41 Mo. App. 254 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1890
Plaintiffs, who were dealers in cork and brewers’ supplies, brought suit against defendant, a business corporation engaged in the manufacture of tobacco, before a justice of the peace, to recover one hundred and five dollars for three hundred pounds of number 3 tin foil twelve by twelve, at thirty-five cents, sold and delivered defendant by plaintiffs. The case was appealed to the circuit court of Livingston county, where there was a trial, and the facts disclosed by the evidence in the record before us seem to be that defendant ordered its . commission merchant, White, to purchase . some tin foil to be use.d by it in its business of manufacturing tobacco. There was considerable written correspondence between White and defendant, and between plaintiffs and defendant, introduced in evidence, but the first letter written by defendant to White, and the reply thereto, though referred to in one of the
“Your postal at hand. The size you name, twelve by thirty-six, is a new one to us. * * * Now, suppose you ship on for us one hundred to two hundred pounds of twelve by thirty-six inches. * * * We will try it any way.”
White thereupon ordered the plaintiff to fill this order. They only had fifty pounds of the foil on hand. The defendant, being informed of this fact, directed White, by a subsequent letter, to ship the fifty pounds and “to order two hundred pounds, thirty-four sheets to the pound, thirty-five cents.” The fifty pounds shipped were received and proved satisfactory. On April 18, 1888, the defendant wrote White, “What about the two hundred pounds of tin foil we ordered at the same time you had fifty pounds, twelve by thirty-six, shipped us % As yet we have no invoice, and are about out. You wrote us you had ordered two hundred pounds twelve by twelve, and if it is coming we want to know it. And you may order three hundred pounds more to follow.” These orders were placed with the plaintiffs by White, who, not having on hand the foil of the description therein mentioned, ordered the same to be shipped defendant by an eastern manufacturer. It does not appear that the manufacturer was notified by the plaintiffs of the use for which the foil was intended The two hundred pounds were received by
I. The principle is elemental that, when a dealer contracts to supply an article in which he deals, to be applied to a particular purpose so that the buyer necessarily trusts to the judgment of the dealer, there is, in that case, an implied term of warranty, that it shall be reasonably fit for the purpose to which it is to be applied. In such case the buyer trusts to the dealer and relies upon his judgment. Benj. on Sales, secs. 987, 988; Oshkosh P. & P. Co. v. Ins. Oo., 81 Fed. Rep. 200; Brown v. Edgington, 2 Man & G. 279; Dutton v. Gorrish, 9 Cush. 89. We see no reason why this just principle is not applicable to this case. The defendant directed its commission merchant, White, to purchase tin foil to be used in its business of manufacturing tobacco. It does not appear that it then had any business or other acquaintance with plaintiffs. The first letter of defendant to White, which is referred to, but does not, as has been already stated, appear in the evidence,
II. While the defendant was not bound to accept the three hundred pounds of bottlers’ foil, still, if he kept it, and did not return, or offer to return it, within a reasonable time after he discovered its worthlessness, he could not plead a total failure of consideration when sued for the contract price, unless it was totally valueless for every other purpose. Brown v. Weldon, 99 Mo.