Opinion by
The buyers sued for alleged breach of the following contract:
“July 15th, 1918.
“Sold to Messrs. Sussman Bros. 22nd and South Sts., Two hundred cases eggs, (200) at Forty-five ($.45) cents per dozen. F. O. B. Philadelphia, candled and delivered up to December 31st, 1918. Storage and insurance paid. The above to be No. #1. Messrs. Sussman Bros, agree to pay a deposit of One Dollar ($1.00) per case on same. Charles J. Meier. Sussman Bros.”
They averred that only 20 of the 200 cases were delivered and sought recovery (1) for the loss sustained by nondelivery of 180 eases, each containing 30 dozen, and (2) for the $200 deposited. Defendant, the seller, admitted plaintiffs’ right to recover the $200, but denied further liability on the ground that plaintiffs made no demand for delivery until after December 31, 1918, to wit on January 4, 1919. Before trial, defendant paid to the plaintiffs the $200, leaving for trial only the issue of alleged breach of contract and damages.
The evidence was very brief. A plaintiff testified that twenty cases were delivered, ten on the request of the
He contends he was not in default because he did not refuse to deliver within the period specified, and that, to put him in default, plaintiffs were required to act by making a demand on him to deliver within the period. As the business places of both buyer and seller were in Philadelphia, and as the contract does not state at which place delivery was to be made, section 43 of the Sales Act of 1915, ■ P. L. 543, 554, supplies the omission. “Whether it is for the buyer to take possession of the goods or for the seller to send them to the buyer, is a question depending in each case on the contract, express or implied, between the parties. Apart from any such contract, express or implied, or usage of trade to the contrary, the place of delivery is the seller’s place of business, if he have one, and, if not, his residence......” As neither implication nor usage to the contrary was alleged, or shown, the place of delivery was the seller’s store, where it was the buyer’s duty to take possession of the eggs. This has always been the law of Pennsylvania: Hamilton v. Calhoun, 2 Watts 139; Perlman v. Sartorius, 162 Pa. 320, 323; see also Williston on Sales, section 450.
Since the, record shows no effort was made by the buyers to take possession at the place of delivery within the time specified, and nothing to sustain a waiver of that requirement, defendant was not put in default, and
The judgment is reversed and the record returned with instructions to reinstate and make absolute detfendant’s motion for judgment n. o. v.