57 Mich. 60 | Mich. | 1885
Plaintiff sued defendant for a balance' claimed to be due for bread. Defendant claimed that the account had been balanced by bad bread returned, and by a sum of ten dollars paid in settlement of accounts.
Plaintiff was a baker, and defendant’s business was to sup. ply bread to customers about the city. It appears that for a period defendant was employed by plaintiff to sell his bread,, and make returns and pay for the bread furnished daily. Defendant claims that on several occasions the bread furnished was bad and unwholesome, and that he returned it to a sufficient extent to overbalance his payments, and that there was an understanding to that effect. The parties are directly at variance on the facts. There was a good deal of testimony showing that bread was often made unfit for use, and that.
The court below rightly excluded evidence of a Sunday •contract before the business was entered into. But there was testimony of subsequent dealings tending to prove the theory of the defense.
The case being an appeal from a justice, it was shown and ■seems to have been admitted that in the justice’s court plaintiff swore that the amount due him was only $65, while in the circuit he swore to $103.79, and recovered it. The court was asked to charge the jury that if plaintiff so swore below, and so changed his testimony without explaining why, that ■circumstance should weigh with the jury against the good faith of the claim. The court refused so to charge, but in the charge the court made this remark: “ Defendant also states that the complainant only claimed $65 in justice court, but the complainant undertakes to explain it by saying that he made a mistake, as he did not have his books of account with him at the time.” This had a decided tendency to induce the jury to regard the point as of no consequence. But it is not a small matter for a person who goes into court to swear to his claim, to pay so little regard to his oath as to take no pains to find out what is due. And beyond this, there is nothing in the plaintiff’s testimony to show any such •explanation given by him on oath. The error was material.
The court also refused to charge that plaintiff was subject by law to an implied warranty that the bread was wholesome, and in the charge stated the defendant’s objections to apply ■chiefly to its marketable quality, and to its being soiled externally by getting dirty on the floor. There was, however, testimony from several sources that the bread was unfit for food, apart from its external appearance.
It was held in Hoover v. Peters 18 Mich. 51, that there is ■an implied warranty of wholesomeness in the sale of provisions for direct consumption. This question is not discussed in plaintiff’s brief, and was left entirely out of view by the ■court, and the only reference to it was in connection with an express contract.
The judgment must be reversed and a new trial granted.