124 Me. 138 | Me. | 1924
This is an action to recover damages for breach of warranty in the sale of commercial fertilizer, and comes up on motion and exceptions.
Sometime in the Spring of 1917 the plaintiff purchased from the International Agricultural Corporation, through its subsidiary, the Buffalo Fertilizer Works of Houlton, Maine, six (6) tons of commercial fertilizer, and used it in planting six acres of potatoes on his farm in Lagrange. The fertilizer was forwarded by the defendant in a two-car-load shipment to the Lagrange Farmers’ Union, which distributed it to the plaintiff and other customers from the cars at the Lagrange Depot. The fertilizer was shipped in barrel containers, each bearing on the outside a guarantee of contents as being four per cent, available ammonia, eight per cent, available
The plaintiff testified that he planted and cultivated his potatoes according to approved and customary methods but when the plants came through the ground they “was kind of goldish yellow right around the edge of the leaf” and “all kind of turned brown and died down.” He said the growth was very “pindling” and upon pulling up the plants the seed piece was in “good sound condition,” but there were “no fibre roots at all” and the main roots were “kind of yellowish and just stubs.” Substantially the same description of the plaintiff’s potatoes was given by three neighbors,' — one adding that the leaves when the plants were small were yellow around the edge and as they grew the yellow color extended over the leaf, and the last of July or first of August the plants were about all yellow and dead. This last witness also stated that the seed piece looked all right; he did not see any rotten seed, but did notice that the roots of the seed piece were short.
Alfred M. G. Soule, Chief Deputy of the State Department of Agriculture, called as an expert by the plaintiff, qualified by stating that since 1919 he had been making a special study of the effect of borax on potato growth and, for that purpose, had consulted all available literature on the subject, and in company with plant pathologists and soil chemists had examined and observed more than one hundred fields of potatoes and the varying effects of borax upon potato growth. He stated that ,the characteristic symptoms of borax poisoning of potatoes are: “The general appearance of the leaves shows a pronounced yellow effect, especially at the margin, a dwarfed appearance of the plant; a spindling appearance of the stalks, and the appearance below the ground shows a stunted appearance of the rootlets, and a burned appearance of the small roots — • fibrous roots; and a preserved effect, generally, of the seed piece — a dried, particularly dried, appearance of the seed piece.”
The defendant called to the stand, Edwin A. Rogers of Brunswick, a potato raiser of twenty-five to thirty years’ experience, and a writer upon the subject of potato culture, who stated that the yellowing of the leaves of potato plants is a common occurrence, and may be attributable to a too heavy or misapplied use of fertilizer. In support of this statement, he related his experience during the current year wherein an excessive amount of fertilizer was planted by error with the result that when the plants first came up there was a very marked yellowing of the margin of the leaves. He, however, states: “This condition did not last but a week or ten days, or we got a rain within
Other facts and circumstances were shown on the one side and the other which the parties claimed tended to support their respective contentions, but it is impracticable to extend our analysis of the evidence further. The issue was one of fact. If the defendant sold the plaintiff fertilizer of its own manufacture so debased with borax as to render it poisonous and harmful to growing potato plants, it sold an adulterated fertilizer within the provisions of R. S'., Chap. 38, Sec. 12, and the plaintiff is entitled to recover in this action the money value of his loss resulting from its use. This issue, together with the correct rule of damages, was clearly presented to the jury by the presiding Judge, and the jury found for the plaintiff. A careful study and consideration of all the evidence does not convince us that their findings ought to be set aside as manifestly wrong..
We are not unmindful of the recent decision of this court in Rogers v. Kendall, 122 Maine, 248. However, we think that case is to be clearly distinguished from the case at bar. In Rogers v. Kendall, the amount of borax' present was 6.6 pounds. The sole affirmative evidence in support of the plaintiff’s contentions was found in the opinion of an expert who stated that 6.6 pounds of borax per acre was deleterious to growing plants. This opinion was not only unsupported by experiment, test, or authority, but the expert’s own prior experiment had demonstrated that the application of 6.6 pounds of borax per acre to potatoes was beneficial rather than harmful. This opinion of the expert was properly characterized as
The Exceptions.
An exception was taken by the defendant to the admission of a hypothetical question propounded by counsel for the plaintiff. The objection when made at the trial was general and not specific, and while counsel now urge in argument that the hypothetical question embraced facts not in evidence, neither the bill of exceptions nor the evidence reported show that the objection was for that cause. To lay the foundation for an exception on that ground, the attention of the Judge should have been called to the specific ground of objection, so that he could determine whether there was sufficient evidence tending to prove the facts assumed. Powers v. Mitchell, 77 Maine, 369; Knight v. Overman Wheel Co., 174 Mass., 455. The exception, however, had it been properly taken, has no merit. An examination of the record disclosed that while counsel in forming the hypothetical question adopted language varying in slight degree from the exact form of expression used by the witnesses, the evidence introduced in the case before the hypothetical question was asked fairly tended to prove the facts assumed.
The defendant objected to the admission of an analysis of a sample of fertilizer purchased from the defendant by a neighbor on the grounds that the identity of the sample had not been established, and that the residue from which it was taken was insufficient to accurately represent the entire lot. The evidence discloses that the sample analyzed and the plaintiff’s fertilizer were both Buffalo 4-8-4 fertilizer, manufactured by the defendant and forwarded from its factory at Houlton in the same shipment. Both lots came out of
The defendant requested an instruction that it would not be liable in the absence-of fraud or deceit, which was refused and an exception reserved. The first count of the plaintiff’s declaration is not free from objection, but in substance it follows the approved precedents as laid down in Oliver’s Precedents, 188 et seq. The gravamen of the cause of action in this count is the breach of the defendant’s contract of warranty, and the allegations of fraud and deceit are matters of aggravation only and do not change the count into an action for deceit. Having declared in assumpsit, fraud and deceit are not in issue, and even if alleged could not be proved under this count. 1 Chitty on Pleading, 137; Mahourin v. Harding, 28 N. H., 131; Dean v. Mason, 4 Conn., 428; Bartholomew v. Bushnell, 20 Conn., 278; House v. Fort, 4 Blackf., (Ind.), 295; Bosworth v. Higgins, 7 N. Y. Sup., 210. Issue was joined on a plea of not guilty, but the character of the action is determined by the declaration and not by the plea, and the mispleading was cured by verdict. Winslow v. Bank of Cumberland, 26 Maine, 9; Cavene v. McMichael, 8 Serg. & Rawle (Pa.), 441; Garland v. Davis, 4 How., (U. S.), 146. There was no error in the refusal of the trial Judge to instruct that the defendant would not be liable in the absence of fraud or deceit.
The defendant’s fourth and final exception is based upon the refusal to give the following instruction: “We also request you to instruct that if the jury find from the evidence that the defendant had no reason to apprehend that the presence of borax might be injurious, that it would not be liable in this action.” This was an action for breach of warranty, the declaration in the first count being laid in assumpsit. Whether or not the defendant had reason to apprehend that the presence of borax in the fertilizer might be injurious is immaterial. “When there is a warranty, the scienter is immaterial.”
The entry must be,
Motion overruled.
Exceptions overruled.