209 N.W. 876 | Minn. | 1926
Plaintiff, an Indiana corporation, sold to defendant a Boss System brick burning equipment including the rights to use under a patent and including blueprints and specifications for construction and installation. The contract provided for a demonstration burn and if unsatisfactory money paid to be refunded. It further provided that the title should remain in plaintiff until full payment was made. It also provided that, in case defendant desired to cancel the contract, if the demonstration burn was unsatisfactory, notice should be forwarded by defendant to plaintiff immediately when the result of such demonstration should be fully determined and should such notice not be received the defendant agreed to make full settlement according to the terms of the contract. The contract also contained a provision fixing the value of services of an engineer at $10 *185 a day and expenses in case the defendant required instructions in service other than those contained in the plans and specifications.
At the request of defendant an engineer was sent to this state to instruct how to install the fire boxes and air ducts which required about three or four days. About four months later the engineer again came to Minnesota at the request of defendant to aid in teaching it how to operate the equipment which took about a week. The demonstration burn was made. Tile were overburned. Defendant advised plaintiff:
"We have followed your instructions to the letter and we have decided that your method of operating is at fault, and would not seem to apply in burning hollow tile with our clay. It would seem that your closing the damper and forcing the fire did not work out and your instructions in having the bottoms closed up on kilns Nos. 9 and 10 did not work out satisfactory. We are now going to try again applying our own actual experience in burning our clay, and trust we will have a better result, as we are more anxious than you are that your system of burning shall prove satisfactory with us."
About a month later defendant wrote plaintiff:
"We have finally succeeded in burning our ware successfully with your system, although it is far from coming up to our expectation, or up to your representation. We are however fairly well satisfied with it and are effecting a saving in fuel. We found that we could not follow your method [of] instruction in burning. We had to adopt our own method and use 5 days instead of 3 1/2 days as you tried and instructed us to do, in that way we have fairly good success. We lost fully half of the ware in the first four kilns which you fired and superintended, and which incurred a loss to us of at least $400.00 a kiln which makes us $1,600.00 in the four kilns. This loss we shall expect you to assume."
The contract called for payment of $1,875 for the equipment for six kilns, of which $468.75 was paid, leaving a balance of $1,406.25. By this action plaintiff sought to recover this balance and $195.75 for services and expenses of the engineer. The answer alleged that the demonstration burn was unsatisfactory and that plaintiff was *186 notified thereof as per the terms of the contract. Defendant counterclaimed for $468.75. By amendment the answer alleged that plaintiff had failed to comply with G.S. 1923, § 7494, and was in this transaction doing business in the state of Minnesota contrary thereto. In ordering judgment the court required plaintiff to eliminate its claim of $195.75. Plaintiff having consented to this elimination does not seek to recover for this item.
1. It seems to be substantially conceded that the transaction involved was an interstate sale and hence was not governed by our statute regulating foreign corporations unless by virtue of the acts of the plaintiff in sending its engineer into this state for the purposes above mentioned. It has now been long established that the interstate commerce power embraces that which is relevant or reasonably appropriate to the power granted and that the right to make an interstate commerce contract includes in its very terms the right to incorporate therein provisions which are relevant and appropriate to the contract made. It is earnestly urged in this case that the construction and installation of the equipment could have been made by any man competent to read the blueprints and also that instructions and directions could have been given by mail and that such a contract is in violation of our statute unless the foreign corporation can show that the installation was, because of some peculiar quality or complexity, essential to the making of the sale. This contention finds support in Palm V.C. Co. v. Bjornstad,
2. The provision in the contract for its cancelation if the demonstration burn was unsatisfactory was a valid one. Helvetia C. Co. v. Hart-Parr Co.
Defendant wrote a letter and advised that the demonstration burn was unsatisfactory but did not express any desire or intention of canceling the contract as it then had a right to do. "Notice to that effect" cannot be read from the correspondence. Indeed the position taken by defendant in failing to exercise its privilege to cancel and in making a claim for $1,600 damage was rather an affirmance of the contract. Moreover after defendant learned of the claimed unsatisfactory condition of the equipment it continued to use it, subsequently reporting fair success, until the time of trial. It made no other contract. Such conduct was inconsistent with the vendor's ownership. Duluth Log Co. v. John C. Hill L. Co.
Other questions argued are unimportant.
Affirmed.