BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
Scottish Court of Session Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Taylor v. Sharp [1868] ScotLR 6_95 (10 November 1868) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1868/06SLR0095.html Cite as: [1868] SLR 6_95, [1868] ScotLR 6_95 |
[New search] [Printable PDF version] [Help]
Page: 95↓
A seedsman held liable in damages for loss occasioned by his furnishing seed of an inferior quality and different from the kind agreed on betwixt him and the purchaser. Claim of consequential damage disallowed.
Sharp, farmer at Lindifferon, brought an action in the Sheriff-court of Fifeshire against William Taylor, seedsman, Cupar-Fife, for a sum of £157, being loss on a field of turnips by reason of the defender having wrongfully furnished a quantity of turnip seed of inferior quality, and different from the kind ordered and purchased by the pursuer. The account annexed to the summons included a sum of £40, as “ loss sustained because of not having sound turnips to fatten” the pursuer's stock. After a proof, the Sheriff-substitute ( Taylor) pronounced this interlocutor:—“ Finds, in point of fact, that the defender, who is a dealer in seeds, on a verbal order by the pursuer for fifty pounds weight of Aberdeen green-top turnip seed, sold and delivered that quantity of turnip seed to the pursuer on the 29th May 1866, which seed so furnished the defender put into a bag with a ticket or label marked ‘Aberdeen yellow selected stock, crop 1865,’ and the defender also invoiced the same as ‘Aberdeen yellow turnip,’ the price being £1, 13s. 4d., which the pursuer paid on 18th June thereafter:—Finds that no express warranty of the quality of the said seed was asked or given, but that the defender at the time of the sale represented it to be ‘pure seed’ of Aberdeen yellow turnip, from selected bulbs of his own growing Finds that the pursuer, relying on said seed being pure Aberdeen yellow turnip seed as contracted for, sowed it in the course of a week or two thereafter in portions of his farms of Lindifferon and Fernie: Finds that these sowings produced a fair average crop of turnips in point of quantity:—Finds that ‘Aberdeen yellow turnip’ is a well known distinct kind of turnip, different from and more hardy and valuable than the hybrid varieties of turnip, and especially has the property of not being so readily injured by frost: Finds that on that account the bulk of pursuer's crop grown from the said seed sold by the defender as Aberdeen yellow turnip was intended by the pursuer for consumption on the ground by his stock in the spring, and was with that view accordingly left in the ground, with the exception of about three quarters of an acre at Fernie, and an acre and a quarter or so at Lindifferon, which had been drawn and carried away in December: Finds that in January 1867, after a severe frost, the pursuer seeing that the said turnips were much injured by the frost, began to suspect that the turnips so grown from the seed supplied by the defender as Aberdeen yellow were not of that description, but a different and softer kind, and he intimated so to the defender on 12th February, requesting him to go and inspect the crop; and he afterwards suggested a settlement of the matter by mutual valuation of the damage, which was not agreed to: Finds it proved that the turnips in question were not Aberdeen yellow turnips but a turnip of a different and softer description, and that they consequently yielded to the power of the frost that prevailed for some weeks in January 1867; and finds that, as compared with a corresponding crop of Aberdeen yellow turnips, the turnips in question became unfit for use and valueless as food for the pursuer's stock in the spring to the amount specified in the first branch of the account sued for, viz., £117, 6s. lid. sterling; Finds that the pursuer thus sustained a direct loss to that amount through the fault of the defender, and that the defender is liable in reparation to the pursuer for said loss, and decerns against him therefor accordingly: Sustains the defender's sixth plea in law, so far as it relates to the pursuer's claim for £40, forming the second branch of the account sued for:—Finds the defender liable in expenses,” &c.
The claim of £40 was disallowed as being of the nature of consequential damage.
The Sheriff ( Mackenzie) substantially adhered, but reduced the sum of damages to £73.
The defender advocated.
Monro and Rhind for advocator.
Young and Balfour for respondent.
The Court adhered.
Agents for Advocator— Murdoch, Boyd, & Co., S.S.C.
Agents for Respondent— Jardine, Stodart & Frasers, W.S.