112 Wash. 440 | Wash. | 1920
This is an action for damages for breach of an alleged implied warranty in the sale of an automobile. The case was tried to the court and a jury, and resulted in a verdict for the plaintiff. The defendant, at appropriate times, challenged the suffi
In stating' the facts it will be assumed that the evidence of the respondent is true where there is conflict. The appellant is a corporation organized under the laws of the state of Washington, and is engaged in the business of selling automobiles at Seattle, Washington. On April 5, 1918, it sold to the respondent a new 1918 model, six cylinder, Oldsmobile. At the time the car was sold, the appellant had on the floor of its showroom this particular car. It did not, however, sell this car, but sold a car of the model described. The respondent saw and looked at the car that was in the showroom. A few days after the respondent had agreed to purchase a car, the appellant delivered to him the car which he looked at in the showroom and then told him that it was the same car. The respondent operated the car, after it was delivered to him, for a period of approximately eleven months. The car was defective, in that the pistons were a little too small for the cylinders. The car did not prove to be satisfactory, and after having operated it for the time mentioned, the present action was instituted for the purpose of recovering damages for a breach of implied warranty. It should be noted and kept in mind that the appellant was not the manufacturer of the automobile, but simply a dealer. The theory of the respondent that the sale was not of a particular car but of a particular model will be adopted.
“According to the great weight of authority, there is a distinction between executory sales by manufacturers and executory sales by dealers; the rule being that, on a sale by a manufacturer, there is an implied warranty of fitness for the purpose intended, and of freedom from defects not discoverable by ordinary inspection and tests, while on a sale by a dealer, there is no such implication, in the absence of a specific warranty to that effect. All that is required of a dealer is an exercise of good faith and fair dealing. ’ ’
“But where such a purchaser buys of a dealer a definite machine of known • manufacture, which has been, or is to be, made by a builder who is not the vendor, and the vendee knows this fact, there is no implied warranty by the dealer, either against latent defects or that the machine or article will be suitable for the purposes for which such articles are commonly used, because the purchaser has the same knowledge and means of knowledge of these subjects as has the dealer. The vendee knows that they both rely on the character and reputation of the manufacturer. (Citing authorities.)” °
This is a natural corollary to the majority rule, or that of nonliability on an implied warranty by a dealer. There is no escaping the conclusion that the appellant in this case sold to the respondent an article of known manufacture of which the vendor or dealer was not the builder. The case comes squarely within this rule. The appellant relies upon the rule that, where goods of some specific kind are ordered of the manufacturer or dealer, which the buyer has neither inspected nor selected, there is an implied warranty that the article delivered shall be of fair average quality or goodness according to its kind, and free from remarkable defects. Mechera on Sales, § 1340. But, under this rule, as pointed out by the same author in § 1345, before a
“. . . namely, an executory agreement by tbe dealer to supply an article not yet ascertained, but left to be determined by bim according to bis own judgment in view of tbe purpose to be subserved by it as communicated to bim by tbe buyer.”
Tbis case, however, does not come witbin tbis rule. Nothing was left to be determined according to tbe judgment of tbe appellant, and bis duty was fulfilled when be delivered a car of tbe particular model contracted for.
To review tbe many authorities cited in tbe respondent’s brief and distinguish them seriatim would extend tbis opinion to an unreasonable length and serve no useful purpose. Generally speaking, it may be said that tbe cases cited fall into one of tbe four following classes: First, they are cases that have adopted what is called tbe minority rule, and not tbe rule of tbe majority as adopted in tbe Hurley-Mason case. Such cases would not be persuasive in tbis jurisdiction so long as tbe rule of tbe case referred to stands. Second, cases where there is an express warranty. Third, cases where tbe purchaser desires an article for a specific purpose and communicates tbis purpose to tbe dealer and tbe latter undertakes to furnish an article suitable for tbe purpose specified. Tbe case of Hausken v. Hodson-Feenaughty Co., 109 Wash. 606, 187 Pac. 319, is within tbis class. Fourth, where goods of some specific kind are ordered of tbe manufacturer or dealer which the buyer has neither inspected nor selected. As already pointed out, tbe present case does not fall witbin tbis rule.
Tbe respondent’s contention that an implied warranty is an inference of fact, and therefore a question
The judgment will be reversed, and the cause remanded with directions to the superior court to dismiss the action.
Holcomb, C. J., Mitchell, Parker, and Tolman, JJ., concur.