Neumiller Farms, Inc. v. Cornett, 368 So. 2d 272 (Ala. 1979)
Neumiller Farms v. Cornett is a staple in Contracts and Sales courses for its clear articulation of the Uniform Commercial Code's good-faith overlay on a buyer's right to reject goods.
Whether a buyer may reject goods on purported quality or satisfaction grounds when evidence indicates the rejection was motivated by a market decline rather than genuine, commercially reasonable dissatisfaction, and, if the rejection is wrongful, what measure of damages applies under the UCC.
Under the UCC, every contract imposes an obligation of good faith in its performance and enforcement (UCC § 1-203, now § 1-304). For merchants, good faith means honesty in fact and the observance of reasonable commercial standards of fair dealing (UCC § 2-103(1)(b)). A buyer may reject goods if they fail in any respect to conform to the contract (UCC § 2-601), but rejection must be exercised in good faith and in a commercially reasonable manner. Where a contract makes performance subject to the buyer's or a third party's "satisfaction" as to commercial quality, utility, or value, the standard is objective reasonableness, and the buyer cannot claim dissatisfaction in bad faith to avoid an unfavorable deal. A wrongful rejection constitutes breach, giving the seller remedies including the contract–market differential at the time and place for tender (UCC § 2-708(1)) plus incidental damages (UCC § 2-710).
The buyer's rejections were not made in good faith but were motivated by a declining market; therefore, the rejections were wrongful and constituted breach. The seller was entitled to damages measured by the difference between the contract price and the market (or resale) price at the time and place for tender, together with incidental damages. The judgment for the seller was affirmed.
Neumiller Farms teaches that the perfect tender rule operates within the UCC's good-faith framework. For commercial-quality disputes, even when a contract references a buyer's or third party's "satisfaction," courts apply an objective, reasonable-merchant standard and will not credit contrived dissatisfaction prompted by price swings. The case is also a clean exemplar of seller remedies for wrongful rejection, highlighting the contract–market measure and incidental damages. Law students encounter Neumiller to understand how good faith cabins rejection rights, how satisfaction clauses are construed in commercial contexts, and how Article 2's remedial provisions restore the seller's expectancy when a buyer acts opportunistically.