86 Iowa 556 | Iowa | 1892
The plaintiff claims that on June 21,. 1890, the defendant purchased and ordered of it a harvester and binder, to be delivered before the harvest of 1890. That the purchase was evidenced by a written order of sale and warrant as follows:
"The, McCormick Harvesting Machine Company will ship for the undersigned, on or before harvest, their latest improved harvester and binder, including the usual extras, consigned to the care of S. H. Jones, at Clarion, Iowa, the undersigned agreeing to pay the McCormick Harvesting Machine Company $-cash, the freight and charges on delivery, and further, to-execute notes for the sum of thirty-five dollars, payable on the first day of January, 1891; fifty dollars, payable-on the first day of January, 1892; fifty dollars, payable on the first day of January, 1893 — with interest at the rate of ten per cent, thereafter until paid. These-' machines are all warranted to be well made, of good' material, and durable, with proper care. If upon one-day’s trial the machine should not work well, the purchaser shall give immediate notice to said McCormick*558 Harvesting Machine Company or their agent, and allow time to send a person to put it in order. If it ■cannot then be made to work well, the purchaser shall return it at once to the agent of whom he received it, and his payment (if any has been made) will be refunded. Continuous use of the machine, or use at intervals through harvest season, shall be deemed an acceptance of the machine by the undersigned.
That the machine was delivered to the defendant in pursuance of the terms of said order, July 14,1890. That the plaintiff has fully complied, on its part, with all the conditions of said order, and the defendant then accepted said machine. That the defendant renounces the contract, and refuses to execute the notes, as provided therein. The cause was tried upon the petition and a substituted answer, wherein the defendant admitted the execution of the order, the delivery of the machine, and the refusal to sign the notes. He denied that the machine worked well, and that it complied with the conditions of the warranty, and denied all other allegations of the petition. The defendant also averred that the machine was not well made, did not work well, did not comply with the conditions of the warranty. 'That Sheets) the agent with whom he contracted for the machine,-set it up and started it, but could not and did not make it work well, or do good work. That it would not bind properly, broke the twine, would clog up, and fail to cut or bind. It was manufactured and designed as a three-horse machine. It was heavy on the horses, «and could not be drawn in work with'three horses without endangering them. It has heavy side ■draft, so that any considerable work would cause the horses necks to become sore. That it failed to do good work, or to work well. That when the agent was trying to operate it the defendant told him he was not .satisfied with it; told the agent he must have a machine ■at once. That the agent, without putting it in order,
‘ ‘If you find from the evidence that upon starting the machine it did not work satisfactory to the defendant, and that he notified the plaintiff’s agent to send a man to try the machine, and put it in order, and when said man came, defendant refused to help try the-machine, or permit the agent to try the same, or put it in order, if the plaintiff’s agent at said time, and under such circumstances, said to the defendant, ‘You will have to keep the machine, and pay for it,’ or words to that effect, such statements would not relieve him from failure to return the machine at once,- as provided by the contract, or the necessity of returning or offering to return it, in order to terminate the contract.”
It will be observed that the instruction wholly ignores the question as to whether the agent came to fix the machine within a reasonable time after being notified. Under this instruction, if the agent came to fix the machine a month after he received notice that it did not work well, the defendant would be bound to let him fix it, to assist him in so doing, and to try the machine. The instruction, for this reason, if for no other, was properly refused.
Many other errors are assigned. We have exam