38 Mo. App. 201 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1889
delivered the opinion of the court.
The defendant is a business corporation, organized under the laws of the state of Missouri, and is engaged in the manufacture of “horse collars” in the city of St. Louis. The plaintiff is a farmer and resides in the county of St. Louis. On the fifteenth day of October, 1885, the parties to this suit entered into the following contract, to-wit: “This agreement made and entered into this fifteenth day of October, A. Í). 1885, between J. B. Sickles Saddlery Company, of the city of St. Louis, Missouri, party of the first part, and John Lee as principal and Wm. Lee as surety, party of the second part, witnesseth : That, whereas the party of the first part has purchased from the party of the second part forty (40) tons of rye straw, cleanly threshed, of good length, and not too coarse, at one dollar ($1.00) per hundred pounds, the party of the second part hereby agrees to deliver the above quantity at their place of business as needed, between July 1, 1886, and .April 1, 1887, unto the party of the first part.
On the first day of May, 1887, the plaintiff brought this suit alleging delivery and acceptance of a small portion of straw of the kind and quality mentioned in the contract, and an offer to deliver the balance, according to the requirements of the contract; that the defendant wrongfully refused to receive any more of the straw, and the plaintiff was compelled to and did sell the remainder to other parties, for the best price obtainable, to avoid a greater loss; that he sold the straw for fifty cents per hundred pounds, which was the highest price he could obtain, by which the plaintiff was damaged in the sum of three hundred and eighty dollars.
The answer of the defendant was a general denial.
It appeared from the testimony that the straw in controversy was purchased for use, in the manufacture of “ horse collars,” and that this was well known to the plaintiff at the time the contract was made. The contract provided that the straw should be delivered between certain dates, and at such times, and in such quantities as the necessities of the defendant’s business might require.
The plaintiff delivered three loads of straw, which were received; the first load was paid for at the contract price; the second and third were paid for at the rate of seventy-fivé cents per hundred pounds. This reduction was made, as the defendant claimed, because the straw was not of the kind and quality contracted for, and that it contained a large quantity of weeds. On the other hand, the plaintiff alleged that the straw was up to the required standard, that it contained no more weeds than were usually found in that kind of straw; that no objection was made to the quality of the straw until it was unloaded, and that he submitted to the defendant's demands rather than have a lawsuit.
The plaintiff’s evidence tended to prove that the remainder of the straw, which he had on hand and ready for delivery, was of the kind and qualify contracted for, and was as good as that previously delivered and tendered ; that, after the execution of the contract, the market price of rye straw declined to fifty cents per hundred pounds, and that this was all he could get for the balance of the straw. The defendant’s evidence tended to prove that the straw tendex-ed was not of the particular fineness and quality mentioned in the contract, and that it contained an unusual quantity of weeds, by reason of which it was rendered unsuitable for the purposes for which it was purchased.
I. The argument of defendant’s counsel, on the first proposition, if we understand him correctly, amounts to this: That, under the written contract, read in evidence, the defendant had a right to demand, that the straw should not only be of the particular quality and fineness, expressly stipulated in the contract, but that its general condition, in other respects, should be such as to render it reasonably fit for the purpose for which it was purchased. In this, we think, the defendant was clearly right. The law governing executory contracts is quite different from that applicable to executed sales. In the latter class of cases, the maxim of caveat emptor applies in its fullest extent, with but very few exceptions or limitations. In all executory contracts for the sale of any commodity, when no opportunity for inspection is offered, there is always an implied warranty that the article sold vpll be of merchantable quality and condition; and if the article is purchased for a particular purpose, and this was known to the vendor, at the time of making the contract, then the law will annex to every such contract of sale, the implied condition that the article shall be reasonably fit for the purpose for which it was bought, unless this is controlled by express stipulation. This 'implied condition, imposed by the law, would not require the article
II. The next assignment of error has reference to the court’s instruction concerning'the measure of damages. The court directed the jury as follows: “If the jury find for the plaintiff, they should find in his favor with reference to all the straw which the defendant agreed, in the contract read in evidence, to take, less the quantity which the defendant actually received from the plaintiff, and they should assess his damages at such sum as they may find, from the evidence, to be the difference between the price which the defendant agreed to pay, under said contract, and the market value, in the city of St. Louis, of such straw as is called for by said contract, as explained in the other instructions of the court, at and during the time when the same was delivered under said contract.”
The defendant insists that, when the evidence showed only a small portion tendered, the plaintiff
Our conclusion is that the judgment must be reversed and the cause remanded for retrial, which relieves us of the necessity of inquiring into the third