120 N.W. 558 | N.D. | 1909
This is an appeal from an order denying a new trial, and from a judgment entered in favor of the plaintiff on motion for a directed verdict. The complaint alleges the sale and delivery by the plaintiff to the defendant of merchandise consisting of seeding and drilling machinery, for which it is alleged the defendant agreed to pay $997.50. The answer is very lengthy. It is unnecessary to quote .it, and we shall only refer to it briefly. It denies the sale of the machinery and the indebtedness, and pleads a contract in writing relating to the goods in question, the terms of which are referred to below. It alleges that defendant received from plaintiff, accepted and paid the freight on, 10 drills, 8 of which he was unable to sell on account of defective construction, etc.; that he received and holds $225 for plaintiff on account of the sale of 2 of said drills. The defendant then attempts to plead a counterclaim growing out of an alleged breach of warranty by reason of which he was damaged, in his effort to make the drills work, $50, and he also attempts to plead a rescission of the contract. To this answer and counterclaim the plaintiff interposed a general denial. The case was called, for trial, and'the size and kind of 10 drills received by defendant from plaintiff were shown, and the contract between the parties was offered in evidence, and received over the objection of the defendant, whereupon .the plaintiff rested. The plaintiff then objected to the introduction of any evidence on the part of the defendant, substantially upon the ground's that the answer did not state facts showing a rescission of the contract, inasmuch as it did not show that all the property had been returned, or offered to be returned, and that the defendant had sold and used a part of it,
Three questions are presented by the assignments of error, and the brief and argument of the plaintiff, for our consideration. The first relates to the construction of the contract in question. It is urged by the appellant that it is a contract of agency, and that therefore it was improperly received in evidence, and forms no basis for the judgment. This requires us to consider the terms of the contract, and what its legal effect is when taken as a whole. It may be an agency contract, although the word “agent,” or “agency,” was not employed in it anywhere. On the other hand, it may be employed, and still the contract not create an agency. The word “agent” appears in only one place, and the construction which appellant relies upon he attempts to gather from its use in that instance. The respondent agrees to do certain things named and “to fill orders promptly so long as it has machines on hand and transportation can be procured, and to appoint no 'other agent' for said territory; provided the party of the second part fully performs the foregoing stipulations and agreements.” The word “agent” is employed in more than one sense, and it is frequently used to indicate that a merchant or dealer has the exclusive right to sell a specified article in certain territory, when in fact no agency exists. The dealer .in no sense represents the manufacturer, but simply buys from him in the regular course of trade, and sells the specified article to the public. The public in such case, and sometimes the dealer himself, frequently refers to this as an “agency” for the article. Almost anyone can call to mind instances of this nature in everyday experience, and in every village and city. We are of the opinion that this is all that is meant by this provision in the contract. The appellant was given the exclusive right, as long as he complied with the conditions, to handle machinery of respondent’s manufacture within the territory named. The agreement to appoint no other
We are unable to construe this contract as a whole, which is the only rule for construing it, except as a conditional sale contract. “A conditional sale is a sale in which the transfer of title in the thing sold to the purchaser, or his retention of it, is made to depend upon the performance of some condition.” 6 Am. & Eng. Enc. of Law, 437; Morrison Mfg. Co. v. Fargo Storage Co., 16 N. D. 256, 113 N. W. 605, 12 L. R. A. (N. S.) 820; note, 94 Am. St. Rep. 209. The vendor under contract of conditional sale may elect
It is urged as a reason for reversing the judgment of the lower court that this action was brought prematurely; that nothing was due until a settlement under the terms of the contract. We are not at all certain that it was incumbent upon the respondent to secure a settlement or even attempt to' do so, before bringing this action, but in any event the point does not appear from the record tO' have been raised in the trial court, and it cannot therefore be considered on this appeal. McLain v. Nurnberg, 16 N. D. 144, 112 N. W. 243; Van Gordon v. Goldamer, 16 N. D. 323, 113 N. W. 609.
The third question discussed relates to the rescission of the contract by the appellant. The trial court evidently held that the answer of the defendant did not show a valid rescission of the contract. In this it was right. Appellant discusses this question very briefly. The ground on which he claimed the right to rescind was that the machinery purchased did not fill the warranty. Hie attempted to plead a breach of such warranty, but the trial court struck out that-part of the answer relating thereto'. The .rule in -both Minnesota and this state is that a breach of warranty entitles the buyer to rescind an agreement for sale, but not an executed sale, unless the warranty was intended to operate as a condition. McCormick v. Fields, 90 Minn, 161, 95 N. W. 886; Lynch v. Curfman, 66 Minn. 170, 68 N. W. 5; Rev. Codes N. D. 1905, § 5378. The answer alleges that at certain times during the spring and selling season of 1905 defendant gave plaintiff due notice of the defective condition of the machinery purchased, and at that time, and soon thereafter, offered to deliver the same to plaintiff, and here and now offers said machinery to plaintiff, and to make full and complete and just settlement to plaintiff on account of said drills and seeding machinery
The judgment and order of the district court is affirmed.