Elliott Supply Co. v. Johnson
Elliott Supply Co. v. Johnson
Opinion of the Court
This appeal is from a judgment of the District court of Hettinger county. Plaintiff seeks to recover on a promissory note of $58.50. Defendant admits the execution and delivery of the note, and alleges by way of counterclaim that such note and a like amount of cash were given by the defendant to the plaintiff as the purchase price of three belt guides and shifts sold to defendant on August 3, 1912, under an alleged warranty as to the quality and fitness of the same for the uses and purposes for which they were sold. Facts showing a
The case was tried to a jury in the court below, and at the close of the testimony plaintiff moved for a directed verdict for the amount of the note with interest, on the ground and for the reason “that the amount due upon the note is not disputed; that as has been shown by the testimony of the defendant, the sale of the belt guides and shifts is an executed contract, and there was no rescission of that contract •and no offer to return the property sold; that the property has never been returned, the company has never been notified of the defect or of the breach of warranty, and that there was no measure of damages proved on the part of the defendant and no testimony offered as to the .amount of the damages.” Such motion was denied, and the jury returned a verdict in defendant’s favor as prayed for in the counterclaim. Thereafter a motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict was made and subsequently denied, and the appeal is from the order denying such motion, and also from the judgment entered pursuant to the verdict.
Appellant has specified numerous alleged errors of law occurring ,at the trial, and in the charge to the jury it has also specified numerous instances wherein the evidence is alleged to be insufficient to support the verdict. We find it unnecessary to notice these specifications seriatim, but will, in a general way, merely state our views relative thereto.
Owing to the small sum involved, we are loath to disturb the judgment, but we feel impelled to do so for the following reasons, briefly stated:
Under the undisputed facts, an executed sale of the three belt guides .and belt shifts was made by the plaintiff to the defendant (a dealer in farm machinery) on August 3, 1912. Defendant testified that he received such goods some time late in the season, and that one of the attachments was used by a Mr. Polchow, and one by a Mr. Schmidt. He states that Polchow used his about five days, but does not know how long Schmidt used his. He says that the plaintiff’s agent, who nego
There is testimony on the part of the plaintiff tending to show that in September, 1912, defendant expressed himself as entirely satisfied with these belt guides and shifts, and regretted that he had not ordered more of them, stating they were the best he had ever seen and were giving excellent satisfaction. This testimony seems to be corroborated to some extent at least by the fact that, in the following February, defendant made full settlement by paying one half cash and executing and delivering the note in suit. However, it is not our province to weigh the testimony further than to ascertain whether there is any sufficient evidence to support the verdict. We are inclined to the view that thei*eis sufficient evidence to support a finding that the attachments were warranted to be reasonably suitable for the purposes for which they were sold, and that as to two of them, such warranty was breached, and that notwithstanding the fact that the plaintiff settled for the attachments in February, 1913, he may nevertheless recover for any damages suffered through such breach of warranty, provided the settlement was a conditional one as testified to by defendant.
But the trouble with defendant’s case is that he apparently relied, wholly upon an alleged right to rescind the sale.' It is obvious, however,.
Section 7158, Compiled Laws 1913, provides that the breach of a warranty entitles the buyer to rescind an agreement for sale, but not an executed sale, unless the warranty was intended by the parties to operate as a condition. See also Simonson v. Jenson, 14 N. D. 417, 104 N. W. 513.
Both in his answer and in his proof, defendant has evidently relied upon a right of rescission, and, in so doing, has failed to furnish any basis in the proof for the recovery of damages as for a breach of warranty. Lie has failed to make proof of his damage. It was error, therefore, to deny plaintiff motion for a directed verdict and as a result a new trial must be ordered.
We have examined the instructions complained of and find no substantial merit in appellant’s criticism thereof, although the learned trial court evidently, through inadvertence, committed a technical error in instructing as to the measure of damages. The true measure of damages for a breach of warranty as defined by § 7158, Compiled Laws, is the excess, if any, of the value which the property would have had at the time to which the warranty referred if it had been complied with over its actual value at that time; but the trial court instructed that “the measure of damages is the difference in value of the articles if they had been as warranted and the value of the articles as they are.”
The trial court should also have restricted the recovery of damages to the two guides and shifts which, the proof shows, failed to comply with the warranty. Eor the above reasons, the judgment must be reversed and the cause remanded for further proceedings according to law. It is so ordered.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- ELLIOTT SUPPLY COMPANY, a Domestic Corporation v. J. D. JOHNSON
- Status
- Published