8 Mont. 380 | Mont. | 1889
The appellant, who was the plaintiff below, brought an action against the respondents before a justice of the peace of Gallatin County upon a promissory note, for the sum of two hundred and seventy-two dollars, dated November 22, 1886, payable to W. S. De Lancy ninety days aft.er date. The plaintiff below filed a complaint setting out the note sued on. To this there is no exception. The respondents filed an answer, which, after admitting that they executed and delivered the note sued on, proceeded to state that it was given for an “ undivided half interest in a certain drove of stock cattle thereafter to be delivered by the plaintiff to them, which at the time plaintiff falsely represented to them that he was the owner of, and thereby, and without consideration, they were induced to make said note to him for the purchase price of said cattle, and that said representations were false, and that plaintiff never was the owner of said cattle, or any number or portion thereof, nor did he have any beneficial interest therein, and that they were misled by said false misrepresentations, and had never received said cattle, or any of them, and that the plaintiff has failed, refused, and neglected to deliver said cattle to them.” The cause was tried by the court without a jury, who found in favor of the respondents, upon the ground that there was a failure of consideration. Motion for a new trial was made and overruled, and an appeal taken to this court. ,
The first objection made by the appellant is as to the sufficiency of the answer, it being contended by him that to maintain the defense of a failure of consideration by reason of a failure ,of title, it must appear that the plaintiff wa.s guilty of fraud or deceit, or that there was a warranty of the title to the cattle, either express or implied, and that the answer does not aver either. An inspection of the answer, the substance of which is given above, shows that it is insufficient for the purpose of either defense, that is, of fraud or warranty. The averment that the representation that the plaintiff was the owner of the cattle was false, or that he falsely represented that he was the owner of the
The court found twelve special findings of fact and two conclusions of law. The substance of the findings of fact are as follows, to wit: That the respondents executed the joint note sued on as stated in the complaint; that the note was given as the purchase price of De Lancy’s interest in the “F” brand of cattle, on the range in Gallatin County; that De Lancy represented to the respondents that he owned a half interest in the brand; that at the time of the sale he turned over to respondents a bill of sale from one Scribner to himself, of an interest in the cattle, but did not mention any particular interest; that the
It is insisted on the part of the appellant, that inasmuch as the court found that the respondents purchased of De Laney a one-half interest in the “ F” brand of cattle, and that the defense rests upon a failure of title, the question of warranty necessarily arises. In this we agree with him, and think that the court erred in holding that there was no question of warranty in the case. In the absence of fraud or deceit in the sale of personal chattels, the right of the purchaser to rely upon a failure of consideration, by reason of a failure of title, depends upon whether the purchase was made under such circumstances that the seller expressly warrants the title, or the law implies a warranty thereof. Of course where there is an express warranty, and there is a total failure of title, and in consequence a breach of said warranty, it necessarily results that there is a total failure of consideration, and this will be a good defense to an action brought for the recovery of the purchase price of the goods sold. Mr. Benjamin on Sales, page 583, section 627, second American edition, says, in speaking of the ancient Fnglish law: “It is well settled that in an executory agreement the vendor warrants by implication his title in the goods which he promises to sell. Plainly, nothing could be more untenable than the pretension, that if A promised to sell one hundred quarts of wheat to B, the contract would be fulfilled by the transfer, not of the property in the wheat, but of the possession of another man’s wheat. Secondly, it is also universally conceded that in the sale of an ascertained specific chattel, an affirmation. by the vendor that the chattel is
While we think the English doctrine is better than the American, still we adhere to the latter, as it is so universally adopted throughout the States of the American Union. It follows,
. The costs of this appeal will be paid by the respondents.
Judgment reversed.