67 Iowa 355 | Iowa | 1885
The machine sold by plaintiffs to defendant was purchased and sold on the following warranty and agreement: “ * * * That it is well made, of good materials, and with proper management is caj>able of doing first-class work; that the purchaser shall have three days to give it a fair trial, and, if it should not work well, written notice, stating wherein it fails, is to be given to the agent from whom it is received, and to John- S. Davis’ Sons, Davenport, Iowa,
The contract also provides that defendant will pay $650 for the machine, as follows: “Cash, old machine, $150; note due December 1, 1883, $200; note due December 1, 1884, $200; note due December 1, 1885, $100.” Also, that said notes shall be secured by a chattel mortgage on the machine. AVhen defendant received the machine, lie executed and delivered the notes and mortgage provided for in the contract. The machine did not work in a satisfactory -manner, and defendant verbally notified the agent from whom he received it of the fact, and the agent telegraphed to plaintiffs asking them to send a man to fix the machine. Defendant also telegraphed them making the same request. Neither of these notices to plaintiffs informed them wherein the machine failed. They, however, in the course of a few days, sent a man to defendant’s place who undertook to run the machine; defendant furnishing the necessary help, also' furnishing grain to be threshed. But he was. not able on that day to make it work in a satisfactory manner, and there is evidence tending to prove that he declared that he could not make it do good work, and that he directed defendant to stack it up on his'place and let it remain there until he heard from plaintiffs. Also, that he státed that he would inform plaintiffs of the failure of the machine, and would endeavor to procure and return to defendant the notes which he gave for the machine. This attempt of the agent to make the
There is also evidence tending to show that defendant, on the first day on which the agent attempted to make the machine work, offered to accept another machine if plaintiffs would at once ship it to him at their cost, but that the agent then informed him that plaintiffs had no machine of the size of the one in question. The machine remained on defendant’s place for about two months after the trial, when defendant hauled it to the railroad station where he had received it, and notified plaintiffs of what he had done with it, and demanded the return of his notes. Plaintiffs, however, had transferred the notes to a third party, who afterwards foreclosed the chattel mortgage given for their security, realizing enough on the sale of the machine under the foreclosure proceedings to satisfy the note first falling due, and credit $53.78 on one of the other notes.
In the first division of his answer, defendant admitted the making of this contract, and admitted that plaintiffs had demanded the delivery of the old machine, and that he had refused to deliver it, but alleged that “ such demand and refusal was after an entire failure of the conditions of the warranty of the machine purchased from plaintiffs by defendant.” The language here quoted contains the only matter attempted to be pleaded as a defense to plaintiffs’ demand. The paragraph contains no statement of the conditions of the warranty, nor does it contain any specific statement of the failure of the warranty. It, however, admits the making of the contract as alleged in the petition, and it contains the general allegation that there was an entire failure of the conditions of the warranty. As plaintiffs made no question of the sufficiency of this pleading before the trial, if the failure of the warranty alone constituted a defense to their demand, they would not now b.e permitted to allege that such failure of warranty was not sufficiently pleaded. But the mere failure of the warranty does not constitute a defense. The contract provides that if the machine shall fail to comply with the warranty, plaintiffs shall be notified of this failure and "have an opportunity to remedy the defects, and that, if they are not able to make it comply with the warranty, they shall either furnish another machine or the sale shall be rescinded. Unless these provisions of the contract have been complied with or waived, defendant has no defense against the demand asserted by .plaintiff's. King v. Towsley, 64 Iowa, 75. But there was no attempt in this paragraph of the answer to plead either a compliance with or waiver of them. In the other divisions of the answer are pleaded the several counter-claims set up by defendant. A failure of the warranty and rescission of the contract are
We think the holding that plaintiffs had dispensed with the provision of the contract which requires that a written notice should be given them of the failure of the machine to work in a satisfactory manner is clearly correct. The provision was for their benefit. They are manufacturers of threshing-machines, and their object in inserting the provision in the contract doubtless was to secure to themselves such information with reference to the defects in the machine as would enable them to make provision at their manufactory for its repair before sending out an agent to make the repairs. When they were advised that the machine was not working
The ground of the holding is that, at the time the notice was given, the warranty, in contemplation of law, under its terms, had been fully performed, and the rights and liabilities of the parties had been fully settled. And, as the notice which had been given, and the acts which had been done by the vendor, were matters entirely outside of the contract, they could not have effect in determining the rights of the parties. But in the present case the warranty had not been performed when the notice was given. The rights and liabilities of the parties were not then settled, but plaintiffs were bound either to correct the defects in the machine, or permit the contract to be rescinded. It is very apparent that the rule
Nr VERSED.