75 Wash. 505 | Wash. | 1913
This action was brought for the purpose of recovering damages for personal injuries. The facts, so far as necessary to an understanding of the questions here to be determined, are substantially as follows: On June 30, 1910, the Walla Walla Iron Works, as the agent of the Advance Thresher Company, by written contract, sold to the plaintiff and one George W. Daniel an Advance separator. The contract provided for an initial payment, and three subsequent payments falling due October 1, 1910, October 1, 1911, and October 1, 1912, which were to be evidenced by promissory notes secured by a chattel mortgage upon the machine. Thereafter, the separator was delivered and the notes and mortgage executed. The separator was used during the season of 1910 by the plaintiff and Daniel. In the fall of that year, it was returned to the Walla Walla Iron Works for storage. After being placed in storage, it appears that the plaintiff desired to remove the machine, or a part thereof, to his farm; but owing to the fact that he and Daniel were owing the Walla Walla Iron Works for repairs, permission to remove it was denied. The plaintiff then desired to remove the drive belt, but this' permission was refused him by the president and manager of the iron works unless he should get permission from one Cowan, the general agent of the thresher company. Subsequently this permission was obtained. At this time the plaintiff.had' met his obligations t.o the thresher company, but Daniel was in default and apparently had neither the inclination nor the ability to make his
There was no change in the possession of the separator until about the first of August, 1911, when the plaintiff took it away. When the plaintiff went to get the separator, he was informed that the cap over the cylinder was gone. The plaintiff then, as he testifies, saw Broughton, the manager of the iron works, who said he had taken the cover for another advance separator and would have a cover put on. An employee of the iron works put on a new cap in the absence of the plaintiff. This cap was not lined with sheet iron- or steel, and after being used about eight days, became so worn and thin that, when the plaintiff stepped on it while the machine was in operation, it gave way, letting his foot into the rapidly revolving cylinder, with the result that a portion of one foot was cut off. The negligence claimed is the failure to line the cylinder cap with sheet iron or steel to prevent it wearing as the grain would beat against it when passing through the cylinder.
The written contract by which the iron works was consti
The defendant thresher company contends that, at the time the cap which broke and caused the injury was put on by the iron works, the iron- works was not then its agent, and consequently, it is not liable.
The iron works denied negligence on its part and contends that the plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence which was the proximate cause of the injury. The alleged contributory negligence consisted in the plaintiff’s stepping upon the cap over the cylinder while oiling the machine. It is claimed that he might either have done the oiling by stepping upon a cross-timber, or by standing upon the ground. Upon the question as to where was the proper place for him to be while oiling the machine, the evidence is conflicting.
The cause was tried to the court and a jury, and a verdict for the plaintiff returned' in the sum of $3,500. At appropriate times on the part of the thresher company, motions for nonsuit, for a directed verdict, for judgment notwithstanding the verdict, and for a new trial, were made and overruled. On behalf of the iron works, a motion for new trial was made and overruled. Judgment was entered upon the verdict. Both defendants appeal.
The questions which are chiefly material are: First, was the Walla Walla Iron Works the agent of the Advance Thresher Company at the time the cap was supplied? Second, if it was the agent, then was the supplying of the cap within the scope of its agency? Third, what was the effect of the contract of May 22, 1911? Fourth, was the plaintiff
I. It must first be determined whether, at the time the Walla Walla Iron Works put the cap over the cylinder, it was the agent of the Advance Thresher Company. It is not questioned that, during the year 1910, such agency existed by virtue of a written contract which, however, as specified in the contract, was to expire on November 1, 1910. The respondent takes the position that the agency once established, and he having dealt with the agent, such agency, as to him, will be presumed to continue until he has notice, either express or implied, of its termination. The rule is that where a general agency is once established, as to third persons who have dealt with the agent, it will be presumed to continue until there is notice of revocation. In 31 Cyc. 1639, the rule is stated in this language:
“If a general agency for any purpose be shown the presumption as to third persons previously dealing with the agent is that it continues until notice of revocation.”
Numerous other authorities might be cited in support of this proposition, but it is so' well established that the cumulative citation of authority here would add nothing to its force. The undisputed fact being that the respondent, in his first transaction, purchased the machine from the iron works as the agent of the thresher company, such agency as to him would continue in the absence of notice of its termination. The respondent testified that he had neither notice nor knowledge that the agency had been terminated. The facts and circumstances which surround the entire transaction subsequent to the time specified in the written contract for the termination of the agency are not such as to enable us to say, as a matter of law, that they would impute knowledge to the respondent that the agency had been terminated. The question then became one of fact for the jury under proper instructions from the court.
“Q. And when you sell machines and they are in storage down at the Walla Walla Iron Works you expect the Walla Walla Iron Works to deliver them when parties call for them? A. If they are there, yes. Q. And you expect them to do whatever is necessary to deliver them? A. Why, I suppose so, yes.”
It can hardly be doubted that, where, at the time the contract of sale is made, the machine was in storage with the agent of the company and was in a completed condition, if, when it came to be delivered to the purchaser, some part thereof was missing, it would be within the scope of the agent’s power to supply the missing part.
III. It is contended, however, that the rules as to agency would not apply to this case for the reason that the machine had been sold to Daniel and Parker, and had
Where a subsequent contract is made covering the entire subject-matter of a previous one, and nothing is shown to indicate that it was intended to be an extension thereof, the original contract is superseded, and the rights of the parties become fixed in accordance with the terms of the second contract. In Leffel & Co. v. Piatt, 126 Mich. 443, 86 N. W. 65, a contract had been made between the parties to that cause on the 6th of May, 1897, relative to the sale of a quantity of machinery. Subsequently, and on September 8, 1897, a second contract of sale for the identical machinery named in the original contract was drawn up and signed by the parties to the original contract. Under the first contract, the machinery had been delivered to the purchaser and notes given for the payments as they became due. Under the second contract there were terms not embodied in the original and some of the terms of the original are not foúnd in the second. The machinery not being paid for, suit was brought upon the second contract. A right secured to the defendant by the first contract was pleaded in defense. It was said:
“We think it altogether clear that the contract of date September 8, 1897, superseded the first contract between the*512 parties. There is nothing on its face to indicate that it was intended to be supplemental. It covered all the property mentioned in the first, — contained an additional provision, it is true, and, in the body of the instrument, omitted any warranty. The property had at this time, however, been delivered, and a question had arisen as to its sufficiency. What more natural than that, in place of relying upon a guaranty, the defendant should insist on an opportunity to make a trial? This he did do. The result was the addendum indorsed on the agreement. The entire subject-matter of the first contract was covered, and when this is apparent it is held that a second written agreement supersedes the first, as matter of law, and that it is a question for the court.”
In Poland Paper Co. v. Foote & Davies Co., 118 Ga. 458, 45 S. E. 374, the plaintiffs had purchased paper which was to be delivered at a certain time. The paper was not delivered at the time mentioned in the contract. Sometime later, when the paper was shipped to the plaintiff, a dispute arose between the parties, and’ the defendant then insisted that the plaintiff should pay cash instead of being allowed the terms of credit provided for in the original contract. The plaintiff being anxious to secure the paper, paid the cash and thereafter brought action for damages for the original delay. Speaking of the effect of the second contract upon the first, the court said:
“But if the parties so intend, a new agreement may operate as a discharge of the old contract, and such discharge will be effected, even if nothing is said as to such being the intention, where the new agreement is founded on a new consideration. . . . There being no reservation of the right to sue for damages for the delay in delivery, the full performance of the new agreement by the seller, and the acceptance by the buyer operated as a discharge of the prior undertaking.”
Applying the rule of these cases to the facts in the present case, it would appear that the contract of May 22, 1911, superseded the prior contract, and the rights of the parties must be determined from it. The effect is the same as though
IV. On the question of contributory negligence, if the evidence of the appellants correctly presents the situation, then the respondent at the time of the injury voluntarily chose a dangerous way of performing the particular work upon which he was engaged, when a safe way was open to him. If the evidence introduced on behalf of the respondent is to be believed, he was performing the particular work at the time of the injury in the only practical way. The question then as to whether or not the respondent was guilty of contributory negligence was one for the jury.
V. Numerous errors are assigned as to the instructions given to the jury. But from a careful reading of all the instructions given, we think that they contain nothing which is prejudicial error.
The judgment will therefore be affirmed.
Crow, C. J., Ellis, and Fullerton, JJ., concur.