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Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Jacobsen, Sons, & Co. v. Underwood & Son, Ltd [1894] ScotLR 31_545 (10 March 1894)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1894/31SLR0545.html
Cite as: [1894] SLR 31_545, [1894] ScotLR 31_545

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SCOTTISH_SLR_Court_of_Session

Page: 545

Court of Session Inner House Second Division.

Saturday, March 10. 1894.

31 SLR 545

Jacobsen, Sons, & Company

v.

Underwood & Son, Limited.

Subject_1Sale
Subject_2Offer and Acceptance
Subject_3Stipulation for Reply by Certain Day
Subject_4Whether Acceptance Posted on that Day Timeous — Delay in Delivery from Insufficient Address.

Contract — Sale — Custom of Trade — Whether Consistent with Law.
Facts:

Upon 2nd March the defenders offered to buy from the pursuers a quantity of straw. The offer was stated to be “for reply by Monday 6th inst.” The pursuers posted a letter accepting the offer on the evening of the 6th. Owing to the letter being insufficiently addressed it did not reach the defenders until the second instead of the first post on the 7th. The defenders repudiated the contract on the ground that the acceptance was too late.

Held (1) that the pursuers timeously accepted defenders' offer by posting their acceptance on the 6th; and (2) that the pursuers were not to blame for the delay in the delivery of the letter on the 7th, as it was addressed in the same manner as their previous letters to the defenders who had never said that the address was insufficient.

The defenders alleged but failed to prove a custom of trade to the effect that when a date was fixed for reply to an offer the reply must be not only despatched but received by that date.

Opinion by Lord Stormonth Darling that the alleged custom of trade, even if proved, would have been ineffectual to affix to the contract the meaning which the defenders desired to put upon it in respect that it was inconsistent with law.

Opinion by Lord Young e contra.

Headnote:

Upon 2nd March 1893 Underwood & Son, Limited, hay and straw importers, Brentford, who also carried on business in Leith, offered verbally through their agent in Leith to purchase a quantity of straw from Jacobsen, Sons, & Company, merchants in Edinburgh and Bona, the straw to be shipped during the month of March. The terms of the offer were reduced to writing and confirmed by Jacobsen, Sons, & Company by a letter addressed to Underwood & Son the same day, in which it was stated that the offer was ‘for reply by Monday 6th inst.” Upon 6th March Jacobsen, Sons, & Company wrote accepting the offer. This letter was posted in Edinburgh after six o'clock on the evening of the 6th. In ordinary course it would have been delivered to Underwood & Son by the first post on the 7th, but owing to the name of the street not being specified in the address it was not delivered until the second or midday post. Upon the same day Underwood & Son wrote to Jacobsen, Sons, & Company as follows—“As our offer for the straw was for reply on Monday, you will have to consult us again before confirming sale … in the meantime there is no purchase.” Jacobson, Sons, & Company refused to accept this repudiation of the contract, and subsequently tendered delivery of the straw, which Underwood & Son refused to take. Jacobsen, Sons, & Company accordingly, after intimation to Underwood & Son, sold the straw in Glasgow through a neutral broker, and then brought an action against Underwood & Son for payment of the difference between the contract price and that actually realised for the straw.

The defenders in answer averred that by the terms of the pursuers' letter of 2nd March, and “according to the understanding and custom of trade and of business men, the defenders' offer was open for acceptance until the end of business hours on Monday 6th March and no longer.”

They pleaded, inter alia—“(2) The pursuers having failed to accept the defenders' offer in terms thereof, there was no concluded contract, and the defenders ought to be assoilzied.”

Proof was allowed. The defenders failed to prove their averment as to custom of trade.

It appeared that the pursuers' letter of acceptance was addressed “Underwood & Son, Argyll Lindsay, Esq., Leith,” that

Page: 546

previous letters from the pursuers to the defenders had been similarly addressed, and that the defenders had never complained that the letters were insufficiently addressed.

Upon 22nd December 1893 the Lord Ordinary decerned in terms of the conclusions of the summons.

Opinion.—[After stating the facts]—I am of opinion that the pursuers are entitled to decree.

The defenders aver on record what they call an ‘understanding and custom of trade and of business men,’ to the effect that when a limit of time is fixed for reply to an offer, the reply must be not merely despatched, but received within that limit of time. They add the further restriction ‘before the end of business hours’ on the day named. But their witnesses to custom do not all go so far as that. I suppose they felt the difficulty of fixing the end of business hours. At all events, the majority contented themselves with saying that the reply must be received on the day named.

Now, I do not doubt that usage of trade may affix to the language of a contract a secondary or non-natural meaning, provided it be so notorious that both parties must be presumed to have used the language in that sense, and provided also it be consistent with law. But I regard this alleged usage as failing in both of these respects, especially the latter. The defenders' witnesses speak rather to their own interpretation of this particular contract than to any experience of a general understanding. And their interpretation of it, whether or not it be according to reason, is not, I think, according to law.

Professor Bell in his Commentaries (Lord M'Laren's Ed., i., p. 344) states the law thus—‘It is the act of acceptance that binds the bargain, and in the common case it is not necessary that the acceptance shall have reached the person who makes the offer. An offer to sell goods is a consent provisionally to a bargain, if it shall be accepted within a certain time fixed by the offer or by the law. Until the expiration of that time the consent to the sale is held to subsist on the part of the offerer, provided he continues alive and capable of consent at the time of acceptance. From the moment of acceptance there is between the parties in idem placitum concursus et conventio, which constitutes the contract of sale. To this, however, an exception may be made by the offerer limiting it so that the arrival of the acceptance only shall bind the bargain.’

The rule thus stated by Professor Bell is not limited to the case of an acceptance despatched by post. But authoritative decisions, and particularly the judgment of the House of Lords in Dunlop v. Higgins, 6 Bell's App. 195, and of the English Court of Appeal in Household Fire Insurance Company v. Grant, L.R., 4 Exch. Div. 216, have established that where an offer is made which, expressly or by implication, authorises the sending of an acceptance by post, the posting of the letter of acceptance completes the contract, whatever delay there may be in its delivery. In the latter case, indeed, the letter never reached its destination at all. On that special ground Lord Bramwell dissented, but even he conceded that ‘where a posted letter arrives, the contract is complete on the posting.’

Here I cannot doubt that the offer was made in such circumstances as to authorise an acceptance by post. The offerer was in Leith, the acceptor in Edinburgh. The offer, though made verbally, was confirmed by letter, and the defenders' agent admits that he expected a letter of acceptance.

In neither of the cases to which I have referred was any day fixed for reply. But the principle which Mr Bell states, and which these cases illustrate, is just as applicable to a case like the present as to one where the reply is to be given in due course. The principle is that the reply is made and the contract concluded when the acceptance is despatched. To the same effect (though complicated by a question as to retractation) is the case of Thomson v. James, 18 D. 1.”

The defenders reclaimed, and argued—The words in the letter “This for reply by Monday 6th inst.” were elliptical and ambiguous; it was, therefore, necessary to have evidence to show what was the proper meaning of the words in the circumstances— Bowes v. Shand, June 8, 1877, L.R., 2 App. Cas. 455; Ashforth v. Redford and another, November 6, 1873, L.R. 9 C.P. 20. The evidence showed that the ordinary meaning which mercantile men in Leith put upon these words, although perhaps not strictly a custom of trade, was, “I must have the acceptance in my hand by Monday.” The words in this case were different from those used in other cases. In the second place, assuming that the defenders were wrong in their construction of the letter, it was admitted that they ought to have got it by the first post on Tuesday, but they did not get it until noon. In such a business the delay of a few hours was important, and as the delay occurred through the fault of the pursuers in putting an insufficient address upon the envelope, they could not claim damages, as the defenders were entitled to think the pursuers did not intend to take acceptance of their offer.

The pursuers argued—There was no proof of a custom of trade at all. What the witnesses deponed to was merely their opinion upon the words of the letter when shown to them after the transaction had taken place—that was not enough. It was plain, apart from the evidence of the defenders' witnesses, that the pursuers had validly accepted the defenders' offer. Upon Monday 6th March, the day stipulated for in the offer, they had written and posted a letter stating their willingness to carry out the contract as arranged, and that was precisely what was stated to be binding on both parties by Lord Shand in the case of Mason v. Benhar Coal Company, June 2, 1882, 9 R. 883. The pursuers had written the reply on Monday that bound them to the contract, and that was

Page: 547

sufficient— Higgins & Son v. Dunlop, Wilson, & Company, February 24, 1848, 6 Bell's App. 195; Thomson v. James, July 12, 1855, 18 D. 1. As regarded the objection that the letter had been unduly delayed, that was the fault of the post office, for which the pursuers were not liable, but the defenders were themselves to blame because it was proved that letters with the same address had been delivered to them before, and they made no complaint.

At advising—

Judgment:

Lord Justice-Clerk—The question in this case is whether the defenders having offered to buy certain goods from the pursuers, and having in their letter used this expression, “This for reply by Monday 6th inst.,” and the pursuers having posted their acceptance to the defenders on the 6th, the pursuers had timeously accepted under the above condition.

The defenders maintain that the condition in their letter was not fulfilled, that it could not be fulfilled unless the pursuers' acceptance reached them within what they call “business hours” on the Monday, and they aver that there is what they call a “custom of trade” to that effect in Leith where the transaction took place. They have brought evidence to substantiate this alleged custom, but having considered the evidence, I come without difficulty to the conclusion that they have entirely failed to substantiate their averment. There is certainly no satisfactory evidence of an established and accepted understanding of the kind alleged. No doubt some of the witnesses say that they would so understand such words, but that is quite a different thing from proving that there exists a universal or even general understanding, such as the defenders maintain, which is and has been acted on in the trade. It could hardly be seriously maintained that such an established understanding was proved by the evidence. I think, therefore, that as matter of fact the defenders' defence fails.

But, further, there is in my opinion ground for holding that the law is established to the effect that such an acceptance as that given by the pursuers is a good acceptance. When a letter of accepttance is posted it is out of the power of the accepting party. He has committed it to a medium of communication which is bound to hold it and safely deliver it to the other party in due course. The dispatcher of the letter has effectually bound himself the moment he has committed his acceptance to the mail. He has done that act of acceptance which, in the language of Mr Bell in his Commentaries, “binds the bargain.” If Mr Bell be correct in his statement of the law, and there is nothing to be found to the contrary so far as I can see, viz., that an offer to sell goods is a consent provisionally to a bargain, if it shall be accepted within a certain time fixed by the offerer or by the law, then I feel compelled to hold that when the offerer names a time such as a certain day of the month, there is given to the person to whom the offer is made the whole of that day to make his decision, and that if within that day he accepts in a manner to bind himself, the bargain is closed. Up to the end of the time named the consent of the offerer must be held to subsist, so that it may be taken advantage of by the other party. Now, it has been made matter of distinct decision that acceptance by post, that is, by posting a letter of acceptance, completes the contract. It is in this case undoubted that acceptance by post was a suitable mode, and indeed was contemplated, and that the defenders' representative expected that the acceptance would so come. I have no doubt in holding (1) that the pursuers were entitled to accept at any time on the Monday; and (2) that they effectually accepted by posting their letter of acceptance on the Monday.

A point was raised on the fact that the acceptance did not reach the defenders' agent till noon on the Tuesday, and this was said to have arisen from the pursuers' fault in using an insufficient address. No such point is raised in the pleadings, but even if it had been, I should have no difficulty in denying any effect to it. The address upon the letter was the same as was regularly used by the pursuers in their communications to the defenders and appears not to have led to any delay on other occasions. It probably arose from some defect of acquaintance with the district on the part of some less informed official than the one who usually took charge of letters for the district. It is certain that the defenders' agent never informed the pursuers that their letters were unsatisfactorily addressed, and it is not proved that they were delayed in consequence of the address.

I am therefore of opinion that the interlocutor of the Lord Ordinary should be adhered to.

Lord Young—I arrive at the same conclusion. I do not think that the case is absolutely clear, but on the best consideration that I have been able to give it, I think that it is ruled by the principle stated by Professor Bell in the passage quoted by the Lord Ordinary. With respect to usage of trade, I do not think that any usage such as is here alleged has been proved to exist. The doctrine of usage of trade is quite clear. If persons in any trade use language to which by custom a special or peculiar meaning is attached, they will be presumed to have used it with that meaning in any contract which they have made, and the contract will be interpreted accordingly. The Lord Ordinary says—“I do not doubt that usage of trade may affix to the language of a contract a secondary or non-natural meaning, provided it be so notorious that both parties must be presumed to have used the language in that sense.” So far, that is just the doctrine which I have stated; but the Lord Ordinary goes on to add—“and provided also it be consistent with law.” In one sense that is true enough. Any

Page: 548

usage must be consistent with the public law of the land. But his Lordship goes on to say that he regards “this alleged usage as failing in both of these respects, especially the latter.” Now, I cannot assent to that. I think that if the usage here alleged had been proved to exist, there is nothing whatever in it that is inconsistent with law. My judgment proceeds entirely on this, that no usage of trade has been proved to exist, and I therefore think that the case must be decided in accordance with the doctrine stated by Professor Bell.

Lord Rutherfurd Clark and Lord Trayner concurred.

The Court adhered.

Counsel:

Counsel for the Pursuers— C. S. Dickson— Salvesen. Agents— Beveridge, Sutherland, & Smith, S.S.C.

Counsel for the Defenders— Ure— Aitken. Agents— Wallace & Pennell, W.S.

1894


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