210 Mass. 211 | Mass. | 1911
On June 28,1906, the defendant signed and delivered to one Wood, a travelling salesman of the plaintiff corporation, an order for a soda fountain and apparatus. The order
The plaintiff completed the fountain which was a <£ Constellation No. 23,” and sent it from the factory to the defendant’s store in North Adams, where it was set up by one Grant, a marble worker in the plaintiff’s employ. Thereupon on September 10, 1906, the defendant, in accordance with the terms of his order, delivered to Grant a lease of the fountain and apparatus, a check for $1,000 and fifty-four notes for the balance of the purchase price. The first twenty-four notes were paid as they became due. These actions were brought to recover the amount of seventeen of the notes that matured and were not paid.
The eases were referred to an auditor
The issues intended to be raised by the exceptions are (1) The admissibility of the conversations between the defendant and the plaintiff’s salesman Wood previous to the written contract, descriptive of the quality of the material and workmanship in the soda fountain; (2) the sufficiency of the evidence to warrant a finding that the defendant accepted the fountain as a fulfilment of the contract of purchase; and (3) the right of the defendant to recoup for the cost of changes in the foundation and plumbing.
The auditor’s findings establish the facts that the fountain as furnished and set up by the plaintiff complies with the terms of the defendant’s written order and is the fountain described in the lease, and that it is reasonably fit for the uses and purposes for which it was made and intended. There is no ambiguity in the description of the property sold, and no suggestion of fraud.
In view of the auditor’s finding that the plaintiff complied with the terms of the written contract, the requests on the issue of the defendant’s acceptance become immaterial. But we do not mean to intimate that the auditor was not justified in his finding, that the giving of the lease and check and payment of the notes after the defendant had full knowledge of the imperfections in the fountain was in fact an acceptance of the fountain as a fulfilment of the contract of purchase.
The auditor found that the working plan furnished by the plaintiff was improperly drawn in such manner as to necessitate cutting new holes in the foundation for the outlet pipes and rearranging the plumbing. This work was done by the defendant at an expense of $100 and the auditor found that he should be allowed that amount. The trial judge did not credit the defendant with this sum, and the requests for rulings apparently do not raise any issue on the right to recover for this expenditure. However the charge could not properly be allowed on the pleadings as the defendant set up no claim of recoupment, and he must now seek his remedy by a separate action. Hodgkins v. Moulton, 100 Mass. 309. Jackman v. Doland, 116 Mass. 550. Wentworth v. Dows, 117 Mass. 14.
The first, second and fourteenth
Exceptions overruled.
Carlton T. Phelps, Esquire.
Crosby, J.
The first and second requests were to the effect that on the pleadings and the auditor’s report the plaintiff could not recover and that the defendant should have judgment. The tenth and the fourteenth requests were as follows:
“10. That the evidence of the statements made by the defendant to Grant and by Grant to the defendant at the time of the giving of the lease and notes should have been admitted.”
“14. That the finding of the auditor that the soda fountain delivered was reasonably suitable for the purpose intended was erroneous.”
As to the statements referred to in the tenth request, the auditor’s report