Franklin Motor Car Co. v. Ratliff

92 So. 449 | Ala. | 1922

Plaintiff, the Franklin Motor Car Company, sold an automobile to defendant, reserving title to secure deferred payments on the purchase price. Defendant made default in payment, and plaintiff brought statutory detinue to recover the machine. Under authority of section 3789 of the Code defendant filed his suggestion requiring the jury to ascertain the unpaid balance of the purchase price of the machine, and also filed special pleas of recoupment 6 and 7, demurrers to which were overruled. In pursuance of the suggestion the jury found a small balance due from defendant to plaintiff, which, within 30 days, was paid to the clerk of the court for plaintiff. Plaintiff has appealed, and, as to the pleadings, assigns for error the rulings in favor of the special pleas noted above.

The pleas were sufficient. As to 6: An automobile is a machine. In the absence of *342 an express agreement as to warranty, the law implied a warranty on the part of the seller that the subject of this sale should be reasonably adapted to the uses for which it was made and sold — uses universally understood; that it should be a reasonably good automobile, its class and price considered; and, if it fell below this standard, there was a breach of this implied warranty. Snow v. Schomacker Mfg. Co., 69 Ala. 111, 44 Am. Rep. 509; 11 Mich. Dig. p. 708, §§ 217(1), (2).

This plea, alleging that various vital parts of the automobile (named in the plea) had been badly damaged between the time of the contract of sale and delivery to defendant, rendering the car of little value, to the damage of defendant, etc., stated, as for any ground of demurrer assigned, a good cause of recoupment. Plea 7 alleged an express warranty that the automobile was free from defects in material and workmanship, and that vital parts thereof were not free from defects and workmanship in this: The axle was defective, the differential and the clutch were defective, etc., to defendant's damage, etc., and these averments sufficiently described the defects in the machine.

Plaintiff's evidence went to show an agreement in writing between the parties, "comprising the entire agreement pertaining to this purchase," and containing the stipulation that —

"The only guaranty under which this car is sold is the regular standard automobile manufacturer's guaranty."

It appeared that the manufacturer's warranty was as follows:

"We warrant each new motor vehicle manufactured by us to be free from defects in material and workmanship under normal use and service, our obligation under this warranty being limited to making good at our factory any part or parts thereof which shall, within ninety (90) days after delivery of such vehicle to the original purchaser, be returned to us with transportation charges paid, and which our examination shall disclose to our satisfaction to have been defective," etc.

Defendant was permitted, over plaintiff's objection and exception, to show that, while the car in question was being driven by an agent of plaintiff from Birmingham to Gadsden for delivery to defendant at the place last mentioned, it had been driven into a ditch, causing the various injuries upon which defendant counted in his pleas of recoupment. In this there was no error. It is true that the parties, at the time of the contract of sale, entered into an exclusive covenant of warranty as to the condition of the machine; but this, according to our view, did not exclude the warranty, implied by every consideration of common honesty and intelligence, that, so far at least as concerned anything done or suffered by plaintiff while the car was yet in its possession, the condition of the car upon delivery should be the same as at the time of the contract of sale.

On the whole evidence plaintiff was not entitled to the affirmative charge against pleas 6 and 7. To notice some of the grounds on which the argument for these propositions is based:

Plaintiff undertook in the end to deliver the car to defendant in Gadsden, whatever may have been the contemplation of the parties at the time they entered into the written contract, and the plaintiff preferred and procured that the delivery should be made by its own agent. Evidence to this effect certainly supported the allegation of plea 6 as to the place where the car was to be delivered.

The testimony of Gallagher, an automobile mechanic who was in the car when it went through the bridge into the ditch, was that he examined the car and found that injuries, as alleged in the pleas, had been caused thereby, and that plaintiff's agent, driving the car, suggested that it was best not to inform defendant of the accident, and asked that he say nothing about it. From this the jury may have rightfully inferred that plaintiff's agent knew of the damage done to the car, substantially as alleged — if that was a material allegation of the plea.

Plea 7 was supported by the evidence out of which the law implied a warranty that the condition of the car had not changed between the time of the contract of sale and the time of delivery.

Most likely the damages awarded to defendant under his pleas of recoupment were excessive; but no motion for a review of the verdict in this or any other particular was made, and the trial court cannot be put in error for what it had no opportunity to correct.

Affirmed.

ANDERSON, C. J., and GARDNER and MILLER, JJ., concur. *343