129 Mich. 209 | Mich. | 1901
The defendant was the owner of the steamer Darius Cole. Its office was in the city of Detroit. The complainant is engaged in the business of transporting passengers and freight between South Haven, in this State, and Chicago. In September, 1899, the complainant purchased of the defendant the steamer Darius Cole for the agreed price of $125,000, a portion of which was paid down, and the balance secured by a mortgage on the vessel. A preliminary contract was entered into on the 13th day of September, in which the defendant agreed that the Darius Cole was capable of running 15 miles per hour, under suitable conditions; and the bill of sale, executed a few days later, contained' a guaranty that the hull, machinery, and boiler of the boat were in sound and perfect condition, and that, “under suitable conditions, she is capable of running, and will run, 15 miles per hour.” The vessel was delivered to the complainant at South Haven in September, 1899. A defect was discovered in the boiler in March, 1900, when the boat was being fitted out for the season. The attention of the defendant was called to it, and the repairs were made at defendant’s expense; and the warranty, so far as it related to the condition of the boiler, was satisfied.
Complainant placed the boat on the line between South Haven and Chicago, and ran her during the season of
There was evidence of statements made by defendant’s officers as to the speed of this boat, in which the opinion was expressed that she would make 15 miles an hour, and in which the statement was made by one of the officers ( Mr. Lee) that his understanding was that she had made somewhat better than 16 miles an hour. There is no justification, upon this record, for any claim that the repre
The case presents the question, therefore (which is for the first time presented to this court squarely for decision), whether a contract of sale, accompanied by a warranty of quality, gives the purchaser the right to rescind for a breach of the warranty." Complainant’s counsel cite a large number of cases from this court where rescission has been permitted in case of false representations, and this though there was an absence of the scienter. But these cases rest upon the view which was expressed by the court in Webster v. Bailey, 31 Mich. 36, — that such representations, even though made without knowledge of their falsity, are tantamount, in legal effect, to a fraud. Such cannot be said of the representations in this case, for no fraud was perpetrated upon the complainant by means of these representations. They were not relied upon as a basis for the contract. We do not mean to be understood that, if there was an active fraud, it would be merged in the writing. But that is not this case. The most that can be claimed is that there were representations which proved to be untrue in fact, even if it be said that they amounted to more than an expression of an opinion. But complainant, so far from relying upon the representations, insisted upon a contract of warranty covering the identical ground.
“ Where a party gives no warranty, but is guilty of such fraud as vitiates the contract, it is clear enough that the effect of the fraud is to authorize its entire repudiation. The grievance is that the agreement as it turns out' is not the agreement which the party supposed he was making. But where a warranty is given, the legal effect is usually, if not universally, to make the stipulation stand as security for performance; and the injured party prosecutes his remedy upon it to enforce, and not to avoid, the agreement. While a right to return property which does not answer the assurance is not always or generally expressed or implied in the warranty, yet, if agreed upon, it is in no way inconsistent with a warranty.”
The next case in Michigan is that of Murphy v. McGraw, 74 Mich. 318 (41 N. W. 917). In that case the plaintiff was permitted to recover upon the breach of a warranty, upon the ground of total failure of consideration. The court, by Mr. Justice Long, said:
“Counsel for defendant have devoted much space in their brief to the consideration of the question that when there is a warranty as to quality on the sale of goods, but no fraud, and no stipulation that the goods may be returned, though the warranty be broken, the vendee can*214 not rescind the contract without the consent of the vendor; that a breach of warranty alone will not justify a return. This may be conceded as well settled as a general proposition, but there may be cases where a purchaser, without returning an article, may yet be allowed to recover its cost.”
And in Murphy v. McGraw a recovery was permitted upon the ground that the property purchased was absolutely without value.
The text-books upon this subject state the rule in accordance with the contention of defendant. 3 Mechem, Sales, § 816, states:
“It is the general rule, as will be more fully seen hereafter, that, in the absence of fraud, or an agreement to rescind, an executed and completed sale, as distinguished from the merely executory one, cannot be rescinded for a mere breach of warranty.”
The author states that in a few States, however, the right to rescind is asserted.
In Story, Sales (4th Ed.), § 431, the rule is stated as follows:
■ “In cases of warranty, where the whole of the goods bargained for are delivered, if there be neither a special agreement entitling the vendee to return the goods, nor an actual return and acceptance by the vendor, nor fraud, the right of the vendee to rescind the contract depends upon whether the contract has been executed, and the goods actually accepted by the vendee, or whether it is executory, and the goods have not been accepted by him. If the contract be executed, and the goods be completely accepted, so as to pass the property therein to the vendee, it is very generally held that he cannot elect to rescind the contract and return the goods, after actually receiving them, so as to entitle him to bring an action for money had and received, but he must declare specially on his warranty.”
So, in Benj. Sales (7th Ed.), § 887, it is stated:
“After the property in the specific chattel has passed to the buyer, it may happen that he discovers the goods bought to be different in kind or quality from that which*215 he had a right to expect, according to the agreement. In such case it is necessary to distinguish whether the defect be one in the performance of a condition or of a warranty. In the former case, he may refuse to accept the goods, and reject the contract, but not in the latter. The reason for this difference is that in the one case the contract itself depends on the performance of the condition precedent incumbent on the vendor, while in the other the principal contract has been performed, and the breach is only of the collateral undertaking of warranty.”
If we trace the origin of this doctrine, it is demonstrable that the few States which are said -to follow the Massachusetts rule, and permit rescission for a mere breach of warranty, are out of line. The English cases begin with two cases decided in 1778, — Power v. Wells, 2 Cowp. 818, and Weston v. Downes, 1 Doug. 23. In the first case it was held that an action for money had and received could not be maintained to recover the price paid for a horse warranted sound, and tendered back. This remained the unquestioned law until 1800, when, in Curtis v. Hannay, 3 Esp. 82, Lord Eldon held that if, upon the sale of a horse, it was warranted, and it afterwards turns out that the horse is unsound, the buyer may return the horse, and bring an action for the price. This case is approved by some of the cases cited by complainant’s counsel. But in 1831, in Street v. Blay, 2 Barn. & Adol. 456, which may be said to have become a leading case upon the subject, it was said by Lord Tenterden, C. J.:
“ It is, however, extremely difficult — indeed, impossible —to reconcile this doctrine with those cases in which it has been held that where the property in the specific chattel has passed to the vendee, and the price has been paid, he has no right, upon the breach of the warranty, to return the article and revest the property in the vendor, and recover the price as money paid on a consideration which has failed, but must sue upon the warranty, unless there has been a condition in the contract authorizing the return, or the vendor has received back the chattel, and has thereby consented to rescind the contract, or has been guilty of a fraud which destroys the contract altogether,” — citing Weston v. Downes and Power v. Wells, and saying:*216 “ If these cases are rightly decided, — and we think they are, and they certainly have been always acted upon, — it is clear that the purchaser cannot, by his own act alone, unless in the excepted cases above mentioned, revest the property in the seller, and recover the price, when paid, on the ground of the total failure of consideration; and it seems to follow that he cannot, by the same means, protect himself from the payment of the price on the same ground.”
See, also, Gompertz v. Denton, 1 Cromp. & M. 207.
In this country the doctrine of Street v. Blay has been generally followed. See Gillespie v. Torrance, 25 N. Y. 310 (82 Am. Dec. 355), and cases cited; Freyman v. Knecht, 78 Pa. St. 144; Allen v. Anderson, 3 Humph. 583 (39 Am. Dec. 197); Lyon v. Bertram, 20 How. 154, citing with approval Thornton v. Wynn, 12 Wheat. 183; Trumbull v. O’Hara, 71 Conn. 180 (41 Atl. 546); Matteson v. Holt, 45 Vt. 341, and cases cited; Wright v. Davenport, 44 Tex. 164; Lynch v. Curfman, 65 Minn. 174 (68 N. W. 5); Hoover v. Sidener, 98 Ind. 293; Woodruff v. Graddy, 91 Ga. 335 (17 S. E. 264, 44 Am. St. Rep. 33); Owens v. Sturges, 67 Ill. 367, 368; Lightburn v. Cooper, 1 Dana, 273; Woodward v. Emmons, 61 N. J. Law, 285 (39 Atl. 703).
The cases are collated and reviewed in 1 Smith, Lead. Cas., under the case of Chandelor v. Lopus, at page 353 (*275), in which it is stated:
“A failure to perform an executory contract on one side may invalidate the obligation on the other; but a warranty is essentially a collateral and independent stipulation, attending on the agreement, and surviving its execution. It is accordingly well settled that a mere breach of warranty, unattended by fraud, does not entitle the vendee to rescind the contract or return the goods.”
And at page 326 (*257), after treating of the sale of goods by sample, the authors say:
‘ ‘ But there is this difference between such a warranty and an express warranty of a specific chattel in esse, which the buyer has had an opportunity to inspect before*217 receiving it: In the latter case he cannot effectually tender back or return the goods, so as to obtain a defense in an action for the price, unless there be a condition in the contract authorizing the return, or the' seller has been guilty of a fraud which destroys the contract altogether,” —citing Street v. Blay and other cases.
We think that Street v. Blay states the logical rule. We find ourselves at liberty to follow it, and therefore hold that this complainant had not the right to rescind the contract when the attempt to do so was made. We need not, therefore, discuss another question, which impresses us as at least very doubtful, namely, whether, if complainant had that right, it has not waived it, after discovering that the vessel did not answer the terms of the warranty.
The decree will be reversed and the bill dismissed, without prejudice, with costs of both courts to defendant.