This contract is with reference to a corncutter, “Willitts’ patent, made by said first party.” We may presume from this that the plaintiff had the sole right to sell this machine in the territory designated, and therefore conclude that the provision appointing defendant “general Western agents for the exclusive sale of the corncutter” is equivalent to an agreement that authority will not be given to any o ther than the defendant to sell in that territory. The prices and terms of payment preclude the idea of agency. Defendant is to. pay fifteen dollars each on four months’ time, subject to. a discount of five per cent, for cash within thirty days from receipt and checking of the goods. We think this provision made the goods the property of the defendant immediately upon delivery. There is> nothing in.the contract that defendant was to sell in the- name of the plaintiff, nor that the title to the corncutter® should remain in lire plaintiff, and the warranty indicates that an. agency was not contemplated. In Mack v. Tobacco Co., 48 Neb, 397 (
IV. Plaintiff contends that there was no* breach of the warranty, for that the warranty was that the machines were “well made and finished.” The contract was made after inspection of a sample machine, and plaintiff insists that, if the machines furnished were made and finished as this sample was made and finished, there was no breach of the warranty, and insists that the evidence so- ©hows.. The warranty expressed is not that the cutters were made and finished as per sample, but that they were well made and finished. If it should be said that this is not a warranty that the cutters were fit for the purpose for which they were intended, we think that such a warranty must be implied. In Blackmore v. Fairbanks, Morse & Co.,
