139 Mo. App. 473 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1909
This is an action for a breach of warranty by the defendant upon the sale of a certain machine consisting of a clover huller, feeder and stacker.
The contract was entered into on September 7, 1905, and the machine was delivered on September 11th, two days thereafter. The contract- provided for a payjment of $300 cash on delivery, and $250 to be paid on the 1st day of November evidenced by a note of plaintiff and secured by chattel mortgage on the property.
After the recitation of the warranty the writing further reads: “hut if inside of six days from the day of its first use, the said machinery fails to fill its warranty, written notice shall be given Reeves & Company by registered letter, and also written notice to the local agent from whom the same was purchased, stating wherein it fails to fill the warranty, and if it be of such a nature that remedy cannot be suggested by letter, a reasonable time shall be allowed to remedy the defects, if any there be, and an opportunity offered for a trial thereafter, the purchaser rendering necessary and friendly assistance. Defects or failures in one part shall not condemn any other part of attached machine, and if after a fair opportunity to remedy a defect the part or parts containing' such cannot be made to fill the warranty that part which fails shall be returned immediately by the purchaser to the place where it was received, with the option of the company either to furnish another machine, or part, in place of the machine or part so returned, or credit the settlement of the same. If Reeves & Company shall furnish another machine or part in place of the one returned, the terms of this warranty shall be held to be fulfilled and the company shall be subject to no further liability under this order'. It is hereby expressly agreed that all claims for damages against Reeves & Company by reason of non-performance of machinery are hereby waived.
“It is mutually, agreed that the failure of the purchaser to give said written notice of defects, as above provided, within six days from the day of its first use,
The machine was first put in use on the 22d day of September. One of defendant’s agents was present to start it, but it failed to do good work. He claimed that the clover was too wet and that he would have to wait until it should get dry and promised to come back later. He returned on the 26th and failed again to make the machine do good work. It was then moved to another farm Avhere it was started to work again by defendant’s agent on the 27th of September, but it failed again to do proper work. On the 28th, the next day, plaintiff endeavored to run the machine without the aid of defendant’s agent, but it still failed to act so as to do good work; whereupon on the same day, he called up the defendant’s agent then in Columbia and told him the machine would not do good work, On the same day
There can be little or no dispute but what the machine failed to answer the purpose intended. The evidence is all one way. It is true the defendant’s agent claimed that the clover was too wet for the machine to operate successfully. But it was tried upon different material at different times and places with the same result. The language of the warranty is not limited in its application to any particular condition of the clover to be hulled as to dryness or dampness. If such was the intention defendant should have specified in that particular. From the very nature of things it may be safely inferred that the condition of clover after it is harvested is subject to change of temperature and the condition of the atmosphere. If the atmosphere he warm and damp the clover would be affected thereby and to some extent would be damp. On the contrary if the weather is fair and the atmosphere dry the clover would necessarily be drier. At the time plaintiff first attempted to use the machine under the supervision of defendant’s agent, it is claimed as we have seen that the clover was wet. And at all the subsequent trials it is claimed that the same condition existed. It is to be concluded from these facts that the huller would only perform good work while the clover was in a. certain condition as to being dry. Just how dry it does not appear. The contract does not say. It seems to us that a machine that would not work well under ordinary conditions as to dampness or dryness of the material, would, in this climate be very uncertain and unsatisfactory, and would be of little or at least uncertain value. But as the contract does not include auy such specification the matter need not be further noticed.
The plaintiff’s failure to give notice to the local agent, and to the corporation by registered letter, was
After defendant notified plaintiff in effect that it would not rescind the contract and that it would hold him to its terms, he was not bound to return the machine to the agent at Columbia. It amounted to a waiver of a return of the machine. [Walls v. Gates, 4 Mo. App. 1; and Osborn v. Mullikin, 88 Mo. App. 350.] The rule is succinctly stated in Padden v. Marsh, 34 Iowa 522, that: “Where by the terms of a warranty under which a reaping machine was sold, it was stipulated that, in case it failed to work as warranted, it was to be returned by the purchaser to a particular place, it was held, that a notification by the seller to the buyer that he would not receive the machine back excused the buyer from making an effort to return it.”
But it is insisted that plaintiff should at least have returned the defective part of the machine and give defendant the option either to refund its value or substitute machinery that would fill the warranty. It is held on a similar contract: “that in case of a breach of warranty the buyer should immediately return the defective machinery and the seller should have the option either to furnish another machine or return the purchase money, the buyer, was bound to elect within a reasonable time whether he would return the machinery and claim cancellation of the purchase money notes or the delivery of proper machinery in lieu of that found deficient. And his failure to do so waived the breach. [Gaar Scott & Company v. Hodges (Ky.), 90 S. W. 580; and so is it held in Heageny v. J. I. Case Threshing
It at as argued that as the contract was devisable defendant was under no obligation to take back any part of the machine that fulfilled the contract. That is to say, if there were no defects in the stacker and feeder the plaintiff was hound by the contract to keep them. It is true these Avere devisable parts of the machine which had either proved defective the defendant upon notice had the right to remedy, yet respondent has left out of consideration that these devisable parts went to constitute the whole, and that without the huller they were of no value whatever to plaintiff. What use could he have had for a feeder Avithout the huller to receive the feed or what material could he have had to stack until the clover passed through the huller are matters which the argument has left out of consideration.
We believe the finding and judgment is not sustained by the evidence and the law for which reason the cause is reversed and remanded.