160 Pa. 317 | Pa. | 1894
Opinion by
The learned court below charged the jury as follows: “ It is for you to say whether the breaks which occurred and the diffi
The defendant being examined as a witness on his own behalf, testified as follows, inter alia, viz.: “ Q. And as another thing you do not pretend to say that the plaintiffs guaranteed this machine would do the work which it was designed to do ? A. They did not guarantee that. . . . Q. No such undertaking on their part that the machine would be successful so far as the paving the street went? A. No. Q. That was the object you had in making he patent, and they did not guarantee it ? They simply guaranteed the work and the materials ? A. That is all.”
■ The contract between the parties was in writing in the form of two proposals, the material parts of which are: First. “We propose to build for you one Johnson’s Patent Street Paving Ramming Machine complete, with boiler and engine, as per drawings and specifications, for the sum of $1,650, exclusive of patterns which are to be furnished to us.” Second. “ We re
The occasion of the revised bid was that a day or two after the first bid, and after the patterns had been examined, it was found that they were incomplete and that the drawings relating to the locomotive part of the machine were defective. The defendant called on the plaintiffs and was then informed of these facts. “ He then informed the plaintiffs that they should carefully examine all the drawings and specifications, and if there was anything imperfect or defective, to correct it. . . . He then requested them to send him another proposition covering everything needed to construct a complete machine suitable for the work for which it was to be used.” The foregoing quoted statements are taken from the defendant’s history of the case.
As will be seen by the above quoted portion of the charge, the court below instructed the jurythat “if the defects are due to imperfect workmanship on the part of the plaintiffs, or to any want in the materials which they used in the construction of the machine, or if the parts which they were to design, and did design and construct, were not reasonably suitable for the purposes for which they were intended, the defendant would be entitled to deduct ” etc.
This portion of the charge is not assigned for error, and it certainly seems to us to express the full measure of the plaintiffs’ obligation under the contract. ' According to the defendant’s personal testimony the plaintiffs did not guarantee, and were not asked to guarantee, that the machine when constructed would do the work for which it was made. The plans and specifications were to be furnished and were furnished by the defendant. When it was found they were imperfect in some respects, the plaintiffs undertook to furnish revised “ drawings and patterns,” to correct the imperfections, and did so, and as to these the charge of the court below held them liable if they were not reasonably suitable for the purposes for which they were intended. We are unable to hold, as is claimed for the defendant, that the words “including revised drawings and specifications,” in the second bid, operated to change the contract so that the finished machine should do its “ work satisfac
Judgment affirmed.