91 F. 213 | 1st Cir. | 1898
The defendant below agreed with the plaintiff below to manufacture and deliver a forged-iron beam strap of the best hammered scrap iron, of the dimensions particularly described, to be used for a beam engine. The contract was executory, and the case, therefore, has no relation to the doctrine of caveat emptor. So far as the words “the best hammered scrap iron” are concerned, the precise meaning of which we have no occasion to define, the contract was express to use that quality; and any failure so to do, whether relating to patent or latent matters, would constitute a breach. The effect of the provision as to the dimensions of the beam strap is laid aside for this part of the case. As for the rest of it, it is an old rule that such an executory contract implies an agreement that the goods to be delivered will be fitly made for the use contemplated bv both parties. Benj. Sales (6th Ed.) § 645. In 1887, in Drummond v. Van Ingen, 12 App. Cas. 284, 290, Lord Herschell stated that this view of the law had
Whether or not the words “implied warranty” are theoretically correct need not be considered here. However this may be, it is certain, as we have seen, that there arose an obligation that the beam strap should be fitly made; and, as no qualification was reserved by the-manufacturer, he can make no claim to be relieved, except to the extent of that extremely narrow class of relief which applies to unconditional agreements. Therefore a failure to deliver a fitly made strap would be a failure in the performance of the contract, whether the defect was latent or patent, and independently of the question whether the defendant below used reasonable care in its work. The declaration stated the case in this particular multifariously, but, as one branch of the allegation clearly covered the rule we have stated, and the demurrer-was general, it was properly overruled. Looking, then, at the nature of the obligation imposed by this contract, it follows that none of the rulings below on this precise topic, objected to by the defendant below, including those disposing of the demurrer, prejudiced it. Later there-grew v. another class of so-called implied warranties, the first glimmering of which was in 1825, in Gray v. Cox, 4 Barn. & C. 108, 115. In that case, Chief Justice Abbott said:
“At the trial it occurred to me that, if a person sold a commodity for a particular purpose, he must be understood to warrant it reasonably fair and proper for such purpose. I am still strongly inclined to adhere to that opinion, but some of my learned brothers think differently.”
This was clearly intended by that learned jurist as a qualification of the doctrine of caveat emptor, and to have application to a mere sale.. This afterwards grew into a settled rule of law in England, and is now recognized by the Sales of Goods Act of 1893, in section 14, as follows:
“Where the buyer, expressly or by implication, makes known to the seller the particular purpose for which the goods are required, so as to show that the buyer relies on the seller’s skill or judgment, and the goods, are of a-description which it is in the course of the seller’s business to supply, whether he be the manufacturer or not, there is an implied condition that the goods shall be reasonably fit for such purpose.”
Newbolt’s Sales of Goods Act, at page 41 et seq., groups various authorities showing that this legislation is a mere enactment of the rule as lately understood by the courts in England. The expressions in Bridge Co. v. Hamilton, 110 U. S. 108, 3 Sup. Ct. 537, and elsewhere, on which the plaintiff in error relies, relate to cases to which this modern English rule applies, having reference to sales of goods, and not to executory contracts for manufacturing and supplying. The rule-with reference to the latter class has been so long established, both in the United States and England, that it would be impossible to break it down, or to essentially qualify it, by any incidental expressions-to the contrary.
The important questions in this case are those of the rules of damages. The plaintiff below furnished the beam strap to a steamer im
The rules of damages at the common law were long accepted as stated in Greenleaf on Evidence (volume 2, §§ 254, 256), to the effect that those which necessarily result from the breach are termed general damages, and that, even with reference to special damages, the damages must be the natural and proximate consequence of the act complained cf. Modern rules in England, and also largely in the United States, follow Hadley v. Baxendale, 9 Exch. 341. Nothing was, in fact, decided in that case; but its dicta have, to a large extent, become accepted rules of law. The rules applied in the court below, permitting a verdict for damages of the nature there recovered, have also been built v. in England on the dicta in that case, although they go .beyond them. They are commonly practiced there, though not yet formally approved by the house of lords. In the United States they have been largely recognized by the state courts, but they have not yet been accepted by the supreme court. On the other hand, that court has been exceedingly conservative in this matter, and has never gone further than to lay down the rule given in Manufacturing Co. v. Phelps, 130 U. S. 520, 527, 9 Sup. a. 601, 603, as follows:
“The rule of damages adopted by the court below, of deducting from the contract price the reasonable cost of altering the construction and setting of the machinery, so as to make it conform to the contract, is the only one that would do full and exact justice to both parties, and is in accordance with the decisions on similar contracts.”
A careful examination fails to discover any instance in which any circuit court of appeals has either accepted or expressly rejected the rules as to damages applied in this case. The English practice is, perhaps, best illustrated by Hammond v. Bussey, 20 Q. B. Div. 79; Mowbray v.
We are unable to see anything which would justify v. in holding that the fundamental questions of the rules of damages which have been explained by v. were in any way raised in the court below. In order that the propositions involved may be understood, it is necessary to bear clearly in view the essential distinction between rules of damages and the question whether or not a judgment, recovered as this one was, can be used to establish the amount of damages under any rule. It is only the latter which is properly submitted to us.
We pass by the proposition of the plaintiff in error that the issues or causes of action are not shown to be the same, because that was a matter for the jury under proper instructions, and it was correctly submitted to it. We have already said that no reasonable question could be raised about this. We also pass by the proposition that this is not a case for vouching in a stranger, as that is included in the larger question whether or not, in this class of cases, a judgment obtained under these circumstances may he admitted for the purpose of showing either presumptively or conclusively the actual amount of damage sustained by the subcontractor. The plaintiff in error urges, as we have said, that it could not have been compelled to go into a foreign country to take upon itself the defense of the suit there. We do not think that any general proposition of this character comes before us, because the charge shows the court understood that the defendant below knowingly subjected itself to the consequences of a subcontract in Canada. If the court misunderstood this matter, the defendant below should have set it right by something more specific than anything found in the record. We also lay aside any question whether, under the conditions of the case, the plaintiff in error could be subjected to respond in any form for the damages inflicted by the laws of the province of Quebec upon the defendant in error if they had been more severe than the rule in New Hampshire, as it has not been submitted to us. Either because it was assumed at the trial Í hat the rules of damages are the same by the laws of New Hampshire and the province of Quebec, and the modem practices in England, or for some other reason, none of the four questions stated by v. has been properly raised except the third, namely, the admissibiliiy and the effect of the judgment against the defendant in error as evidence in the suit below of the amount of damages in fact sustained. To put the question in another form, it is—whether it was necessary for the court below, disregarding this judgment, to ascertain from
With reference to the question thus submitted to v. in its various phases, there is such a mass of authorities, arrayed to a very considerable extent against each other, that nothing would be gained by our attempting to examine them in detail. Most of them will be found referred to at various points in 1 Suth. Dam. (2d Ed., 1893). The text writers and courts are far from always making proper distinctions with reference to the various subdivisions of the principal question. They present one class of issues when a judgment is offered with reference to the damages recovered, and a different class when offered with reference to the costs included in the judgment, and the expenses of litigation not so included. Moreover, there is a limited class of cases where, beyond doubt, a judgment rendered against a person for whom another has agreed to respond is conclusive as against the latter unless impeached for fraud, and this even though such third person has had no opportunity to assume the defense, or has not even been notified of the existence of the litigation. There is another class where a judgment is, at least, prima facie evidence against a stranger to the record who has voluntarily agreed to indemnify, within which class falls French v. Parish, 14 N. H. 496. There is still another, admitted by the plaintiff in error, in which a stranger to a suit is liable over by operation of law, as in Littleton v. Richardson, 34 N. H. 187, and in Lebanon v. Mead, 64 N. H. 8, 4 Atl. 392, where, beyond doubt, the judgment is evidence against the person so liable, either prima facie or conclusive. But the case at bar falls outside of all these classes, except so far as it is controlled by the principles which underlie them. Notwithstanding this, the weight of authority and the rules of convenience, together with the fact that injustice can hardly arise there
The same considerations, and, it may be, others, apply to the exceptions to the evidence that the plaintiff below paid the judgment rendered against him, and to permitting the reading of those portions of the declaration which recite the judgment; as, in each instance, the form of the objection was practically the same as those which we have considered.
This leaves, however, the question raised by the exceptions taken to the rulings by virtue of which the jury added to the judgment for damages the costs and expenses of the litigation in Canada. In view of tiie fact that the defendant below was given no opportunity to assume the defense of the suit against the plaintiff below, it seems to be the law of New Hampshire, which, in this respect, is in harmony with the more conservative and safer rule that the defendant below should not be held for any of the costs and expenses referred to. Notwithstanding the general expressions found in Towle v. Lane, 61 N. H. 586, 589, that no formal action is required if only the party intended to be charged understands that he may intervene in the suit (Burrill v. West, 2 N. H. 190, 192), and the express ruling in Chase v. Bennett, 59 N. H. 394, 395, seem to determine it to be the local law that in a case like this at bar, in which the defendant below was excluded from taking a part in the defense, he should not he holden for the costs and expenses thereof. Nevertheless, we are unable to perceive from the record in this case that any objection was made going so far as that. The only exception relating to this topic covers a large portion of the charge of the court below, which contains several distinct propositions, without specifically challenging any particular one. So much injustice has been done by inconsiderately setting aside verdicts through the fact that appellate courts often fail to put themselves in the position of the courts below that we have several times called attention lo the necessity of shaping objections and exceptions in such way as to show that, in the court below, the finger was plainly put on the precise spot in question. This rule is so well settled that it is not neccs
The plaintiff in error also objects to the admission of certain letters written by the defendant in error to the plaintiff in error, .all of which we can group together. Some were written before the suit against the defendant in error was commenced in Canada, and some after. For the most part, each purports to inform the plaintiff in error, from time to time, of the facts with reference to the accident, to the steamboat which were reported to the defendant in error. We are unable to see on the face of the letters that they could have been taken from the jury below as not written in good faith for that purpose. In view of the fact that it is apparent that the defendant below had not, at this stage of the trial, if at any, admitted the right of the plaintiff below to recover his legal expenses, nor the reasonableness of their amount, nor the reasonableness of the conduct of the plaintiff below in incurring them, and since, also, as we have seen, it does not, on this record, present a clear case in reference to these expenses, we are unable to say that the court was not justified in admitting some portions of each of these letters as part of the plaintiff's opening case. It seems to have been his reasonable duty, before involving himself in a litigation the expense of which he intended to charge ultimately on the defendant below, to inform the latter from time to time of the facts reported to him, giving opportunities of explanation in reference thereto. It may be that, if the defendant below had admitted that it made no issues of the character referred to, the letters should have been excluded. It may be, also, that if the defendant below had asked the court to exclude certain expressions contained in them, those parts should not have been read to the jury. The conservative course which might have been pursued under these circumstances is well illustrated by Israel v. Baker, 170 Mass. 12, 48 N. E. 621. But the defendant below asked nothing of this nature. The objections were to each letter as a whole, and they cannot be sustained.
There were various rulings of a subordinate character, with referr efice to the alleged existence of a custom among manufacturers giving them a right to replace forgings, and to evidence that other beam straps made by the defendant below were not defective, with regard to which the court was so clearly right that we need not protract this opinion by noticing them in detail.
One serious question remains. It appears that the shape and dimensions of the beam strap were prescribed by the plaintiff below, so that any insufficiency or weakness which arose therefrom ought not to have been allowed to fall on the defendant below. An expert called by the defendant below testified substantially that, for the work which this engine was set to do, the size of the beam strap was insufficient. He also testified to a matter of common knowledge that for all parts of machinery of this character a certain margin is customarily allowed for safety, which, in the case at bar, he put at a figure beyond what he computed to have been provided by the dimensions specified. It is
“If the jury find that the beam strap was constructed of the form and size required by the drawing furnished by the plaintiff, and that tile form was unsuitable, and the size insufficient, and that the accident was caused thereby, The defendant is not liable.”
We do not find that this request was given, or anything which was the equivalent thereof. It was claimed by the defendant at the trial that the beam strap wa's unduly strained in being set upon the spider, and also by reason of the foaming and priming of the boilers; and a request for a ruling was made in reference thereto. The court substantially instructed the jury that, if such strains and such priming and foaming of the boilers were incidents against which a contractor should reasonably have guarded, they offered no defense. This is undoubtedly trae as a major proposition, but, in order to fit it to the facts as claimed by the defendant below, the requested instruction which we have quoted should have been given, not only because it is correct generally, but especially because, with reference to this class of cases, while, on the one hand, a contractor takes the risk of ordinary incidents of the kind stated, on the other hand he is entitled, so far as the question of enhanced damages is concerned, to demand that the person ordering the machinery, and for whom it is constructed, shall likewise make the ordinary provisions to guard against the results of such incidents, including a proper allowance for margin of safety. It the requested instruction had been given, we think, also, it would have been more clear to the jury that the question was whether or not the work done by the defendant below was fitly done, .instead of whether or not the beam strap was reasonably fit for the uses to which it was in fact applied. The latter involved the matter of “size, shape, and dimensions,” for which the defendant below was not responsible. Under the circumstances, we think that this omission operated substantially to the prejudice of the defendant below, and for this reason we think the judgment must be reversed. The judgment of the circuit