Thomas Manufacturing Co. v. Watson
Thomas Manufacturing Co. v. Watson
Opinion of the Court
There was a written contract between the plaintiffs and defendant which is reported in full. It provided (among other stipulations) for the delivery of twenty-five Royal Self-Dumping Rakes at twenty dollars and fifty cents by the plaintiffs to the defendant between January 1, and June 15, 1889. It also provided for a settlement therefor by the defendant on September 1, 1889, in one of three ways at the option of the defendant (1) by cash, (2) by farmers’ notes taken by defendant in exchange for rakes and indorsed by him, (3) by his own note.
The plaintiffs delivered the rakes within the stipulated time, and they were received by the defendant. He did not, however, make any settlement for them in either stipulated mode, nor in any mode, nor is there any provision in the contract releasing him from the stipulation for a settlement on the day named. He thus committed a breach of that stipulation and of the contract.
Exceptions sustained.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- The Thomas Manufacturing Company v. John Watson
- Cited By
- 2 cases
- Status
- Published