Ashford v. Schoop
Ashford v. Schoop
Opinion of the Court
This is an action for damages for an alleged breach of warranty in the sale of a car load of apples. The plaintiff is a dealer in fruit in the city of Chattanooga, Tennessee, and the defendant is engaged in the same business in the city of St. Louis. In December, 1897, W. G. Oehmig was a merchandise broker in Chattanooga and had been representing the defendant there in the sale of apples. On December 10, 1897, Oehmig solicited an order from plaintiff for a car load of apples to be shipped by defendant. After some telegraphic correspondence between Oehmig and defendant the former made the contract with plaintiff upon the following terms, to wit, the apples to be “fancy,” and the price $3.10 per barrel on the cars at St. Louis. After the negotiations with Oehmig but on the same day the plaintiff
The plaintiff read in evidence the deposition of Oehmig, who testified that soon after the apples arrived at Chattanooga he examined eight or ten barrels of the “Ben Davis” variety and found them in fair- condition, and that he immediately wrote the defendant to that effect. He further testified that he subsequently examined the remainder of the fruit and
The plaintiff read in evidence the last telegram from defendant to plaintiff, as above set forth. The original dispatch as delivered by defendant to the telegraph company had been destroyed, and the defendant offered to read what purported to be his office copy, which the court excluded. The only difference between the telegram delivered by the telegraph company to the plaintiff and the copy offered by defendant, is that the latter contains the word “re-examination,” instead of “examination.” The telegram as delivered to the plaintiff was the best evidence. In sending the dispatch the company must be regarded as the agent of defendant, and if any mistake was made in its transmission, the plaintiff can not be prejudiced on account of it. Therefore, this assignment must also be overruled.
The plaintiff asked no instructions. The court on its own motion gave the following:
(a) “The court instructs the jury, that if you believe from the evidence, that upon the arrival of the car of apples the'plaintiff made a partial examination only of the apples, and that before he made a sufficient examination to ascertain the condition and quality of the apples, and before he accepted them he received the telegram from defendant dated December 14 and read in evidence, and that he accepted the apples and paid the draft relying upon said telegram as to the condition and quality of the apples, and if you further believe from the evidence that the apples when shipped were not all fancy
It is claimed by defendant that the foregoing instruction is erroneous because there was no evidence as to the value of the apples in St. Louis in their alleged bad condition. In proving the damage the plaintiff’s witnesses assumed in their depositions that the contract price was the marketable price in St. Louis of the kind of apples that the defendant contracted to sell, and then the witnesses were allowed (without objection at the time or at the trial) to state the value of the fruit in its actual condition. Whether the witnesses were qualified to speak as to St. Louis values, does not appear, but as their testimony was. admitted without objection the circuit court was warranted in the assumption that they were qualified to testify on the subject. This objection if valid comes too late.
A further objection to the instruction is that it assumes that the telegram of December 14 constituted in law a warranty that the fruit was fancy stock, whereas the language of the dispatch being ambiguous and of doubtful meaning h ought to have been left to the jury to say whether the defendant intended to warrant the apples to be of a particular kind or quality. Counsel misconceive the purport of the instruction. The warranty is to be found in'the original agreement between Oehmig and plaintiff supplemented by the subsequent telegraphic correspondence between plaintiff and defendant. Clearly there was an implied if not an express warranty on the
The foregoing discussion answers all matters presented in the briefs. The judgment of the circuit court will be affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- ROBERT J. ASHFORD v. CONRAD SCHOOP
- Cited By
- 2 cases
- Status
- Published