Appellant brought suit against respondents to recover a judgment of $3,550, being the amount of three promissory notes given by respondents to Blewett Harvester Company. The court denied appellant any relief and ordered the notes canceled. The suit was originally begun by Blewett Harvester Company. Later it was thrown into bankruptcy and the trustee was substituted as plaintiff.
The facts are substantially as follows: In 1917, respondents were extensive wheat growers, and the harvester company wished to sell them one of its combined harvesters for $3,550. Its representative informed respondents that it had such a machine on the farm of a neighbor some miles from respondents’ place, and that such machine was practically a new one, but needed some repairs. At the request of the company, respondents, on the 9th or 10th day of August, 1917, obtained the machine from the neighboring farm and brought it to their own place. On that day, or possibly the day following, at the request of the agent of the company, respondents gave to it their written order for a new combined harvester, to be shipped to them from Pendleton, Oregon. This order was to become a contract of purchase when accepted by the company at its home office. The order further provided that, upon the arrival of the machinery, respondents should give their three promissory notes, each to be dated August 10, 1917, one falling due on the date of its execution, another in one year, and the third in two years from date, and these notes were to be secured by a chattel mortgage on the machinery ordered. The order further provided that the title should remain in the company until settlement was made, that the combined harvester was warranted to be made of good material and would do good work under favorable conditions, and
It appears from the evidence that the company had previously sold this particular harvester to the neighbor from whom respondents obtained it, but he had refused to keep it because it would not do satisfactory work. It further appears that, at that time, the machine was very much out of repair. Eespondents appear to have known that the machine needed some minor repairs, but were not acquainted with the fact
We are satisfied that there was no consideration for the notes sued on. According to the order or contract, they were not to be given until there was a delivery of the machinery; and, in our opinion, there never was any delivery thereof to respondents. All the parties knew that the harvester was out of repair, and that it would require certain expert work to put it in reasonably suitable condition. For this purpose the company sent its agent and expert to respondents’ place. All the time the machine was there, this expert was working on it and trying to get it in condition for delivery; and he finally gave up the task and directed that the machine be taken to the barn and surrendered to the company. During all of this time the machine was in the possession of the harvester company through its agent and expert. The testimony clearly shows that the first note,, which, according to its terms, was due on the day it was given, was not to be paid until the harvester was made to work properly. An officer of the company testified that respondents were willing to get the machine, “but wanted to get a good chance' to try it out for a few days before he actually paid the note—before the note became due.” Plainly, it was not in the minds of the parties that the machine was to be considered as delivered in the condition it was when the notes were given, or until it had been repaired and put in shape to do reasonably satisfactory work. This is shown by the facts: That the contract itself does not at all fit the facts of the case; that the machine was not a new one, and was not to be shipped from the factory as the contract provided; that it
Appellant argues, however, that the harvester could not have been in its possession, through its agent, because the company paid his wages for only the first two or three days that he was working with the machine and respondents paid them thereafter. This fact is, however, neither conclusive nor persuasive. The agent himself informed respondents that it was proper and customary for the purchaser to make payment to the expert or agent after the first two or three days. The conclusion to which we have thus come would require an affirmance of the judgment. But if it should be conceded that there had been a complete delivery of the harvester ■ and that the contract had been accepted and was in force, appellant is in no position to recover on the notes. Under the contract, respondents were entitled to have a machine which was made of good material and which would “do good work when properly operated under favorable circumstances ; ’ ’ and we find that they did not get such a machine.
But it is earnestly argued hv appellant that respondents are in no position to now claim that the harvester did not comply with the warranties, because they did not live up to that portion of the contract which pro
We are satisfied that the judgment of the trial court was correct. It is affirmed.
Holcomb, C. J., Fullerton, Tolman, and Mount, JJ., concur.
