Horigan v. Chalmers Motor Co.

111 Me. 111 | Me. | 1913

Savage, C. J.

Action for breach of a contract of guaranty. The plaintiff purchased an automobile of the defendant company, and as a part of the trade received its guaranty of freedom from defect in material and workmanship for one year from date of delivery. At the conclusion of the plaintiff’s evidence, the presiding Justice directed a verdict for the defendant, to which direction the plaintiff excepted.

The case turns on a single point. The plaintiff claimed that he discovered certain defects in the car, which were covered by the guaranty, and so notified the ’defendant. The parts claimed to be defective were various bearings, in one of which, the crank shaft bearing, a ball was broken. The parts alleged to be defective were shipped to the defendant, in accordance with 'the terms of the guaranty. The defendant denied any liability whatever, except possibly for the crank shaft bearing. Several letters passed between the parties, in which the plaintiff insisted that his claim was valid, and the defendant insisted with equal force that it was not. Finally the defendant wrote the plaintiff a letter in which, after arguing the question from its standpoint, it said: “It is not your fault,— *113neither is it ours — but we are taking a broad view of the matter, simply with a desire to help you as a Chalmers owner, out of your troubles at a minimum of expense to you, for you have been put in wrong by the people who worked on your car, and if it is possible for you to do so, we would suggest that you make them stand the brunt of the charges. Simply with this desire to help you, we will be willing, in addition to replacing gratis the one crank shaft bearing that had! a broken ball, to send you the other bearings and1 simply charge you with the actual cost of the same. We do not know of a more liberal offer we could make you under the conditions, and we feel sure that after reading this letter you will appreciate that this is simply done for you and no one else.

“If we followed out the term's of our guaranty we would not do anything whatever in the matter, for one of the conditions of our guaranty is as follows:' ‘This guaranty is such that our liability Under it ceases when parts .claimed as defective are replaced outside the Chalmers factory, or the shops of ‘Chalmers dealers.’ . If you accept our offer, and we feel sure you will, we would request that we be authorized' to ship these bearings either to you or to our sub-dealer in your city, Mr. C. A1. Welch.” In reply to this letter the plaintiff telegraphed to the defendant as follows: “'Ship, first express, complete set bearings through sub-agent C. A. Welch for my car.” The bearings were shipped accordingly, and billed to the plaintiff in accordance with the terms of the offer.

The defendant contends that the telegram of the plaintiff was an acceptance of its offer, and that the offer and the telegram constituted an accord, and the shipping and receipt of the new bearings, a satisfaction of .the claim of the plaintiff under the guaranty, that it was, in effect, the substitution of a new contract under such conditions as to be a waiver of the claim under the guaranty.

The plaintiff, on the other hand, contends that the language. of the defendant’s offer was so vague, general and! indefinite as not clearly to convey >to the plaintiff the impression that if he accepted the offer it would be a settlement of his claim, and that the plaintiff was not bound so to understand! it. And further that, in any event, a jury would be warranted in drawing the inference that the plaintiff did not understand, and was not bound to understand', that the offer was made as an offer of settlement.

*114Since the presiding Justice directed a verdict, we are only to consider whether any other inference than the one implied by the verdict could reasonably have been drawn. When only one inference can -reasonably- be drawn from the evidence, the question is one of law, andl for the court, and not for the jury. Otherwise the inference of fact to be drawn by the jury. Fuller v. Smith, 107 Maine, 161.

The case of Fuller v. Smith is one cited and relied upon by the plaintiff. It states' the law accurately, and we quote from it such statements of law as are applicable to this case. The court said: “Ah accord and satisfaction- is an executed agreement, whereby one party gives and another receives, in satisfaction of a demand, liquidated or unliquidated, .some money or other valuable consideration, however small. No invariable rule can be laid down as to what constitutes such an agreement, and each case' must be determined on its .own peculiar facts. The agreement need not be express, but may be implied from the circumstances and the conduct of the parties. It must be shown, however, that the debtor tendered the amount in satisfaction of the particular demand, and that it was accepted by the creditor as such.” “When a person tenders 'his creditor the exact amount of his undisputed debt, but intends that if it is accepted it shall also be in satisfaction of another demand, fairness and justice require thiat he should make his intention known to the creditor in some unmistakable manner. The proof should be clear and convincing that the creditor did1 understand the condition on which the tender was made, or that the circumstances under which it was made were such that he was bound to understand it.”

The question then is, is any other inference reasonable and permissible than that the plaintiff did understand, or under the circumstances was bound to understand and ought to have understood, i hat the defendant’s offer was made as a proposition of settlement of his claim? If not, then the proof of an accord is “clear and cc nvincing,” in the language of Fuller v. Smith.

There can be no doubt, as we have already stated, that the plaintiff’s telegram was in answer to the defendant’s letter containing the offer. He ordered the goods to be shipped through C. A. Welch, as suggested! in the letter. Therefore, he accepted the offer with all *115the consequences which might .follow from what he understood, or was bound to understand, the offer to mean.

We are unable to escape the ¡conclusion, that the defendant intended the offer as a settlement and end of the whole controversy. There had been an extended correspondence between the parties in which their varying contentions had been threshed out. The defendant had denied all liability, but in. this letter had expressed a willingness to replace the crank shaft bearing, gratis, to give a customer “the benefit of the doubt.” The offer itself was to replace the crank shaft bearing without charge, and that would be a compliance with the plaintiff’s demand so far. Then as to the other bearings which were the subject of complaint, the defendant offered, not to replace them without charge as the plaintiff demanded, but to supply -new ones at cost, without profit. It is difficult to see how the plaintiff could understand the offer to mean that he was to take the new bearings and pay for them at cost, and still leave the controversy open, still leave to himself the right to recover back the same sum so paid, which so far as the ¡case ¡shows would be the measure of damages, if he recovered, it seems to us that such a conclusion would be contrary to reason and ordinary business sense.

The defendant’s offer was so clearly intended as a proposition of settlement that the plaintiff was bound, under the circumstances, so to understand it. We think no inference to the contrary is admissible. The direction of ¡a verdict for the ¡defendant was right.

Exceptions overruled.

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