33 Mo. App. 388 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1889
delivered the opinion of-the court.
This action is brought to recover the sum of two hundred and ninety dollars, being the price which the defendant agreed to pay to plaintiff for placing in his house a furnace of a certain description. The contract contained a guarantee that the furnace, when completed, would heat all parts of the house supplied with registers, at the same time, to eighty degrees Fahrenheit, with the outside temperature at zero, with either hard or soft coal. It further provided that no payment should become due or be demanded until a trial of the furnace should be made to the satisfaction of the defendant, and that if the furnace should fail in any point to meet the guarantee, the plaintiff would remove the same from the defendant’s house without expense to him. The petition alleged performance of the contract, by placing in the defendant’s house a furnace of the description therein named, but excused the performance of the guarantee that it should heat all parts of the house at the same time to eighty degrees Fahrenheit, with the allegation that the defendant prevented the plaintiff from setting the furnace so that it would thus heat the house. The answer, after a general denial, “except as hereinafter expressly admitted,” set out the contract, admitted that a furnace of a certain description was by the plaintiff placed in the defendant’s house,
The contract provided that all pipes should be of “X bright tin.” There was no substantial evidence that any of the pipes were made of “X bright tin.” There was evidence that the supply-pipes conducting the hot air from the furnace to portions of the house were made of a quality of tin known as “I 0 tin”, which is of an inferior quality to “X bright tin”, and this evidence was not rebutted by the plaintiff. The evidence, moreover, indisputably showed that the pipe which introduced the cold air from the outside was not made of tin at all, but was made of galvanized iron. The evidence also showed that the furnace failed to comply with the guarantee, and that the defendant had been obliged for that reason to remove it from his house and to heat his house with grates, But the plaintiff gave evidence tending to show that the reason why the furnace developed no better heating power was that the defendant refused permission to the plaintiff’s workmen to cut new holes for the insertion of the hot-air pipes so as to give them that upward slope which was required in order to give the hot air a sufficiently rapid movement from the furnace to the portions of the house intended to be heated ; and the defendant’s evidence was more or less to the contrary. We shall not go into this element of the case, although it was the principal struggle
At the close of the whole case, the defendant requested an instruction in the nature of a demurrer to the evidence, which was refused. It is now insisted that he was entitled to this instruction, because the evidence indisputably showed that the furnace which was placed in the defendant’s house was'not of the description required by the contract, in that the heat-pipes were not of “X bright tin”, and in that the cold-air pipe was not of tin at all. The court submitted the case to the jury upon an instruction which authorized them to find for the defendant if they should find that the hot-air pipes were not of the quality of “X bright tin”, but did not instruct them that they should also find for the defendant if they should find that the cold-air pipe was not made of “X bright tin.” A compliance with the terms of the contract in these particulars was a condition precedent to the right of the plaintiff to recover, as there was no testimony tending to show that the defendant in any way prevented him from so complying with it. Egerman v. Mount Sinai Cemetery Ass'n, 61 Mo. 490. The defendant was therefore entitled to his instruction that the plaintiff could not recover, and the court therefore erred in submitting to the jury the question whether the hot-air pipes were made of “X bright tin”, when there was no evidence tending to show that they were made of such tin, and when the evidence speaking upon the question was to the contrary, — the burden of showing that they were so made being upon plaintiff. This conclusion is sought to be avoided on the ground that it is admitted in the answer that the furnace which was placed in the defendant’s house conformed to the requirements of the contract, except in respect of the guarantee. We are of opinion, reading the petition and answer together, that a fair interpretation of the answer does not show that it makes- such an
The judgment will be reversed and the cause remanded.