Hytken Bros. v. International Dress Co

Decision Date25 November 1929
Docket Number28192
Citation124 So. 653,155 Miss. 469
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
PartiesHYTKEN BROS. v. INTERNATIONAL DRESS CO

Division B

SALES. Merchant buying from wholesaler with understanding that goods, if not as ordered, would be returned, must return all or accept all.

Where a merchant buying goods from a wholesaler buys a bill of goods selected, and the bill therefor is made out as a continuous transaction with the understanding that, if the goods are not as ordered, they will be returned, such buyer must return the goods as a whole or accept them as a whole, and cannot return part and retain part. Nelson v. Wilkins, 151 Miss. 492, 118 So. 436. and other cases cited.

HON. W A. ALCORN, JR., Judge.

APPEAL from circuit court of Bolivar county, Second district, HON W. A. ALCORN, JR., Judge.

Action by the International Dress Company against Hytken Brothers. Judgment for plaintiff, and defendant appeals. Affirmed.

Judgment affirmed.

Somerville & Somerville, of Cleveland, and Howorth & Howorth, of Jackson, for appellant.

Where the contract is divisible or separable it can be rescinded in part and enforced in part. The present record contains a divisible or separable contract.

23 R. C. L. 1444; 23 R. C. L. 1341-2; 5 Elliott on Contracts, 1152; 2 Elliott on Contracts, 828; 7 A. & E. Ency. Law, 95; Johnson v. Stone, 69 Miss. 826; Pierson v. Crooks (N.Y.), 22 N.E. 349; Schiller v. Blythe & Fargo Co. (Wyo.), 88 P. 648; Buckeye Buggy Co. v. Montana Stables (Wash.), 85 P. 1077; Costigan v. Hawkins (Wisc.), 94 Am. Dec. 583; Herzog v. Purdy (Cal.), 51 P. 27; Barlow v. Stone (Mass.), 86 N.E. 306; Williams v. Robb, 62 N.W. 352 (Mich.); Hutchins v. Smith Harrison & Co. (Miss.), 64 So. 789; 35 Cyc. 139-140; Vorhees v. Earl, 2 Hill (N.Y.) 288, 38 Am. Dec. 588.

W. W. Simmons, of Cleveland, for appellee.

The contract involved in this case is not a separable or divisible contract, but is an entire contract. In actions at law the remedy of the purchaser where he receives what he did not buy, either because of quantity or quality, is to reject the entire shipment and place the seller in statu quo, or to accept the shipment and have his rights adjusted in the court in recoupment or set-off.

Brown v. Norman, 65 Miss. 369, 4 So. 293, 7 A. S. R. 663; Kanson Hat & Cap Mfg. Co. v. J. D. Blakeney & Son, 142 Miss. 851, 108 So. 139; S. P. Nelson & Sons v. Wilkins & Parks, 151 Miss. 492, 118 So. 436; Ware v. Horton, 41 Miss. 370; Ormand v. Henderson, 77 Miss. 34, 24 So. 170; Rubenstein v. Grossman-Winfield Millinery Co., 109 Miss. 819, 69 So. 688; 110 Miss. 213, 70 So. 210; Manss-Bruning Shoe Mfg. Co. v. Prince, 41 S.E. 907 (W. Va.); Charles Syer & Co. v. Lester, 82 S.E. 122 (Va.); Simonoff v. Parsons, 153 P. 152 (Okla.); Northwestern Rug Mfg. Co. v. Russellville Furniture & Mercantile Co., 116 So. 314 (Ala.).

OPINION

Ethridge, P. J.

Hytken Bros. are merchants conducting a department store at Cleveland, Miss., and one of them went to the city of New York, where the International Dress Company, a wholesale establishment, does business, and selected twenty dresses on exhibition in the store at the price of sixteen dollars and fifty cents each. These dresses were all selected during the same transaction and were piled together by Mr. Hytken and the salesman, and the bill made out for them as one transaction, and the goods were turned over to another employee for wrapping and shipping to Cleveland, Miss. They were shipped by express, and on reaching Cleveland were taken out of the express office, opened up, and examined. Hytken Bros. accepted two of the dresses and returned the other eighteen to the express office, claiming that they were not the identical patterns selected by the buyer.

When the shipment was returned to New York the seller declined to receive it on the ground that the buyer could not take part and return part; he must either accept the shipment as a whole or refuse it as a whole. Therefore, they brought suit against the Hytken Bros. for the amount of the bill so sold.

It was contended by the Mr. Hytken, who did the buying, that each selection was a separate transaction; that each of the articles had a separate and special price, and that the goods he selected had not been shipped, and that he had told the salesman at the time of the purchase that if they were substituted upon him he would not take them, but would ship them back to the company. A succinct statement of the testimony of the said Mr. Hytken on this proposition is contained in one answer: "Q. Did you give them the privilege of sending you something else other than what you selected? A. No, sir; just before I left, I told them positively, Don't switch those dresses, if you do, it...

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5 cases
  • Bullard v. Citizens' Nat, Bank
    • United States
    • Mississippi Supreme Court
    • March 25, 1935
    ... ... 342; Nelson & Sons v ... Wilkins, 118 So. 436, 151 Miss. 492; Hytken Bros. v ... International Dress Co., 124 So. 653, 155 Miss. 469; Hytken ... ...
  • Bullard v. Citizens' Nat. Bank
    • United States
    • Mississippi Supreme Court
    • June 10, 1935
    ... ... Nelson & Sons v. Wilkins, 118 So. 436, 151 Miss ... 492; Hytken Bros. v. International Dress Co., 124 ... So. 653, 155 Miss. 469; ... ...
  • Red Star Milling Co. v. Moses
    • United States
    • Mississippi Supreme Court
    • October 5, 1936
    ... ... Hytken ... Bros. v. International Dress Co., 155 Miss. 469, 124 ... ...
  • Colossus Co. v. D. L. Fair Lumber Co
    • United States
    • Mississippi Supreme Court
    • March 31, 1930
    ... ... is not subject to countermand ... Hytken ... Bros. v. International Dress Company, 124 So. 653; ... Hytken Bros ... ...
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