116 Ky. 508 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1903
Opinion op the court by
Reversing.
The appellees, W. A. Arnold and J. I. Hamilton, were-sued by the appellant, McCormick Harvesting Machine Company, upon three promissory notes of $75 each of date November li, 1901, and due December 1, 1901, June 1, 1902,, and January 1, 1903, respectively. The payment of the notes was resisted by appellees in the court below; the defense interposed by their answer being that they were executed for one McCormick husker and shredder, which they received of appellant, and which its agent warranted would husk and shred 150 shocks of corn and fodder, or would shred 200 shocks of fodder, per day, and that if, upon a fair trial, it failed to do so, appellant would return to appellees their notes and take back the machine; that the notes were executed upon that condition alone, and would not have been given but for the warranty mentioned. The answer further avers that the machine did not perform its-work as warranted, though given a fair trial by the appellee Arnold, but only had the capacity to husk and shred 100 shocks of corn and shred a like quantity of fodder per day,, and that by reason of the breach of warranty appellees are entitled to the return of their notes and appellant to the return of the machine, and a tender of the return of the machine to appellant was made in the answer. The action was upon all three of the notes, though instituted soon after the maturity of the first one, as it was stipulated in the contract between the parties that, in the event appellées failed to pay any one of the notes within thirty days, after its maturity, all should become due and payable.
In this view of the law, the instructions given by the lower court were altogether erroneous, for which reason the judgment is reversed, and cause remanded, with directions to the lower court to grant appellant a new trial consistent with the opinion herein.