73 Pa. Super. 419 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1920
Opinion by
The plaintiffs are engaged in the printing business and give their special attention to the printing of tickets and tags. They had been using Gordon printing presses, and desiring to enlarge the facilities of their plant, in order that they might more effectively compete with competitors in the same business, wished to secure a power automatic press. The defendant dealt in a machine known as Toledo Webb Press which included a slitter, 6 pairs heads, single rewind, two-color attachment, delivery table, long fountain, short fountain, rotary perforator with two pairs heads, 28-inch feed, and one punching unit comprising four heads of eight punches each. They proposed to lease to the plaintiffs a machine of this type which was valued at $2,123.50, which proposition was accepted by the plaintiffs. The lease provided for the payment of $200 when the order was given; $416.50 when the lease was signed and further payments running through a period of fifteen months, amounting in the aggregate to the valuation placed on the machine. The lease contained a provision permitting the lessees to buy the machine after the payment of the last installment referred to for a consideration of $1. The machine was installed in the plaintiffs’ plant by the defendants. Payments to the amount of $600.50 were made on the lease, and the lessees paid a freight bill of $16.98 when the machine was delivered at their place of business. This action was brought to recover the amount so paid; the allegation of the plaintiffs being that the machine was acquired for the express purpose of printing, slitting, punching and rewinding tickets and tags produced
No question of an alteration or reformation of a contract arises in the case. The plaintiffs’ action rests on the implied promises of the defendants to return the money received by them from the plaintiffs when the consideration therefor failed because of the unfitness of the thing leased.
The evidence covered by the third assignment was competent in connection with other testimony in the case to show that the machine did not perform the work satisfactorily. Under the averments in the statement of claim, it tended to support the plaintiffs’ action.
The assignments are overruled, and the judgment is affirmed.