Marshuetz v. McGreevy

Smith, J.:

This action was brought to recover the balance of the purchase-price of a cask of gin sold and delivered by the plaintiffs to the defendant. The plaintiffs were wholesale liquor dealers in the city of New York. The referee found that in June, 1876, the plaintiffs, by their traveling agent, Coshland, agreed to sell to the defendant a cask of Tom ” gin, containing about twenty gallons, at the price of two dollars per gallon, to be forwarded by the plaintiffs to the defendant at TIornellsville, out of their wholesale stock in New York, at a credit of sixty days from the date of the bill. He also found that Coshland represented the gin to be of good quality, and that it gave general satisfaction and was worth more than two dollars a gallon, and that at the same time he exhibited to the defendant a sample of gin which was of good quality and a good article of Tom ” gin. The cask of gin containing twenty-two and a half gallons, with the bill, was sent by the plaintiffs and received by the defendant soon after the twentieth of June. The cask was not opened or the gin examined by the defendant until the twenty-sixth of September, when he examined the gin and found it of poor quality and unfit for use in his business. It was not of the same kind or quality as the samples exhibited to the defendant at the time of the sale. The defects were discoverable by tasting and smelling the gin. On fourth of October the defendant sent to the plaintiffs a draft of thirty dollars to apply on the gin, and at the same time informed them by letter that the gin did not come up to the standard and that he would settle with them for the balance. The defendant paid nothing more. He did not offer to return the gin, and he disposed of the same. The referee found that the sum of seventeen dollars and fifty cents of the purchase-price was unpaid, and that the gin was not worth more than one dollar per gallon, and he held that the defendant is entitled to judgment for costs.

The appellants contend that as the sale was executory and the defects complained of were capable of discovery by ordinary observation, the defendant’s claim for damages did not survive his acceptance and use of the gin. Ve do not concur in that view of the case. The sale was with warranty as to the quality, and as the liquor could not be examined while it was inclosed in the cask in which it was shipped, the vendee had the right to rely upon the warranty, *410and be was not required to open tbe cask and test its contents at tbe time of delivery. It is not found that bis delay in opening tbe cask and examining tbe liquor was unreasonable. "When be did examine the gin and found that it was defective, he was not bound to return or offer to return it, and his remedy upon the warranty was not lost by his retaining the gin and using it. (Day v. Pool, 52 N. Y., 416.) Upon this principle the case was disposed of by the referee.

A single question of evidence is presented. The defendant was examined as a witness in his own behalf, and he was permitted to testify against the objection and exception on tbe part of tbe plaintiffs, that after the trial before the justice, Coshland, the plaintiffs agent said to him that he thought the gin was bad. The testimony was inadmissible, there being no evidence that Coshland at that time was acting for his principals. But there is other evidence in the ease of the bad quality of the gin, so ample and conclusive as to show very clearly that the error above pointed out did not affect the result. It should, therefore, be disregarded. '

The judgment should be affirmed.

Talcott, P. J., and IIakdiN, J., concurred.

Judgment affirmed.