150 Mich. 118 | Mich. | 1907
(after stating the facts).
At the. request of defendant, plaintiff sent to it a description of the motor and the transmission. This description is quite lengthy, but I find nothing in it which can be construed into a warranty. These oral statements the judge instructed the jury were conditions precedent, and. that while there was no express warranty, there was in implied one that the engines and transmissions should be. merchantable in quality and reasonably fit for the use for-which they were intended. The court explained this, principle at great length to the jury, and left it to them as a question of fact to determine whether the motors and, transmissions furnished were in accordance with the contract as contained in the order and the oral representations. The charge of the court upon this branch of the. case was clear and explicit, and was all to which the defendant was entitled.
The court at great length also instructed the jury upon, this question. He also instructed them as follows:
“ If you believe from the evidence in this case that the-defendant was compelled to replace all of the eight motors and transmissions furnished to it by the plaintiff by reason of poor workmanship, defective material or defects entering into the construction of the same, and if you believe that the defendant had not had the opportunity for inspection, or, having made a reasonable inspection, did not discover such defects, then and in that event, if you.*123 further believe that the same were wholly lost to the defendant and useless to it in its business, the plaintiff could not recover against the defendant. * * *
“If the Reid Manufacturing Co. inspected motors and transmissions as they were received, and gave them a proper test, and such test did not disclose some of the defects complained of, and the same were not discovered until after the motors and transmissions were installed in automobiles and sold to customers, it was not the duty of the Reid Manufacturing Co. to return such motors and transmissions, and by so using them defendant did not waive or lose its right to recoup damages against the plaintiff for such defects.”
The court further instructed the jury that the machines-were not delivered within the time provided for in the contracts, and that the plaintiff was liable in damages for such delay, unless the delay had been waived by the defendant, and added:
“ The mere acceptance of the motors and transmissions, after the time specified, would not of itself, waive the claim for damages for delay by the defendant.
“The Reid Company had the right to require the Buick Co. to deliver the motors and transmissions ordered after the time had passed, and by exercising its rights and insisting on the delivery of motors and transmissions after such time, the Reid Co. did not waive its rights to whatever damages it suffered by the delay.”
These instructions, while mainly clothed in the language of the circuit judge, were in effect the same as those preferred in the requests of counsel. Part of them were in the exact language.
It was the clear duty of the defendant, under the repeated decisions of this court, to examine and test the-machines as they were delivered. It waived any defects discoverable by reasonable inspection and those which it-did discover but accepted the goods after such discovery. It did not waive latent defects. Talbot Paving Co. v. Gorman, 103 Mich. 403 (27 L. R. A. 96); Williams v. Robb, 104 Mich. 247; Day Leather Co. v. Michigan-Leather Co., 141 Mich. 533; Industrial Works v. Mitchell, 114 Mich. 29.
3. The verdict of the jury is conclusive that they did not reach or consider the question . of damages. Their verdict was for the full amount claimed. They must therefore have found either that the machines were such as the contracts called for, or that defects and delays were waived. It therefore becomes • unnecessary to discuss and determine the questions raised as to the measure of damages.
Judgment affirmed.