35 N.W.2d 155 | Mich. | 1948
Plaintiffs sue for an amount due on contract for the manufacture and delivery to defendants of a mold. Defendants seek recoupment for damages occasioned by plaintiffs' alleged failure to manufacture the mold in accord with the terms of the agreement. From judgment for plaintiffs, defendants appeal.
Defendant Testori testified that he submitted a working model coil cleaner to plaintiff Yeager and asked if he could make a mold or die for the manufacture thereof which would work; that Yeager said he could; that plaintiffs quoted a price of $1,600 in writing and that defendants gave plaintiffs a written order therefor on that basis; that upon delivery the mold was defective and would not work, as a result of which defendants suffered damage.
Plaintiff Yeager testified that he had agreed to and that plaintiffs did build a mold in accord with designs and specifications submitted by defendants, but that he had not guaranteed that it would work.
Plaintiffs' written offer and defendant's written order are in evidence. Neither contains any mention of a warranty that the mold would work or provision as to which party should prepare and furnish the design for the mold.
Defendants contend that upon placing their order in response to plaintiffs' offer a contract resulted under which plaintiffs were required to design and build a workable mold; that plaintiffs thereafter declined to make the designs and requested defendants to furnish them, which they did; that the court's *197 admission and consideration of testimony that defendants agreed to and did furnish the specifications and designs constitute a varying of the terms of a written contract by parol evidence.
Inasmuch as plaintiffs' written offer and defendants' written order, which defendants rely upon as comprising, the entire contract, are silent on the question of who should furnish the design and, according to the testimony, there is no custom in the trade determinative of the question, admission of testimony to supply that portion of the contract not covered by the writings did not amount to varying the terms of the written contract by parol and was entirely proper. National Cash Register Co. v.Blumenthal,
Defendants claim an express warranty by plaintiff Yeager that the mold would work. No such warranty is expressed in the writings which defendants insist comprise the contract. To hold plaintiffs to an oral express warranty not contained in the writings would serve, indeed, to vary the terms of the written contract by parol, contrary to our holding in *198 Salzman v. Maldaver,
Defendants also claim an implied warranty that the mold would work. They rely on the provisions of 2 Comp. Laws 1929, § 9454 (Stat. Ann. § 19.255) and decisions of this Court, particularlyDunn Road Machinery Co. v. Charlevoix Abstract EngineeringCo.,
"It is well stated by Mr. Mechem, as follows:
"`The implied warranty of fitness is not to be extended to cases which lack the necessary conditions upon which it depends. The essence of the rule is, that the contract is executory; that the particular article is not designated by the buyer; that only his need is known; that he does not undertake or is not *199 able to determine what will best supply his need, and therefore necessarily leaves the seller to make the determination and take the risk; and if these elements are wanting, the rule does not apply. If, therefore, a known, described and defined article is agreed upon, and that known, described or defined article is furnished, there is no implied warranty of fitness even though the seller is the manufacturer and the buyer disclosed to him the purpose for which the article was purchased.' 2 Mechem, Sales, § 1349."
The trial court properly rejected defendants' theory of an implied warranty.
Defendants' motion for a new trial, on the ground that one of their witnesses, whose whereabouts was known at the time of the trial, could not be present on the date of the trial, was properly denied, defendants having requested no continuance on that account. Bosek v. Detroit United Railway,
Judgment affirmed, with costs to plaintiffs.
BUSHNELL, C.J., and SHARPE, BOYLES, REID, NORTH, BUTZEL, and CARR, JJ., concurred. *200