98 Kan. 538 | Kan. | 1916
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The defendants appeal from a judgment rendered against them on notes given for the purchase of a gasoline engine and plows. The order for the engine, signed by defendant Robert M. Hay, had printed thereon the following warranty:
“The seller warrants the within described engine to do good work, to be well made, of good materials, and durable if used with proper care. If upon trial, with proper care, the engine fails to work well, the purchaser shall immediately give written notice to the seller, stating wherein the engine fails, shall allow a reasonable time for a competent man to be sent to put it in good order, and render necessary, and friendly assistance to operate it. If the engine can not then be made to work well, the purchaser shall immediately return it to said seller and the price shall be refunded which shall constitute a settlement in full of the transaction.
“Usé of the engine after three days, or failure to give written notice to said seller, or failure to return the engine as above specified, shall operate as an acceptance of it and a fulfillment of this warranty. No agent has power to change the contract of warranty in any respect.
“This express warranty excludes all implied warranties, and said seller shall in no event be liable for breach of warranty in an amount exceeding the purchase price of the engine. If part proves defective, a new part will be furnished on receipt of part showing defect free.”
When the case was called for trial, the court required the defendants to elect as between their right to recover damages for breach of the warranty and their right to a rescission of the contract of sale. The defendants elected to rely on rescission of the contract. The attorneys agreed that the jury were not to find and include in the general verdict the amount of the notes mentioned in the first and second causes of action in the plaintiffs’ petition. Special questions were submitted concerning these causes of action.
The engine was purchased in 1912. The return, or the offer to return, was made in 1914. New notes were given for a part of the notes in 1913.
In Hall v. Manufacturing Co., 92 Kan. 538, 141 Pac, 592, an election as between damages and rescission was required and was made, and that case seems to recognize the regularity of such a proceeding, but the question now presented was not considered. Weybrich & Co. v. Harris, 31 Kan. 92, 1 Pac. 271, recognizes that where personal property sold is not as warranted, the purchaser has two remedies: “(1) He may return the property and rescind the contract; or, (2) he may affirm the contract and sue for damages for the breach of warranty.” (Syl. ¶ 1.) In McCormick v. Roberts, 32 Kan. 68, 3 Pac. 753, an action on promissory notes given for the purchase of a self-binding harvester, the defendant pleaded a warranty of the harvester, that the warranty failed, that he offered to return the harvester, and set out damages sustained by reason of its failing to work as warranted. A motion was filed by the plaintiffs asking the court to direct the defendant to elect on which of the two defenses stated in the answer he would stand. The court required the defendant to construe his answer. The answer was then construed as containing the defenses of rescission of the contract and such damages as might be recovered thereunder. In the syllabus this language is found:
“In directing the jury, the court charged that no rescission or repudiation of the contract had been shown, but that the defendant was entitled to recover damages from the vendors for a breach of their warranty, if a warranty had been established, and a breach thereof had been proved. Held, under the circumstances, the charge to the jury was erroneous, misleading, and prejudicial.”
The reason given by the court was that—
“The answer, as construed, allowed only proof of rescission of the contract, and the damages therefor; yet the jury were directed upon another and entirely different theory of the ease.” (p. 72.)
The defendants cite a dissenting opinion in Houser & Haines Mfg. Co. v. McKay, 53 Wash. 337, 101 Pac. 894. The majority opinion follows the rule, stated in-the headnotes in the Pacific Reporter in these words:
“The purchaser of a machine, on finding that it is not as warranted, may refuse to accept, rescind the sale and recover what he has paid on the price, or retain the machine and set off against the price such damages as naturally result from the breach of warranty, though he may not pursue 'both remedies simultaneously.” (¶ 1.)
The rule declared by the supreme court of Washington in that case is in harmony with what this court has said. The rule contended for by the defendants would compel this court to overrule a number of its former decisions. There was no error in requiring the election.
The conclusion here reached governs other complaints of the defendants that concern instructions, and which will not be further considered.
“Thereupon the court announced that with the consent of all parties, general verdicts would be submitted to the jury upon the matters involved in the third, fourth and fifth causes of action, and that special findings would be submitted to the jury relative to the first and second causes of action and that the court would then enter thereon such judgment as it might deem proper, to which all parties assented.”
In view of this agreement, any error in refusing the instructions requested by the defendants does not justify a reversal of the judgment.
5. Another complaint, in the language of the defendants, is as follows:
“The court erred in denying appellants’ request for certain special findings by the jury. These questions were as follows, and we complain of the refusal to submit Nos. 1, 3, 4, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11.”
Then follow the questions requested by the defendants. They make no argument concerning this complaint. Questions 2, 5, and 6 were submitted and answered. These three questions, together with other questions submitted and answered by the jury, apparently find all the facts necessary for the court to know in order to render judgment under the agreement made on the trial.
Other matters are complained of. They have been examined. There is not sufficient merit in them to warrant a reversal of the judgment.
The judgment is affirmed.