263 F. 58 | 2d Cir. | 1920
The evidence made it clear that defendant sent these ingots to a reputable forge, where in the process of forging they developed or disclosed cracks or seams which rendered them unfit for gun forgings. But what was their condition when delivered to defendant was the subject of acute difference of sworn opinion.
Plaintiff admitted the existence of “hair-line” cracks on the ingot surface, but averred that it had “chipped out” the same so that the ingot was either “perfect” on delivery, or was made so thereafter, at its expense. There was evidence that such cracks were a necessary result of
The warranty insisted on is expressed in the order for manufacture given by defendant to plaintiff, and in a nearly contemporaneous letter explaining (as far as it ever was explained by plain writing) what was wanted. The order recites that its acceptance “constitutes a guaranty that all steel furnished' [under the order] will be free from all physical defects.” The letter declares that plaintiff’s “responsibility consists” in furnishing steel “free from surface defects and an unusual amount of pipe”; wherefore (wrote defendant) “please use care; * * * serious surface defects will be cause for rejection of the entire ingot.”
The theory of suits or defenses such as this was long ago tersely stated by Lord Tenterden, speaking of an action on the warranty of a horse; his words may be thus modernized: In assumpsit the rule is that you must prove the whole of the consideration, but you need not prove the whole of the promise. The consideration here is that defendant would buy ingots of plaintiff at a certain price, and the promise is that the ingots shall be free of serious surface defects. The very words of the promise need not be laid or proved; it is sufficient to state the substance; if that be proved, it is enough to support the action or defense. But in this case it is quite clear that hair-line cracks chipped out before delivery and serious surface defects are not convertible terms, wherefore the motion to take the case from the jury was rightly-refused. Coltherd v. Puncheon, 2 Dow. & Ry. 10.
Some matters of evidence have been discussed; we only note that
Judgment affirmed, with costs.