The opinion of the court was delivered by
This was an action to recover upon three promissory notes, amounting to $565.25, executed by Philip Miller in favor of C. Aultman & Co., on July 31, 1882, payable respectively in one, two and three years after date. The consideration for the notes was a threshing machine, which was warranted to be well made and to do good work, but whether the warranty was a written or verbal one, and what were all of its conditions, are disputed questions of fact. Miller tried to operate the machine for three weeks and failed, when he endeavored to rescind the contract, and returned the separator to the agent of plaintiff, who sold it. Several months afterward, the horse power was also returned. It is claimed that the machinery was accepted by the agent, and it appears that it was afterward sold to other parties by the same agent of plaintiff, who unsuccessfully endeavored to operate it, after which it was again returned to the plaintiff, when the agent is said to have admitted that it could not be operated, and was unfit for use as a thresher. The defense against the notes was, that there had been a rescission of the contract; and further, that one of the notes was barred by the statute of limitations, no action having been brought thereon until more than five years after its maturity. The trial resulted in a general verdict in favor of the defendant, and
The third instruction refused is not sufficiently material to require attention, and the fourth is fairly embraced in the charge that was given. Complaint is made of several of the instructions that were given, and among them the third, which we deem to be unobjectionable. The question whether the warranty was verbal or written was submitted to the jury, and they were told that if it was not found as represented and warranted, the defendant was entitled to rescind the contract, provided he notified the plaintiff or plaintiff’s agent, as required by the warranty, and returned the machine within the required time or within a reasonable time.
We find no error which would justify a reversal of the judgment, and hence it will be affirmed.