Ghirardelli v. McDermott
Before: Cope, Crooker, Norton
Synopsis
Appeal from the Fourth Judicial District.
The complaint, which is verified, alleges a sale and delivery of two hundred mats of rice to defendant at San Francisco, for which he promised to pay eight hundered and fifty dollars. The answer, also verified, in its first clause denies, in a conjunctive form, the allegations of the complaint as to a sale and delivery at San Francisco of two hundred mats of rice at the price of eight hundred and fifty dollars; and in the second clause sets up a conditional purchase and avers a breach of the condition by plaintiff; and in a third clause, for a separate defense, denies that there was any delivery at any time or place of any rice by plaintiff to defendant. All other material facts are stated in the opinion. Defendant had judgment, and plaintiff appeals.
Crooker, J. delivered the opinion of the Court—Cope, C. J. and Norton, J. concurring. This is an action to recover the price of a quantity of rice alleged to have been sold and delivered by the plaintiff to the defendant. The defendant recovered a judgment of nonsuit, from which the plaintiff appeals. The pleadings are under oath, and the plaintiff moved for judgment on the pleadings, which was overruled, and this is assigned as error. The first part of the answer is clearly insufficient, as it denies the allegations of the complaint in the con[541]juncture ; but in a subsequent portion of the answer the defendant distinctly denies that the plaintiff ever delivered the rice in accordance with the contract, and this is sufficient to raise an issue, and the Court, therefore, properly overruled the motion.
It appears from the pleadings and evidence that the sale of the rice was made through a broker in the City of San Francisco ; that at the time of the sale the rice was in a warehouse in Stockton; that the defendant accepted and received an order drawn by the plaintiff on the warehouseman for the delivery of the rice to the defendant; that he never presented the order to the warehouseman, but, three days after the sale, took the order to the broker, told him that he could not take the rice, because there were only sixty mats of the two hundred sold that were fit to be delivered, and gave the order to him to return to the plaintiff; the broker took the order to the plaintiff, who refused to receive it, and thereupon, on the same day, he took it back to the defendant, who refused to receive it back. It appears that the rice was in the warehouse at Stockton, in good condition, and ready to be delivered upon presentation of the order. This is the substance of the plaintiff’s evidence. After he had closed his testimony, the defendant rii'oved for a nonsuit, on the ground, first, because there was a departure in pleading on the part of the plaintiff, as his complaint averred a sale and delivery of the rice at San Francisco, and the replication averred that at the time of the sale the rice was at Stockton,;' second, because there was no delivery of the rice by the plaintiff to the defendant; third, that the contract of sale was rescinded by the broker taking the order of delivery from the defendant. The Court sustained the motion for a nonsuit, and this is assigned as error.
The first ground of defendant’s motion is untenable. There is no substantial variance between the complaint and the replication. The second ground is equally invalid. As between the parties the delivery of the order to the defendant, on the warehouseman, who had the goods in store, was clearly sufficient to pass the title to the goods to him, and rendered him hable to pay the price. (Story on Sales, Secs. 312, 314; Horr v. Barber, 8 Cal. 614; Clark v. Rush, 19 Id. 396.) The third ground is also untenable. la
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