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Legal Decisions

Legal Decisions image
Parent Issue
Day
28
Month
August
Year
1903
Copyright
Public Domain
OCR Text

The purchaser is not bound to accept goods of an inferior quality, and after rejecting them he may in the absence of specific instructions take such steps in the disposition of the goods as may be expedient to save the seller unnecessary loss. (89 Mo. App. 1.)

Where one agreed to manufacture for another articles of a certain standard of excellence and the buyer returned a part of the goods after he had paid for them because they were defective the measure of his damage was the price that he had paid. (72 N.Y.S. Rep 662.)

The gathering of surface waters from the streets of a township and turning it out of its course in such quantities that the gutters are inadequate to carry it, so that it overflows and injures private property in the vicinity, is held in McAskill versus Hancock (Mich., 53 L.R.A. 738O to render the township liable.