34 Ind. App. 259 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1904
The appellee sued the appellants for the cancelation of certain promissory notes and a chattel mortgage executed by him to the appellant The E. T. Kenney Company. The demurrer of the appellants to the complaint for want of sufficient facts was overruled.
The complaint showed that the appellee, a fanner, and engaged in raising corn, executed his written order to the appellants for the purchase of a certain machine known as the “Janney Common Sense Corn-Husker,” made for the purpose of husking corn, and cutting and grinding the cornstalks into small particles for feeding live stock. The order was set out in the body of the complaint. It is of great length, and only the portions thereof necessary for the illustration of the dispute of counsel relating to the sufficiency of the complaint will be specially noticed. It was dated at Star City, Indiana, signed by the appellee, and addressed to the appellant A. W. Hartman, at that place, as agent; and he was thereby requested to furnish or ship for and to the appellee, about October 1, 1902, to that place, in care of Hartman, agent, such a com-husker, named and described, for the price of $525. The appellee agreed to receive it subject to the conditions stated in the order, and to pay therefor that price by giving his three promissory notes for $115 each, and his chattel mortgage, described. The order was therein expressly made subject to the acceptance of The E. T. Kenney Company at its home office at Indianapolis, Indiana. In a portion of the order it was stated that the com-husker was “warranted to be well made, of good material, and, with proper use and management, to do as good
It was alleged in the complaint that, upon the execution of the order, tbe appellants delivered the husker to the appellee, who thereupon executed the notes, for which such husker, when complying with the warranties and conditions set forth in the order, was the sole consideration, and also executed the mortgage mentioned to secure the payment of the notes. It was alleged that the whole consideration for the notes and mortgage had failed, in that the machine for which they were given had wholly failed to husk com properly ; that it shelled a great quantity of the corn; that it was improperly constructed, so that certaip parts of the machinery necessary to operate it, to wit, the cogwheel, snapping roller, shucking rolls and belt-tightener, constantly broke, and rendered it impossible to use the machine for husking com; that the appellee repeatedly notified the appellants of such failure of the machine to work successfully, and of the breakage of such parts thereof, and the appellants unsuc
It was alleged in the complaint that the appellants failed and refused to surrender the notes, and wholly failed to furnish or tender such a machine. It was not required by the contract that the buyer should demand another machino; it devolved upon the seller to exercise its option to furnish it, or to return the notes; and, the buyer having shown the performance bv him of what was required of him, the burden was upon the seller to show that it furnished another husker, or ivas ready and willing to do so, and tendered it, or offered to do so,, but was prevented or relieved from obligation to do so by the refusal of the buyer to, accept another machine, or that it exercised its alternative right to return the notes given for the purchase money; otherwise, a cause of action existed for the cancelation of the notes retained by the appellants. It was upon the doing of one or the other of these things that “no, further claim” was to be made. Skeen v. Springfield Engine, etc., Co. (1889), 34 Mo. App. 485. There was not here merely an offer to surrender the machine to, the seller upon condition that the buyer’s notes be surrendered. The surrender was unconditional, and the machine was accepted back, and the buyer’s demand for the surrender of his notes did not make the.
In view of the express finding that the defendant company never, by itself or its- agent, made any offer to furnish the appellee a new machine until some time after the return of the purchased busker and after the commencement of this suit, we can not say that a conclusion of law in favor of the appellee was erroneous.
Judgment affirmed.