Opinion op tiib Court by
JUDGE PAYNTERReversing.
Tjhe appellants live in and are engaged .in business in, Chicago, and the appellees' live in, and are doing business at, Princeton, Ky. On May 3, 1898, the appellees, Kevil .& Sons, sent appellants, Munford & Co., a telegram as follows; “.Make offer one oar number two wheat f. o. b. track Chicago.” On the same day the appellants responded in a telegram as follows: “Rid dollar nineteen track Chicago two red — prompt shipment.” The appellees responded by telegram as follows: “Accept- your offer on one. car two red.” On May 5, 1898, the appellants wired appellees: “Offer dollar twenty-five track Chicago two red wheat.” On same day the appellees responded by wire: ■“Offer you twelve hundred bushels two red one twenty-*249eight f. o. b. Chicago; answer quick,” — to which the appellants responded: “Accept the wheat; ship in quick.” It will be observed that a car load of bio. 2 red wheat was agreed to be shipped by appellees to appellants on May 3d at price stated in telegram, and that 1,200 bushels of No. 2 red wheat, at price stated in telegram, was contracted! for on May 5th. The wheat was shipped to Chicago, to be delivered to the consignors, the appellants. In the meantime the appellees drew a draft on the appellants for the price of the wheat, and forwarded it through their banker at Princeton to Chicago, with direction to deliver the bill of lading to the appellants on the payment of the draft. Under the contract, the wheat was to be delivered f. o. b. Chicago, and the title to the property would have remained in the appellees until it reached its destination, but they chose to draw on the appellants for the price of the wheat, which draft was paid, and the bill of lading delivered, and the title to the wheat at that moment vested in the appellants. When the wheat arrived at Chicago, an inspection of it, according to the allegations of the petition. — and they are taken as true on demurrer, — showed that it was not No. 2 red wheat, but a cheaper grade, being several cents less in value on the bushel. This action was brought by the appellants against the appellees to recover the difference between the value of No. 2 red wheat and the kind that was delivered by the appellees. The court below sustained a demurrer to the petition, presumably, from argument of counsel for ap-pellees, because it was of the opinion that there was no warranty; that it was essential there should have been one to entitle plaintiffs to recover; that, as the appellants had received the wheat in compliance with the contract made *250by appellees, they waived any defects in the wheat, and can not recover damages by reason of its inferior quality.
The rule in this State is that, where there is a contract to deliver goods or chattels of a particular description or quality, at a future day, and the vendor tenders goods not of the agreed description or quality in discharge of the contract, and the vendee, after inspecting them, or after having had a fair opportunity to do' so, receives them in discharge of the contract, he can not thereafter maintain an action against the vendee to- recover damages for the defects in the description or quality. The stipulation that goods of a certain description or quality are to be delivered is made an essential part of the contract, which must be complied with by the vendor as a condition preceding the obligation of the vendee to receive the goods and pay for them; and,, if the goods are not of the description or quality described, the vendee has the right to reject them, and hold the vendor responsible in damages; but if he inspects the goods, or, after having had a fair opportunity to do so, received them in discharge of the contract, although they are not of the description and quality sold, he waives their defect by their acceptance, and is not entitled to recover damages. Jones v. McEwan, 91 Ky., 376, (16 S. W., 81), (12 L. R. A., 399). In this ease the contract seems to have become executed by the payment of the contract price and a delivery of the, bill of lading before the goods reached the place where they were to be delivered. The wheat was not inspected, nor- did the appellants have an opportunity to do- so before it reached Chicago. The vendees found themselves in this dilemma: Their vendors lived in another State. They had the contract price of the wheat, and they had on their hands the wheat of inferior quality to that which the vendors agreed’ *251to deliver to them. Had the appellees waited until the wheat arrived at Chicago before collecting the purchase money, then appellants would have had an opportunity ' to inspect it, and reject it, if it was not of the» character required to be delivered by the terms oí the contract. The wheat was in Kentucky when the contract was made, and, of course, could not be inspected. Besides, under the terms of the contract, it was subject to inspection in Chicago. The contract of sale was by description, and the description, from the nature of the transaction, must be obligatory upon the party making it, and did eater into the contract as an essential term of the sale. In Baird v. Matthews, 6 Dana, 133, the court said: “But there is an obvious distinction between such a case and an executory contract for the sale of a chattel, or a con. tract of sale not executory in form, but which, on account of the absence of the article sold, and its being not immediately accessible, leaves the actual delivery still to be made. In such a case, the article itself not being present, or subject to inspection, the sale is necessarily made by a description, more or less minute, to be furnished on the part of the vendor. If the vendee be previously acquainted with the individual article, nothing more than an identification of that article may be included in the description or in the terms of the contract. But if he be not acquainted with it, and there be- no opportunity of inspection, a description more extensive and specific would probably be required. In all cases where the sale, whether wholly executory or only so in respect of the actual delivery of the article, must necessarily be by description, the description “itself, whether parol or written, must, from the juature of the transaction, be, to a reasonable extent, obligatory upon the party making it, and *252enter into the contract as an essential term oí the sale. In other words, there must, in such cases, be a substantial conformity between the article delivered and the description by whioh it is sold, or the vendor will have broken, not merely his word, but his contract.” The appellants had no opportunity to inspect the wheat before the contract was changed, by the acts of the parties, from an ex-ecutory to an executed contract. When the appellees drew on the appellants, and forwarded the bill of lading, they, in effect, proposed to change the contract as to the place of delivery of the wheat, and the payment of the draft and the delivery of the bill of lading was an acceptance of the proposition. This change was made with all the consequences which the law imposed on the parties by the contract as changed. They did not have an opportunity to inspect the wheat until it reached Chicago, and, in our opinion, it can not be held that they accepted it in discharge of the contract. If the wheat was not of the description and quality represented, then they are entitled to recover such damages as they sustained by reason thereof. The judgment is reversed for proceedings consistent with this opinion.