82 Mo. App. 632 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1900
This is an action to recover on two promissory notes executed by the defendant fox the purchase price of a certain harvesting machine which the plaintiff sold to defendant in the summer of 1885. The defense pleaded was that the machine was wholly worthless for the purpose for which it was sold and also that plaintiff promised to make it do good work by the beginning of the harvest season of 1886, which was not done.
It seems that in May or June, 1885, just before the wheat harvest of that year, the defendant took the machine to his farm on trial. He used it during the harvest of that year, though the evidence tends to prove that it worked badly. After the season had passed, that is, in August, 1885, the agent for the company went to the defendant and induced him to keep the machine, he, the defendant, at the time executing two notes of $90 each (which covered the contract price) one due August 1, 1886, and the other due August 1, 1887, and the agent at the same time gave to defendant this writing:
“August 17, 1885.
“I hereby agree that we will fix the Buckeye Elevator Binder sold to Mir. J. A. Hunter, so that it will bind and do good work at the commencement of the next harvest.
(Signed) “Nick Johnson, G. A.”
The machine was used again in the season of 1886, but according to defendant’s evidence worked very poorly. However, the defendant seems to have made a small payment on one of the notes and this was renewed in May, 1887, for a balance of $61. The evidence shows that at the request of plaintiff’s agents and their promises from time to' time to make the machine work, the defendant continued to use it, but the same proved worthless until it was cast aside and defendant secured another of different make. On evidence tending to prove the foregoing facts the case was submitted to the jury, resulting in a finding and judgment for defendant, and plaintiff brought the case here by writ of error.
Ve think there is no merit in this contention, and that the trial judge properly told the jury that by the sale of the machine the law implied a warranty on the part of the vendor that said harvester was reasonably fit for the purposes for which it was sold, and that in so far as it fell short of this warranty its diminution in value should go to the reduction of the purchase price. The undertaking to repair, as contained in the writing of August 17, 1885, in no way supplanted the warranty which the law implied when the machine was delivered to defendant. Neither were these agreements in any way inconsistent. There is no reason why they may not both exist at the same time. By the sale of the machine there was an implied warranty that it was reasonably fit for the purpose for which the one party sold and the other party purchased it. It was subsequently discovered that the binder was imperfect and failed to do good work. The plaintiff, by its agent, then declared and promised by the writing that it would repair the machine before the next season so that it would answer the-original warranty and do good work. In Pavement Co. v. Smith, 17 Mo. App. 264, it was said: “The general rule denies an implied warranty as to any matter or particular which may be brought within the purview or intendment of the special warranty. But there may be an implied warranty so wholly independent of anything contemplated in the express' warranty as to stand by virtue of its own distinctive force.”
II. The evidence for defendant tended to prove (and the jury so found) that the machine was worth nothing over and above the amount which the defendant paid. That being so, then there was such a failure of consideration that plaintiff was not entitled to recover for the balance of the purchase price.
On the facts found by the jury, the judgment is for the right party and will be affirmed.