Boley v. Walter A. Wood Mowing & Reaping Machine Co.
Boley v. Walter A. Wood Mowing & Reaping Machine Co.
Opinion of the Court
In the early part of the summer of 1892 the plaintiff purchased of the defendant a reaping machine, for which he agreed to pay the sum of $125. For the purchase money he executed and delivered to the defendant two negotiable notes, due respectively October 1, 1892, and October 1,1893, bearing eight per cent, interest from and after September 1, 1892. The machine was sold under the following conditional warranty, to wit:
“All our machines are warranted to be well made and of good material, and tó do good work, with proper management, when set up and operated as per printed-directions. If upon starting any one of our machines it should not work well, immediate written notice must be given to the Walter A. Wood Mowing and Reaping Machine Company, or the local agent from whom it was purchased, and reasonable time allowed to come to it and remedy the defect, if any, (the purchaser rendering necessary and friendly assistance) ; when, if it can not be made to do good work, it shall be returned, free of charge, to the place where received, and the payment of money or notes will be returned. Failure to immediately give notice as above, or continued possession of the machine, whether it is kept in use or not, shall be deemed conclusive evidence that the machine fills the warranty. No one has any authority to add to, abridge or change this warranty in any manner.
“(Signed) Waltek A. Wood Mowing and Reaping-Machine Co.”
(Indorsed)
“Sold by W. Fravel, traveling salesman.”
The plaintiff sues for a breach of the above warranty, alleging, in substance, in his complaint, that the machine failed to do good work; that he immediately
There is no merit in the first assignment of error. The complaint filed before the justice was ill contrived and clumsy, but enough can be gleaned from it to show a sale of the machine in question, that it was sold under the above mentioned warranty, and that there had been a breach thereof, and that the plaintiff was entitled to damages on account of it. The amended statement in no wise changed the nature of the action. It merely stated, in a more explicit and detailed manner, the facts and circumstances attending the transaction.
The plaintiff’s evidence tended to prove that the machine failed to do good work; that the plaintiff immediately gave to one Sam Morris, the defendant’s local- agent, a written notice of that fact; that in response to that notice the defendant sent two men to work on the machine: that after repeated and reasonable efforts they failed to remedy the defects, and that thereupon the plaintiff took the machine back to Rush Hill, the place where he had received it, and that
The defendant concedes that, at the time the machine was sold, Morris was its agent in the county where the plaintiff lived and the machine was sold, and that Morris received a commission on all machines sold in the county, whether sold by him or not; but it denies (and its evidence was to that effect), that Morris had anything to do with the sale in question. The sale was made by one of the defendant’s traveling salesmen.
Under the foregoing proof the circuit court, at the instance of the plaintiff, instructed the jury as follows:
1. “The court instructs the jury that,-if they believe from the evidence in the ease that, after (sic) the plaintiff took the machine in question upon his farm, and that the defendant’s agents came and helped to set up and start the machine, and that afterward plaintiff found that said machine would not work, that he immediately gave written notice to Sam Morris, local agent of said company, of his inability to make said machine work, and that thereupon the agent of the defendant went upon his premises and attempted to make said machine do good work, and that said machine, notwithstanding their. efforts, would not do good work, and that plaintiff finding that said machine wholly failed to do good work, and thereupon, without unnecessary delay, he returned said machine to the place where received-, and demanded the return of his notes; and if they further believe that said notes were not returned by said defendant or its agents, then the jury will find for the plaintiff in the sum of $125.”
2. “If the jury find from the evidence that the plaintiff purchased from defendant through its traveling salesman, Fravel, the machine in question, and
It is insisted by the defendant that the foregoing instructions erroneously assume that the alleged notice to Morris, who did not sell the machine, was a compliance on the part of the plaintiff with the conditions of the warranty. The language of the contract is: “If upon starting any one of our machines it should not work well, immediate written notice must be given to the Walter A. Wood Mowing and Reaping Machine Company, or the local agent from whom it was purchased,” etc. The instructions do not place the liability of the defendant solely on the ground that the notice to Morrris was a substantial compliance with the terms of the warranty, but on the further ground that the defendant acted on the notice. This, we think, was the correct view. Having treated the notice as sufficient,
Again, it is claimed that the measure of damages as declared in the instructions — that is, that the plaintiff was entitled under the facts stated to recover the face value of his notes — is erroneous, the contention being that the plaintiff was entitled, at most, to a judgment for nominal damages. The question is in a small compass, but it is not free of difficulty. Against the theory of the instruction, the argument is that the plaintiff may never pay his notes, and that, therefore, he ought not to recover their value. The answer made to that is that the defendant agreed, under certain contingencies, to return the notes; that the contingencies had happened; and that the defendant, having failed in its undertaking, must be held as for a conversion of the notes, and for their value, which is prima facie their face value.
We think that the extent of the plaintiff’s recovery must be the value of the notes, which value, in the absence of other proof, must be taken to be the amount of the notes. But the difficulty in disposing of the assignment, grows out of the improper theory of the petition. It states the damages at $250 as for a violation of the contract, whereas it ought to have claimed damages for a conversion of the notes. While we would not be justified in unconditionally reversing the judgment on account of this mistaken theory, yet the defendant’s rights have not been regarded. As. the record now stands, there is nothing to show, in case the present judgment is satisfied, that the outstanding notes of the plaintiff are valid obligations.
It is clear that the defendant ought to be protected in some way, for it would be palpably unjust to permit a recovery as for a conversion of the notes, and leave the plaintiff free to defend against their collection on
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.