62 Ind. App. 171 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1916
This is an appeal from a judgment in appellees’ favor in an action brought by appellants to recover damages for an alleged breach of contract. The complaint is in one paragraph and charges that appellants are partners, doing business under the firm name of “Champion Brewery”; that,on June^, 1910, they were engaged in conducting a brewery and in manufacturing and selling beer under and by virtue of the laws of the United States government; that appellees were engaged in manufacturing and selling beer cooperage and on
It is insisted by appellees that the specifications of error set out in appellant’s brief are not such as can be reviewed upon appeal, and that such brief in other respects so far fails to comply with the rules of the court that no question is presented.
It is not easy to determine on what theory the complaint proceeds, but our examination of the evidence convinces us that whatever may have been the theory adopted in and by the trial court, the evidence was not such as to compel a decision in favor of appellant under the rule above stated. It would seem from the averments, supra, that appellants relied on a warranty, express or implied, that the half barrels purchased from appellees would conform to some government regulation as to the number of gallons that each half barrel would hold. Appellants have not cited any government regulation, and we know of.none, regulating the manufacture of half barrels and fixing any gauge, or the standard gauge, for such half barrels. Indeed, it appears from the evidence that the custom among cooperage manufacturers is to make such half barrels a little large, viz., within a range of a small amount over fifteen and one-half to seventeen gal-
Finding no reversible error in the record, the judgment below is affirmed.
Note. — Reported in 112 N. E. 896. See under (4) 4 C. J. 777; 3 Cye 308, 360. ,