40 Mo. App. 477 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1890
The plaintiff sued defendant for the price of a fodder cutter. The defendant admitted the purchase of the machine, but denies that he owes plaintiff anything on account thereof, and pleaded and offered evidence to sustain two defenses: First. That the machine was bought with a warranty that it was the finest machine ever presented to the public, strongly and durably made, would do good work, etc., and that if it did not do good work as warranted the plaintiff on notice would make it work properly ; and that it failed to work and was a failure as a cutting machine, and that defendant notified plaintiff, and he failed to make it
It appears therefrom that the machine was delivered to the defendant about the seventeenth of November, 1887, at his farm, where it was set up and run between that day and the month of March following, some twenty-five days in all. It seems to have been bad in make and material and did not do its work properly. It was constantly breaking and out of order. It required twenty-five days to do the work which it should have done in half that time. It was, as a cutting machine without value. After the defendant had subjected it to a fair trial and found that it did not meet the requirements of the warranty, notice was given to the agent of the plaintiff of that fact, accompanied with an offer to return it to plaintiff. That, after the defendant ascertained that it was worthless and had offered to return it, he continued to occasionally run it up to March, 1888. The reason why he continued to use the machine was that the plaintiff’s agent urged him to do so, stating that it would work if defendant “would not get blue.” There was some other evidence which need not be stated as it is not important or necessary to the proper consideration of the questions which will be presently noticed. The verdict of the jury under the instructions, which need not be set forth,
I. The plaintiff contends that the case was tried upon the theory that there were two warranties instead of one, or in other words that there was an express and implied warranty. This is a misconception of the theory upon which the court proceeded in the trial.
The answer, the instructions and evidence all show that the case, went to the jury upon the idea that there were two separate and distinct defenses interposed by the defendant, one based upon the warranty and the other upon the fact that the machine was bought-for a specific purpose made known at the time to the plaintiff, and that it proved utterly worthless for that purpose. -These were consistent defenses.
The plaintiff seems to confound the last-named defense with that of an implied warranty, when no such defense was interposed. The defense that the machine was of no value for the purpose for which it was purchased was well sustained by the evidence, The defendant’s second instruction accorded with this theory. Such a defense was valid as showing a failure of consideration, and this whether the defendant offered to return the machine or not, or failed to notify plaintiff of its worthlessness. Barr v. Baker, 9 Mo. 850; Murphy v. Gay, 37 Mo. 535; Compton v. Parsons, 76 Mo. 535; Keen v. Haymaker, 20 Mo. App. 350.
This rule is subject, however, to the qualification that if the article bought and sold is of any value for any other purpose, then the vendee cannot retain it and be permitted in an action for the purchase price by the vendor to interpose the defense of a total failure of consideration. In such case he must either return, or offer to return, the article to the vendor within a reasonable time after he discovers the worthlessness of the same for the purpose for which it was bought and sold.
II. The plaintiff further contends that the defendant did not offer to return said machine within a reasonable time after he discovered that it did not fulfill the terms of warranty. The defendant was entitled to a reasonable time in which to test the machine and determine whether it filled the requirement of the warranty, and the retention of it for that purpose during that time could not be held an acceptance. Phil. Whiting Co. v. Leadworks, 24 Nev. 881; Osborn & Co. v. McQueen, 29 Nev. 636; Skeen v. Springfield E. & T. Co., 34 Mo. App. 485. The uncpntradicted evidence was that the defendant at the urgent request of the plaintiff continued the use of the machine during the entire time occupied by him in cutting his corn. We are satisfied from an examination of, the evidence that the delay of the defendant in not promptly returning the machine was occasioned by the request of the plaintiff, which furnishes á complete excuse ard justification
But, as has already been remarked, the question of a reasonable time, either as one of law or of fact in respect to the return of said machine by defendant, is not properly before us, or if it is then the plaintiff’s second instruction taken in connection with those given for defendant sufficiently enlightened the mind of the jury in relation to it so that there is really no grounds for complaint on that account. The case was in the main fairly tried, and we can discover no grounds justifying our interference with the judgment which must be affirmed.