60 Mich. 397 | Mich. | 1886
On May 1, 1883, one W. D. McLaughlin, as agent for plaintiff, took from the defendant the following order:
“ Gratiot, Mich., May 2, 1883.
“To Charles Grieb, Port Huron, Mich.: You will please shij) me, on or about the first day of June, 1883, one Buckeye light mower, to Port Huron, for which I agree to pay you $77, in manner as follows (reserving, however, the fnil benefit of the warranty hereon indorsed): $35 cash, with freight from Port Huron, on delivery, and execute approved ■notes as follows : $35, payable on the first day of January, 1884, with interest at 7 per cent, from delivery; $42, payable on the first day of January, 1885, with interest at 7 per cent, from delivery ; $-, payable on the-day of -, 188 — , with interest at 7 per cent, from delivery. For the purpose of obtaining credit for the above, I certify*399 that I own, in my own name, —— acres of land in the township of Gratiot, county of St. Clair, and State of Michigan, of which 80 acres are improved, and the whole worth, at a fair valuation, $5,000 over and above all incumbrances, liabilities, and legal exemptions. It is not incumbered, except 1,000 dollars, and the title is perfect. I also own $500 worth ■of personal property over and above all indebtedness, and not exempt from execution by law. ,
“P. O. address, Port Huron.
“ Taken by W. D. McLaughlin, Agent.-
His
“ Chas, x Cole.”
Mark.
Across the back of which was printed a blank warranty, with Grieb’s printed name appended, as follows:
“ Whereas, Mr.-has this day given us his order for a-; we hereby agree, in consideration of said order and the faithful performance of the conditions herein mentioned, to warrant said-one year to be good and well made, and to do as good work as any other machine of its class.
“ It is an express condition of this warranty that the directions for using this machine shall be faithfully followed, and if for any reason it fails to perform as warranted, immediate notice of the same must be communicated to the agent to whom the order is given, and if said agent should fail to make the machine perform as warranted, it may be returned, and money or note refunded. And it is also agreed, should the machine be used from day to day or at intervals, or set aside before or after use, without giving said agent notice, then, in either of said cases, it shall be conclusive evidence that the machine is accepted and the warrant is at mi end.
“ Dated--.
“Charles Grieb.”
The agent delivered this so-called order to the plaintiff, who claims that he accepted it, and delivered to the defendant the said machine on the eighteenth day of July, 1883, but the defendant has neither paid for said machine, nor executed and delivered the notes; and after the time expired when the note for $35 mentioned in the order would have matured had it been executed, the plaintiff brought suit in justice’s court to recover the amount claimed to be due at that time.
The plea was the general issue.
It is always proper, in construing a contract, to talte into consideration the position which the parties occupied, and the circumstances under which the agreement was entered into.
The plaintiff resided at Port Huron, and was engaged in the business of supplying mowing-machines to farmers. He was not a manufacturer, but took written orders, and purchased the machines to fill such orders.
Defendant is a farmer, residing in the vicinity of Port Huron, and on the second day of May, 1883, signed the order above set out, and delivered it to plaintiff’s agent.
On the trial the plaintiff offered in evidence the aforesaid order, and warranty thereon indorsed, to which the defendant objected because not admissible under the declaration, and as immaterial to the issue. The objection was overruled, and this constitutes defendant’s first assignment of error.
This objection is based upon the idea that the paper is incomplete; that the order refers to the warranty on the back, and reserves the full benefit of such warranty, and it appears that the blanks in the warranty were not filled out;, and it is claimed, and I think rightly, that the warranty indorsed must be of such legal validity as to support an action thereon by Cole in case of a breach thereof.
By reference to the warranty indorsed, it will be observed that the name of Mr. Cole, and the description of the machine ordered, are omitted, as well as the date. If the warranty stood alone, there could be no doubt that it would be so far incomplete as to render it invalid, because thus standing it lacks the essential qualities of naming the party to be indemnified and the subject-matter. It does not appear from it whether the machine is a steam-thresher or a mowing-machine.
But the reference in the order to the warranty indorsed
The warrantor is bound by the printed signature which he adopts as his, as fully as if it was in his handwriting.
The order and warranty were properly admitted in evidence at that stage of the case.
The plaintiff gave evidence tending to show that he had complied with the contract on his part, and had delivered the machine at Port Huron within the terms and meaning of the contract, and also had requested defendant to execute the notes, and that defendant declined to accept such delivery, or to execute and deliver the notes. The. fact of delivery was controverted by defendant.
The defendant also offered testimony tending to show that the 'mower which plaintiff claimed to have delivered to-defendant was. a second-hand machine, showing considerable-wear ; that the worn parts had been stripped and filled with paint in the wood-work, and parts of it had been painted over after having been used and worn ; that the axles had old grease upon them, one set of knives were chipped and broken, and the tongue and neck-yoke considerably worn; that the entire machine.had been used one season somewhat: but the court, on objection of plaintiff’s counsel, excluded this evidence as not admissible under the plea, and not tending to show the condition of the machine when delivered. The latter portion of this ruling was based upon the fact that the witnesses by whom these facts were sought to be proved did not make the examination of the machine until after the trial in the justice’s court in April, 1884. The evidence, however, showed that on the twenty-first of July, 1883, which was three days after plaintiff claims to have sent the machine to defendant’s farm and demanded the
The court erred also in excluding the evidence upon the •other ground stated. It was proper for the defendant, under the plea of the general issue, to prove that the article •delivered was not the article he purchased. He did not ■order or purchase a second-hand mowing-machine, or one that had been in use and worn ; but the order, taken in ■connection with the circumstances under which it was made, called for a new machine. A purchase of a machine from a dealer implies that the machine sold shall be new — that is, not second-hand, or the worse for wear — and under such an •order the dealer could not impose upon the purchaser a second-hand and worn article, whether it complied with the ’terms of the warranty or not as to being good and well ■made, and will do as good work as any other machine of its •class.
This evidence, if believed, fairly met and rebutted the plaintiff’s case, and tended directly to sustain the defendant’s plea, which put in issue each and every allegation of the plaintiff’s declaration : Rodman v. Guilford, 112 Mass. 405.
The judgment must be reversed, and a new trial ordered.