The evidence demands a finding that the property for the value of which this action is brought was not purchased from the defendant by the plaintiff, for which reason he cannot maintain an action against this defendant for breach of warranty in failing to deliver certain items of machinery and cannot recover for storage charges which had been incurred at the defendant’s order prior to delivery of the equipment to him.
John M. Hausman testified that his corporation, Akron Rubber Machinery Company, Inc., was in the business of buying and selling used machinery; that he informed Mr. Dismuke of certain machinery which the Dayton Rubber Company had for sale because he knew that Mr. Dismuke, as president and owner of D. & J. Sales & Service Co. was interested in purchasing equipment of this- type; that about April 9, 1958, they went together to inspect this equipment at the plant and Dismuke agreed to purchase it provided he could borrow the money to do so; that with the aid of Hausman, D. & J. Sales & Service
T. T. Thompson, an officer of the Dayton Rubber Company, testified that he orally agreed to sell the machinery to Akron Rubber & Machinery Company on April 10, by telephone conversation for an agreed price of $20,000, that it received Akron’s check in payment on May 14, and then released the machinery, which had been held in storage with Youngblood Truck Lines, for delivery to the plaintiff on the next day, as per Hausman’s instructions. In the meantime, Dayton had notified Akron Rubber & Machinery Company of the storage costs and had been advised by Hausman that these would be assumed by D. &. J. Sales Company. On May 6, Dayton Rubber Company notified Dismuke regarding these costs. Thompson, who acted for Dayton Rubber Company in the matter, had no dealings whatever with Dismuke, and Dismuke admitted that on the occasion when the three men inspected the equipment Thompson refused to quote prices to him.
It is uncontested that Dismuke never had any direct dealing with Thompson or any other official of Dayton Rubber Company concerning the purchase of the machinery in question, and that no agreement was ever entered into between them. It is the plaintiff’s contention, however, that Hausman was acting solely as his agent or broker in the transaction and that Haus
The testimony of the plaintiff, which is the only testimony in the record in favor of the proposition that he as an individual purchased the property directly from the defendant, is not sufficient to make a jury issue on this question. Although he sued under an alleged oral agreement of May 1, he admitted that as late as May 9, he had no title to the property. On the same day that the money to pay the purchase price was borrowed, D. & J. Sales Company, by the plaintiff as president, executed a conditional-sale contract reciting that this corpora
The trial court erred in denying the defendant’s motion for a judgment notwithstanding the verdict.
Judgment reversed.
