33 Minn. 98 | Minn. | 1885
In July, 1878, the plaintiff purchased of an agent of defendants a harvesting-machine known as the “Osborne Self-binder,” which he alleges was accompanied with an oral warranty of -its quality and capacity. The defendants were manufacturers, and the agent had control of the sale of their farm machinery for the vicinity. The making of such warranty is denied by the defendants, and they allege in their answer that the machine was purchased subject to a written warranty, which is set out therein, and is similar to the one which was construed by this court in Tunell v. Osborne, 31 Minn. 343. The plaintiff introduced, without objection, evidence tending to prove the alleged oral warranty. On the part of defendants, their agent testified that he sold the machine on trial,
1. The defendants claim that they were bound by the terms of such printed warranty only, and insist that this testimony of the witness was competent and proper evidence, to be considered by the jury, of a general and universal custom among machine companies to sell with a published printed warranty, and they accordingly asked the court to instruct the jury, in substance, that if they so found, then the company was not liable upon oral warranties by agents in excess of their authority; and if the agent was acting under a contract which defined or limited his authority as an agent for special and particular purposes only, the plaintiff was bound thereby, and defendant was not liable upon a contract of its agent in excess of such authority. Such instructions were properly refused by the court. The evidence of the usage of two companies within the knowledge of the witness— how long continued it did not appear — was insufficient to support a finding by the jury of a general usage or custom binding on the plaintiff, in the absence of evidence of any actual knowledge on the subject by him. Winsor v. Dillaway, 4 Met. 221; Janney v. Boyd, 30 Minn. 319; Taylor v. Mueller, 30 Minn. 343. The effect of such custom as a limitation upon the authority of the agent, is not, therefore, considered.
3. The objection to the plaintiff’s evidence of the condition and working of the machine subsequent to the first year, considering also that it was still kept in use by him, went rather to its weight than competency. This question, as well as that of the care and skill exercised in its management by plaintiff, was for the jury. If the evidence of the plaintiff and his witnesses is to be believed, the machine worked badly from the first, and was intrinsically defective, and in need of frequent repairs. We cannot say, therefore, though the damages appear large and the jury have found the machine of.littie value, that the verdict is unsupported, or that the trial court erred in refusing a new trial for excessive damages. Had a new trial been granted on such grounds, we should, doubtless, have regarded it a proper exercise of discretion by that court; but in this court, where the strict legal rights of the parties are to be determined, it is not sufficient that in our view a different and perhaps better result might have been reached. Massoth v. Delaware & Hudson Canal Co., 64 N. Y. 524, 531; Karsen v. Milwaukee & St. P. Ry. Co., 29 Minn. 12.
Order affirmed.