145 Mo. App. 78 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1910
Lead Opinion
Eespondents, mother and son, on January 13, 1907, bought from the Myronda Motor Car Company in the city of St. Louis an automobile manufactured by the The Lozier Motor Company and known as No. 417. The purchase price was six thousand dollars which was paid by the joint check of the respondents to the order of the Myronda Motor Car Company, dated January 23, 1907.
On September 14, 1907, plaintiffs brought this suit against Clifford M. Dolph and William Patterson, alleging in their petition that said defendants were co-partners in business, engaged in the sale of automobiles or motor cars and doing business under the name of Myronda Motor Car Company. The petition further alleges that on or about the 13th day of January, 1907, defendants showed plaintiffs a certain automobile made by The Lozier Motor Company, and represented to plaintiffs that said automobile was of the latest 1907 pattern as made by the Lozier Company, and that all of its parts were of the latest improved kind as contained in a certain car of the same make then on exhibition in defendants’ warerooms, and that the said automobile which the defendants offered to sell plaintiffs was perfect in every respect, and of forty horsepower capacity, and that, the same would in all respects run to the entire satisfaction of the plaintiffs.; that the defendants also guaranteed that if the said automobile was not in every respect as represented, or if the same should thereafter prove defective, defendants would furnish plaintiffs an entire new, complete and perfect
Defendant Dolph filed an affidavit denying the existence of any partnership between himself and defendant Patterson, and also filed a general denial as his answer. Defendant Patterson filed simplv a general denial.
The jury returned a verdict for plaintiffs for the-sum of six thousand dollars and the case is here on-the appeal of defendant Dolph.
I. The only serious legal question raised in this1 case, outside the alleged defect of parties which willi be considered, is as to the measure of damages.
The trial court instructed the jury that if they found the issues for the plaintiffs, the measure of damages which the plaintiff would be entitled to recover would be “the reasonable value of such new automobile at the time of the demand and refusal to deliver the same.”
Appellant claims that this was an erroneous statement of the law governing the facts of this case, and that the true rule of law which should have been declared by the court is that where the buyer of a chattel relies on an express warranty and accepts the chattel,, his measure of damages in an action for a breach of the contract is the difference in value of the chattel as: warranted and the chattel sold at the time and place-of sale, and that on that account, the measure of damages as declared by the court in its instruction for the-plaintiff was erroneous, and that the instruction tendered by the defendant presenting his view of the law should have been given instead.
The instruction asked by the defendant has no ap-plieation to the facts of this case. Recovery is sought' by plaintiffs in this case on the theory that within a'! reasonable time, the plaintiffs, after the purchase of the-' automobile, upon defendant’s warranty, the car not' proving to be of the character and kind warranted, rejected and returned the car to the seller. Where- thee
The petition in this case charges that the plaintiffs were induced by the defendants to keep the automobile and to give it further trial; and they, acting under defendants’ instructions, made several efforts to make it work and that it proved to be defective and comparatively worthless and did not come up to the warranties, and that thereafter they returned it. The law is that if a purchaser is persuaded by the seller to keep the chattel for a while to give it a proper trial, and he does so, and it nevertheless does not come up to the warranties, he may still return the same and recover the amount paid on account of the purchase price. [Hayner v. Churchill, supra; Osborne v. Henry, 70 Mo. App. 19; Osborne v. Mullikin, 88 Mo. App. 350; Courtney v. Boswell, 65 Mo. 196; Walker v. Grout Brothers Automobile Co., 124 Mo. App. 628, 102 S. W. 25.]
The defendants impliedly warranted that the chattel was fit for the purpose for which it was intended and no special authority in the agent, Patterson, who
As the appellant, Dolph, who sold the plaintiffs the car, kept the fruits of the contract of sale made by his agent, he cannot repudiate the representations of Patterson as his agent made to effect the sale. [Hayner v. Churchill, supra; McLachlin v. Barker, 64 Mo. App. 511; Fahy v. Springfield Grocer Co., 57 Mo. App. 73; Heath v. Schroer, 119 Mo. App. 93, 96, 96 S. W. 313; Green v. Worman, 83 Mo. App. 568.]
The evidence very clearly shows that the agent, Patterson, made positive representations as to the quality and condition of the automobile in question; that he made such representations with the intention of their being relied on and that they were relied on by the purchasers, the plaintiffs. Under such circumstances, such. representations, in law, amount to positive warranties. [Childs v. Emerson, 117 Mo. App. 671, 93 S. W. 286; Haines v. Neece, 116 Mo. App. 499, 510, 92 S. W. 919; Young v. Van Natta, 113 Mo. App. 550, 88 S. W. 123.]
We find, therefore, that the instruction for the plaintiffs properly declared the law and the instructions requested by the defendant were properly refused.
II. The petition alleged that the defendants, Clifford M. Dolph and William Patterson, were co-partners, engaged in the sale of automobiles and- doing business under the name of Myronda Motor Car Company.
As stated, defendant Dolph filed an affidavit denying the existence of a partnership between himself and Patterson, and also filed an answer denying generally the allegations of the petition. Defendant Patterson filed a separate answer, being a general denial.
At the close of all the evidence, the plaintiffs dismissed as to Patterson. Whereupon, defendant Dolph moved to dismiss the case on the ground that the action, having been brought against Dolph and Patterson as partners under a joint contract, if plaintiffs could not recover under a joint contract they could not recover at all. The motion was overruled.
Section 624, Revised Statutes 1899, provides : “Plaintiff not to be nonsuited, when. — In all actions founded on contract and instituted against several defendants the plaintiff shall not be nonsuited by reason of his failure to prove that all the defendants are parties to the contract, but may have judgment against such of them as he shall prove to be parties thereto.”
That this statute applies to suits against alleged partners was expressly decided in the case of Crews v. Lackland, 67 Mo. 619. In that case, the defendants were sued as partners for the breach of an alleged contract in reference to the herding of cattle. The defendants asked an instruction that “unless the jury are satisfied from the evidence in the case that, at the time of the alleged making of the alleged contract, the defendants were partners, then the verdict must be for the defendants.” The court say: “At common law it is quite clear that the third instruction asked by defendants should have been given. . . . And unless altered by statute, the rule of the common law, in this regard, would still prevail. This alteration has, however, occurred. Wag. Stat., sec. 82, p. 1019, provides: ‘In all actions founded on contracts and instituted against several defendants, the plaintiff shall not be nonsuited by reason of his failure to prove that all the defendants are parties to the contract, but may have judgment against such of them as he shall prove to be parties thereto/ This section was passed on in Finney v. Allen, 7 Mo. 416, and it was held that in consequence of its enactment a similar instruction to the one under
. This ruling has been followed in many cases. [Hodel-Mutti Mfg. Co. v. Ham, 112 Mo. App. 718, 87 S. W. 608; Ross v. McAnaw, 72 Mo. App. 99; Woods-Evertz Stove Co. v. Grubbs & Co., 135 Mo. App. 466, 116 S. W. 5.]
Appellant contends that the case of Bagnell Timber Co. v. M., K & T. Ry. Co., 180 Mo. 420, 79 S. W. 1130, lays down a different rule. The same contention was urged by appellant in the late case of Woods-Evertz Stove Co. v. Grubbs & Company, 135 Mo. App. 466, 116 S. W. 5, where the St. Louis Court of Appeals was required to pass on the same question. H. A. Grubbs and S. A. Haseltine were sued as partners, under the name of H. A. Grubbs & Company. In the trial court, judgment was for plaintiff against Haseltine. The court, speaking through Eeynolds, P. J., said:
“The question at issue was as to whether appellant was liable for certain articles alleged to have been purchased of plaintiff for the firm. The evidence was conflicting on many, in fact on practically all questions, even on the question of partnership. The appellant asked an instruction in the nature of a demurrer to the evidence which the court refused. ... It is contended by appellant that when the case was determined in favor of one partner defendant, it necessarily should have been determined in favor of the other. This is a mistake, and the cases of Vanhoosier v. Dunlap, 117 Mo. App. 529, and Bagnell Timber Co. v. M., K. & T. Ry. Co., 180 Mo. 420, relied on by counsel for appellant, do not support this contention. In those cases plaintiffs were joint contractors and were plaintiffs. Their right under the contract was not a right in each of them but in all. Neither the rule nor its reason apply in the case of defendants occupying or claimed to occupy the position of partners, and also defendants in the case.”
Rehearing
ON MOTION FOR REHEARING (July 19, 1910).
The motion for rehearing is overruled. As the opinion heretofore filed in this .case is in conflict Avith the opinion in the case of Meyers v. M., K & T. Ry. Co., 120 Mo. App. 288, 96 S. W. 737, decided by the Kansas City Court of Appeals, this cause is certified to the Supreme Court for its decision.