31 Kan. 92 | Kan. | 1883
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This was an action commenced by plaintiffs in error, plaintiffs below, on March 10, 1883, before a justice
The facts are that on June 9, 1880, the defendants purchased of plaintiffs through Puterbaugh Brothers, their agents at Newton, Kansas, a machine known as the Weybrich header. The contract entered into at this time as testified to by Harris, one of the defendants, was in substance this: Defendants were to take the machine out and set it up; if it didn’t work right they were to notify plaintiffs, and they (plaintiffs) were to go out and fix it up, and to pay all the expense of fixing it; and if they failed to make it work, defendants were to return it to the plaintiffs’ agent at Newton, Kansas; and plaintiffs were either to give them a new machine, or give up the notes; and as a part of this contract, plaintiffs warranted the machine to be made of good material and to do good work. This being a credit sale, defendants gave in consideration therefor their three promissory notes, all bearing date June 9, 1880, as follows: The first was for $87, due November 1, 1880; the second was for $87, due November 1,1881; the third was for $86, due November 1, 1882. The first note was paid on or about maturity, and this action was on the last two notes. The defense was a breach of this warranty; that the machine which the purchasers received was not of the quality or as good as represented by the agent of the vendors.
It is a general proposition, that on a sale of a personal chattel with a warranty, in case the chattel turns out to be not of the kind or quality represented, the purchaser ,may have one of two remedies: he may rescind the contract and return the property. The effect of such action is to place the parties in the same condition in which they were before the purchase; and whatever has been paid or delivered by either
But as heretofore stated, if the contract is held good, if the plaintiffs are liable under such contract for a breach of the warranty, the contract is also good against the defendants, and they are liable for the contract price. It makes a material difference whether in the first instance the jury charged the defendants with $260, the cost price of the machine, or simply charged them with what they thought under the testimony, the machine was worth. Only for this and a subsequent error in the ruling of the court, can we understand
A third proposition, and the only one which we deem worthy of further notice, is in reference to the ruling of the court as to the admission of certain evidence. This evidence -is as to the statements of certain parties, evidence which by ordinary rules it is conceded would be incompetent as mere hearsay. The trial court admitted it, because, as it said, it tended to prove good faith. We think the reason given is insufficient, and that as a general rule no testimony which upon the issues joined is clearly hearsay, can be received upon the mere supposition that it tends to prove good faith. In this case the error is material, for conversations with the
The judgment will be reversed, and the case remanded for a new trial.