
    Julius C. Drucklieb and Lebrecht Herzig, Copartners under the Firm Name of J. C. Drucklieb & Co., Respondents, v. Universal Tobacco Company, Appellant.
    
      Sale of merchandise — what constitutes an executory contract of sale —inspection to ascertain whether the price asked is the reasonable value — determination as to quality and value must be made within a reasonable. time — evidence of acceptance — effect of a tendm of the merchandise at a reduced price after its r^eoUon by the vendee — tender of a larger amount than the vendee was bound to accept — when the objection is loaived— an offer, after a jury has retired, to charge as requested, if refused, prevents the party from objecting that the charge was not made.
    
    The following order: -
    “ New York, June 4th, 1961.
    “ J. 0. Druoklieb & Co.,
    “309 Broadway,
    “ Manhattan:
    “Dear Sirs.— Please enter our order for the following, tobaccos:
    “ 50,000 lbs. Cávalla at not over 22c. per lb.
    “ 25,000 lbs. Ayaso.uluk at an average price of about 70c. per lb,
    “ 5,000 lbs. Basma at from 25 to 60c. per lb., according to quality.
    “ Also, for immediate delivery, ■ '
    “ 2,500 lbs. Ayasouluk at about 75c. per lb.
    “ This .latter being the lot which you stated to the writer was immediately available. Yours very truly,
    “UNIVERSAL TOBACCO. COMPANY,
    “B. M. Cole,
    “ Asst. Secy.”
    
    is, when accepted, in every substantive respect an. executory contract of sale. Such an order binds the vendor to furnish tobacco of the kind and quality specified therein, which would, at a reasonable- price, approximately be worth in the city of New York the price specified.
    
      Upon the arrival of the tobacco at the port of New York the vendee is bound to accept and pay for the tobacco tendered if it is in substantial compliance with the terms of the order. It is entitled to an opportunity to inspect the tobacco in order to determine whether it is of the quality ordered and whether the price placed thereon is tbe reasonable value of the goods in the city of New York.
    The vendee is bound to make such determination as to quality and price within a reasonable time after it has been given an opportunity to inspect the tobacco.
    What evidence is sufficient to sustain a finding that the vendee accepted the tobacco, considered.
    If the vendee, after accepting the tobacco, repudiates its purchase and the vendor then tenders the tobacco at a reduced price such tender does not create a. new contract, nor will its rejection by the vendee operate to defeat the latter’s liability under the original contract to pay a reasonable price for the tobacco.
    Where the vendee did not at any time base its rejection of the tobacco on the ground that the vendor had tendered a larger amount than it had ordered, it is not entitled to have the court charge that such a tender would entitle it to reject the entire amount tendered.
    Where," after the jury impaneled on the trial of an action have retired for delib- ■■■ eration, a question arises as to whether the trial court has refused to charge certain propositions requested .by the defendant, and the court informs the defendant’s counsel that if lie wishes any of the requests in question charged the court will send for the jury and charge them, if the defendant neglects to avail himself of this offer he cannot, on appeal, predicate error on the neglect or refusal to charge the requests in question.
    Appeal by the defendant,'the Universal Tobacco Company, from a judgment of the Supreme Court in favor of the plaintiffs, entered in the office of the cleric of the county of New York on the 24th day- of December, 1904, upon the verdict of a jury, and also from an order entered in said clerk’s office on the 27th day of December, 1904, denying the defendant’s motion for a new trial made upon the minutes.
    
      Otto T. Hess, for the appellant.
    
      Louis O. Van Doren, for the respondents.
   Hatch, J.:

This action was brought to recover the sum of $28,732.41, the purchase price of 754 bales of Turkish tobacco imported by the plaintiffs from Turkey and claimed to have been sold by them to -the defendant, and also to recover the further sum of $104.50, being premiums upon fire insurance paid by the plaintiffs for the defendant. The defendant contends that there was no contract of sale of the tobacco, and that it never accepted the same when tendered by the plaintiffs. The order for the tobacco was contained in a written memorandum delivered by the defendant to the plaintiffs, reading as follows:

“ New Yobk, June tíh, 1901.
“ J. C. Dbttoklibb & Co.,
309 Broadway,
“ Manhattan :
Dear Sibs.— Please enter our order for the following tobaccos : “ 50,000 lbs. Cavalla at not over 22c. per lb. ■
25,0.00 lbs. Ayasouluk at an average price of about 70c.. per lb.
5,000 lbs. Basma at from 25 to 60c. per lb., according to-quality. • ■
“ Also, for immediate delivery,
. “-2,50.0 lbs. Ayasouluk.at about 75c. per lb. . •
“ This latter being the lot which you stated to the writer- was; immediately available: •
“Yours very truly,
.“UNIVERSAL TOBACCO COMPANY,
“ B. M. Cole,
Asst. SeeyP

The- controversy between.these parties arises out of the first two-items,in the above order. Fulfillment of the same,as to the Basma. tobacco was not.insisted upon, and the 2,500 pounds of Ayasouluk for immediate delivery were delivered and paid for by - the defendant. The plaintiffs, in execution of -this order, purchased and imported from Turkey 500 bales, containing 59,101 pounds, of Cavalla tobacco, and 254 bales, containing 28,1295- pounds, of Ayasouluk. The Cavalla tobacco arrived at the port of New York on October 6,, 1901, and the Ayasouluk tobacco on the next day. The duty imposed by the United States government upon these goods was thirty-five cents per pound. On arrival the tobacco was put into the bonded warehouse of William II. Dumont & Co. by agreement between the parties, the warehouse entries being.made by the plaintiffs through their brokers. On the fifteenth of October the defendant was informed that all of the tobacco was in- the bonded warehouse. Mr. Judkins, manager of- the leaf tobacco branch of the defendant’s business, directed the plaintiffs to send ten bales of the Cavalla and five bales of the Ayasouluk tobacco to the defendant’s factory. The plaintiffs complied with the order and sent the fifteen bales as requested, selecting a sample of the different sized leaf in the five-bale lot, which represented the different grades of Ayasouluk tobacco. The Cavalla was of a single grade, and the ten bales from it were taken at random. Withdrawal entries were executed for these fifteen bales of tobacco, and the defendant received the same and paid the customs duties, which amounted to $611.25. On October twenty-ninth the plaintiffs sent the defendant a bill of the Cavalla, 59,101 pounds, at twenty-two cents per pound net, and at same time sent the defendant an order for the tobacco remaining in the warehouse so that the defendant could withdraw it therefrom. On the sixth of November the defendant’s president met Mr. Drueklieb and told him that he had not expected to be charged top price for the tobacco,' and after some talk Drucklieb agreed to reduce the price and the next day sent a second bill to the defendant, charging twenty-one cents per pound net for the Cavalla, and offering to go. with Mr. Judkins to the warehouse and take samples of all the tobacco there. On the 7th of November, 1901, the plaintiffs saw Mi. Judkins and had a conversation with him concerning seventeen bales of the Ayasouluk protomana, or large leaf tobacco, which was the lowest grade óf that class. The defendant did not want to take that, and thereupon the plaintiffs stated that the defendant could have it at thirty cents per pound, or that the plaintiffs would keep it at that price. Judkins thereupon said lie would keep it himself at that price — “ make separate bills out and I will keep those myself!” Drucklieb then said the other Ayasouluk would be sixty cents per pound. Two days after this conversation the plaintiffs ■obtained the. official weight of the Ayasouluk tobacco,' showing 28,129-^ pounds net. Two separate bills were made out therefor, one for 17 bales, and the other for the remaining 232 bales, pursuant to the conversation with Judkins.

On the eleventh of November, the plaintiffs testified, Mr. Cole called them up by telephone and said: I want you to send us, as quick as possible, about a dozen withdrawal blanks for the withdrawal of our tobacco from the warehouse.” ' The plaintiffs immediately procured the sheets and sent them to the defendant, and it retained the same. ■ After the order and withdrawal receipts for all the tobacco had been delivered by the plaintiffs to the defendant, and although the prices of the tobacco liad been before that time apparently arranged, after considerable negotiation and discussion, the defendant again raised the question as to price,, and the plaintiffs, as they claim, for the purpose of avoiding controversy and a lawsuit over the tobacco, wrote under date of December 5, 1901:

“ Complying with your request for a written proposal from us in regard to the 754 bales of tobacco we submit, that we are willing to accept the following prices:
“ 254 bales Ayasouluk at .45 per lb.
“ and 500 “ Cavadla at .20 . “ ■ “
“ We also enclose our statement covering sales outside of the above 754 bales and should be glad to receive your cheek.' All of the items appearing on this statement represent goods sold on cash terms and should have been paid before this.”

To this letter the defendant replied :

“ Answering your letter of the 6th inst., we are unwilling to purchase the 754 bales of tobacco at the prices indicated. ■
“ The tobacco in question is. not of the character covered by our orders, and furthermore, you first billed to us at 60c. and 22c. stock which you now offer at 45c. and 20c. and even the 'latter figures are above the market value for such grades.
“The sample bales of this lot which you sent to our factory are held subject to your order. Kindly send for them as promptly as . practicable.
“ Respecting the other items to which you refer, we enclose check as per statement.”

The defendant did not return with this letter the weight lists, the bills, the orders on the warehousemen, and the signed withdrawal entries for consumption.

The facts as above stated are fairly to be derived from the testimony offered on the part of the plaintiffs, and the finding of the jury in their favor must be deemed to have established that such was the relation between the parties and their status at the time of the commencement of this action. The testimony upon the part of the defendant put in issue every substantial element, made by the case of the plaintiffs. A question of fact was thus presented for determination by the jury, and the verdict in favor of the plaintiffs is abundantly established by the evidence. •

The written order for the tobacco was in every substantive respect an executory contract of purchase and sale. (Anderson v. Read, 106 N. Y. 333.) The contract contemplated the purchase of the tobacco in Turkey, and the conditions which were shown to exist surrounding the execution of the contract clearly indicate that accuracy as to quality and price could not be definitely known until the tobacco was obtained, and for this reason the contract as to price was left somewhat indefinite and was evidently to be determined-by the parties upon the arrival of the tobacco, when, within the reasonable range of the terms fixed by the order, the prices would.be agreed upon. The order bound the plaintiffs to furnish tobacco of the kind and quality which would at a reasonable price approximately be worth in the city of New York the prices specified in the order. The defendant, upon the arrival of the tobacco at the port of New York, became bound to accept and pay for the tobacco tendered if it was in substantial compliance with the terms of the order. It had a right to an opportunity to inspect the same in order to determine that.it was of the quality ordered and that the prices placed thereon were the reasonable value of the tobacco, having regard to the terms of the order. The'plaintiffs could not compel an acceptance of tobacco which did not in quality and in price approximate to the description of the same as contained in the order; neither could the defendant refuse to accept and pay a reasonable price if the tobacco as tendered as to quality and price answered the terms of the order. The defendant was bound to determine as to quality and price within a reasonable time after its arrival and opportunity for inspection. When the plaintiffs tendered the tobacco" and fixed the price, the conditions being complied with, the defendant became bound to accept the same and pay the reasonable price therefor. The evidence justified the conclusion that such reasonable opportunity for inspection was given ; that the quality of the tobacco fairly complied with the terms of the order, and that the prices placed thereon were its reasonable value in the city of New York. These facts existing, and the plaintiffs having tendered delivery- of the tobacco, and the defendant having received and retained a part without objection and having the muniments of title in its possession, sufficient appeared from which the jury were authorized to-find that the tobacco had been accepted by the defendant and that it became obligated to pay therefor (Rohde v. Thwaites, 6 Barn. & Cr. 181; Hankins v. Baker, 46 N. Y. 666), and the defendant cannot.be heard thereafter to object either to the quality of the commodity or its price. (McCormick v. Sarson, 45 N. Y. 265; Carr v. Sullivan, 68 Hun, 246.)

The jury were authorized to find upon -the evidence that at the-time when the question was raised by the defendant as to the price of the tobacco, after there had been delivery of the fifteen hales, which had been retained for nearly two months, and after the defendant had asked for and received the withdrawal orders under the claim that it was their tobacco, that it had accepted the same, it could not then repudiate the sale and, under pretense of negotiating as to" price; create a new contract which ignored and ' disavowed the fulfillment of the old one. The offer by the plaintiffs of a reduced price for the-tobacco, under these circumstances, amounted to nothing more than an offer of settlement of the claim and- liability which had already become fixed. It did not create a new contract, nor could the defendant by rejection of the offer defeat-its liability to ..pay for the tobacco a reasonable price. This question, at least, under the evidence, became one of fact for the jury,, and their determination in favor..of the plaintiffs settles the question of the defendant’s liability.

The court submitted the case to the jury under a very stringent rule, more favorable to the defendant than the one to which it was entitled. It charged that,, before a recovery could be had, the defendant must have- accepted a delivery of the tobacco; that such acceptance was not to be derived from a consideration of the delivery of the orders of withdrawal and muniments of title solely as being sufficient, but that they must find from all the circumstances of the case that in fact the defendant had accepted a delivery of the tobacco. Certainly, the defendant could not ask for a more favorable charge upon the question at issue.- The defendant contends, however, that error was committed in the refusal of the court to charge that. “ if the. tobacco was tendered and was’ a larger amount than defendant ordered, the defendant was entitled to reject .the entire'amount tendered.” This rule might have been invoked had the defendant at any time planted itself upon such ground. But nowhere in the case, either during the course of the negotiations or in the letter by which they finally assumed to reject the tobacco absolutely, was there any suggestion that more had been tendered than complied with the terms of the contract or more than they were required to take. Under such circumstances the point is not available. (Hayden v. Demets, 53 N. Y. 426.)

It is further objected by the defendant that error was committed in refusing to charge various requests, to the number of twenty, to which it is claimed an exception was taken. The court charged eight specific requests presented by the defendant. .Counsel then said: “1 will take an exception to the others. I understood your Honor declined to charge the others. The Court: I decline to charge those except as severally charged.”' The jury then retired, when counsel for the defendant took some exceptions to the charge and then stated that he excepted to the refusal to charge eleven of the requests, which, apparently, were not read. Counsel for the plaintiffs thereupon stated : I understood that those you did not ask the court to charge, you withdrew.” To which the counsel for the defendant replied : “No. The court said he refused to charge those, except as specifically charged. The Court: If you want me to charge any of those I will send for the jury and charge them.”

To this offer the defendant made no response and did not request that the jury be brought back. No question was raised by this proceeding, and the exception is not available. (Huerzeler v. C. C. T. R. R. Co., 139 N. Y. 490.)

The counsel, as he had an opportunity to have the jury recalled and the requests charged and did not avail himself of such offer, must be deemed to have waived whatever right he had with respect thereto. In addition, the charge as made covered the issues and presented all the questions to which the defendant was entitled.

It follows that the judgment and order should be affirmed, with costs.

O’Brien, P. J., Patterson and McLaughlin, JJ., concurred; . Ingraham, J., concurred in result.

Judgment and order affirmed, with costs.  