32 Kan. 666 | Kan. | 1884
The opinion of the court was delivered by
On June 23, 1881, T. H. Nicholson purchased of the Sandwich Manufacturing Company, a corporation, through J. H. Caddy, its agent at Spring Hill, Kansas, a reaper and a binder. The reaper and binder were- at Spring Hill at the time, and Nicholson examined them, and then entered into a written contract for their purchase. Under this contract Nicholson 'took the machines home with him and used them for two or three days in cutting and binding about fifteen acres of his wheat; and then gave his promissory notes to the manufacturing company for the purchase-money, amounting to $240. As to whether he gave two notes of $120 each, or three notes of $80 each, there is a conflict in the evidence. He afterward finished cutting and binding his wheat — about thirty acres; and then took the machines to his house, and in about two or three weeks thereafter took the machines back to Spring Hill and delivered them to Mr. Caddy. There is much conflict in the evidence, and therefore we think it is un
The last defense is not well pleaded, but for the purposes of this case we shall consider it sufficiently pleaded. Both of these defenses required that the defendant should show that the machines were not what they should have been or what they were represented to be; and either that they would not do good work, or that they would not do the proper amount thereof within a specified time. For the purpose of showing that they would not do the proper amount of work, the defendant showed about how much wheat these machines would cut and bind in a day; and then his counsel, who was examining him as a witness, asked him the following question: “ State, if you know from your own experience or observation, or both, how many acres of wheat were ordinarily cut in a day with an ordinarily good binder.” (The parties frequently called this reaper and binder simply a binder.) This question was objected to by the plaintiff upon the ground that it had not been shown that the defendant was competent to testify with regard to this matter; but the objection was overruled and the plaintiff excepted, and the defendant then answered: “About twelve to fifteen acres per day. Some cut more than that.”
The defendant’s counsel also put the following question to the witness, H. Longsten: “I will ask you to state, if you know, how many acres of ordinary wheat ought to be cut in
About the only evidence introduced to show that the reaper itself was not good, was that it did not cut as much wheat as this evidence showed that a good reaper ought to cut. There was also some evidence tending to show that the binder was not good. There are several other questions involved in this case, but probably the case will never again be what it is now, and probably these questions will never again arise; hence we shall not discuss them.
The judgment of the court below will be reversed, and the cause remanded for a new trial.