenged by the defendant’s attorney. His contention, however, is first that the time before rejection was. beyond a reasonable time in which the plaintiff should have rejected the monument. Of this, however, we are of opinion that the jury was justified in deciding otherwise. The defendant further contends, however, that when the monument was delivered the plaintiff asked time to inspect the same and had two months’ time before the final payment was made. This the defendant contends constitutes an acceptance which should preclude him thereafter from rejecting the monument delivered. The rule is stated in Pierson v. Crooks (supra) as follows: “ The purchaser of goods under an executory contract where payment and acceptance are by the contract concurrent and dependent obligations -cannot, in the absence of fraud or deceit on the part of' the vendor, on delivery of the goods pay the purchase money and subsequently rescind the contract and reject the goods for defects ascertainable on examination.” To this contention it would seem that the plaintiff might make two answers, first, that payment and acceptance are not by this contract made concurrent obligations. The payment was to be made when the monument was set up. oBy reason of the nature of" the defect and the difficulty of its ascertainment it is clear that acceptance was not, as matter of law, required to be made during the two months in which payment was delayed. Plaintiff was in default under his *372contract and-was- subject to be sued by the defendant. He might well have been unwilling to risk such action by farther delay, notwithstanding he had not made all of the examination which the law permits him to make. The payment, therefore, at the time that it-was made, being in pursuance of a legal obligation to pay under any facts of which he was then aware, should not be held tó be an acceptance of the- defective monument, ' The, plaintiff might f urther answer the defendant’s contention, however, - that furnishing him with the monument of Troy white — an inferior granite — knowing presumably that he'would be unable to discover wherein he was' deceived, was an imposition and fraud upon him which precludes the defendant'from asserting that any payment in ignorance„of that fraud would operate as an acceptance of the monument. It is doubtful in the case at bar whether there is any warranty accompanying this contract. (See Staiger v. Soht, 116 App. Div. 874.)-If the defendant’s contention be true that there is no warranty and that there has been an acceptance'of the contract the law is very inadequate to protect a party from fraud and imposition. Within well-settled principles of law, therefore, the jury might lawfully find that the plaintiff has duly rejected the attempted performance of the contract within a reasonable time and is entitled to his damages for its non:performance.
In the opinion of the learned trial judge upon the granting of the new trial, he also states as a ground thereof the reception- of certain letters of the plaintiff to the defendant after the making of the contract. Assuming, however, that these letters were incompetent evidence, if properly objected to they were not objected to as self-serving declarations, and, moreover, they are only declarations of facts which are substantially admitted upon the trial of this action. Ho question is made that this granite of which this monument and this headstone were made was Troy white. While it is claimed that some of these other granites sometimes went by the name of Westerly granite,, the evidence is very far from sustaining such a claim; and even if it weredrue, there is'no evidence that the Troy white granite is the best Westerly granije. The fact appears that the granite from Westerly, B. I., is harder and more costly than the .Troy white. The action stands, therefore, with .the contract almost confessedly unfulfilled. The monument and headstone have *373been rejected by the plaintiff, and they are now the property of the defendant. The plaintiff having paid the .full consideration of the contract, is entitled to recover the full value of the monument and headstone in the best white Westerly granite. While a deduction from that sum was allowed by the court of the value of the monument and headstone now found in this action, such reduction of damages was not proper. The error, however, has been prejudicial to the plaintiff and not to the defendant. ' We see no reason, therefore, why the verdict of the jury should have been set aside.
If we are right in these views, it is unnecessary to consider, whether there was, in fact, a warranty in this case, and as to what would be the proper measure of damages in case of a breach of warranty. The question was so submitted to the jury that they have found all the facts necessary to sustain a verdict as in an action upon a breach of the contract. We think, therefore, that the order granting a new trial should be .reversed, with costs, and the motion, denied, with costs.
All concurred,' except Cochrane, J., dissenting in opinion.