220 Mich. 300 | Mich. | 1922
The defendant, a widow about 70 years of age, was solicited by the plaintiff, a business man at Ithaca, to purchase a gas engine and lighting plant to light her farm home and out buildings, and signed an order therefor. This order does not appear in the record. Her daughter and son-in-law, who lived with her on the farm, advised against the purchase. The plant was installed in November, 1916. It is the claim of the defendant that she executed this order on the representation of the plaintiff that the use of the engine a few hours each day while pumping water, separating the milk, etc., would sufficiently charge the storage'batteries to furnish light for the buildings during the hours when lights are required in farm homes. It is also her claim that the plant as installed failed to do this, notwithstanding repeated efforts on the part of the plaintiff to make it do so. On January 5,1917, defendant signed and delivered to plaintiff a promissory note, payable in one year, for $378.66, the purchase price of the plant. It was accompanied by an agreement reserving title in plaintiff until the plant was paid for. Defendant claims
Plaintiff insists that the defense at most raised but a partial failure of consideration, that no notice of recoupment was given and under the record as made he was entitled to a directed verdict. Whether the note was given in settlement of plaintiff’s claim or was ■delivered conditionally, its payment being dependent ■on the lighting plant being made to work satisfactorily, was a question for the jury. The plaintiff testified '“I had told her if she would give that note I would make the plant work.” In Central Savings Bank v. O’Connor, 132 Mich. 578, 580 (102 Am. St. Rep. 433), it was said:
“It is doubtless true, as contended by the appellants’ counsel, that it may be shown that a promissory note, unconditional in terms, was conditionally delivered; that is to say, that it was placed in the hands of the payee, but with the distinct understanding that it was not to be operative or to become a binding obligation until the happening of some event. Brown v. St. Charles, 66 Mich. 71; Burke v. Dulaney, 153 U. S. 228 (14 Sup. Ct. 816).”
If the lighting plant was installed under the warranty relied on by defendant and the note was delivered conditionally as claimed by her and there was at the time the note was sued on a breach of the warranty, we think it was open to defendant, as the
Error is assigned on several parts of the charge. In stating plaintiff’s claim the court said:
“He further claims that there was a valuable consideration passing for the giving of this note and he further claims in that regard that the plant was as it was represented and warranted by him to be, and he claims he performed his contract in that regard; and she claims that he did not, that the plant was not up to the warranty which he made.”
Counsel urge that the plaintiff did not admit the making of any warranty of the plant. We do not think this claim supported by the record. He testified:
“I saw their buildings and told them my plant would light their buildings. This plant was a storage plant. * * * I told them that it would light all of the lamps that I did install. * * * I might have told them that perhaps it wouldn’t take more than the time that they were pumping to be sufficient to charge their batteries for lighting their buildings, I can’t recall that exactly, but it is possible that I said that. * * * At the time I put the plant in there, they wanted to try it before they paid for it. * * * I had told her if she would give that note I would make the plant work.”
The several issues were carefully submitted to the jury by the trial court. We find no abusé of dis- > cretion in his refusal to grant a new trial.
The judgment is affirmed.