Lead Opinion
To adopt the theory advanced by respondent and accepted by the trial court .relative to the purpose of the statute of limitations would be to ordain the statute as an instrument for the protection of fraud instead of for its prevention. The action is upon a breach of a warranty made by respondent upon the sale of carpet. If it should be held that the statute began to run at the date of the sale of the carpet and not when it had been ascertained and established as a fact that the warranty had been breached, not only would appellant be deprived of its right to present its cause of action on the merits but respondent would be invited to continue the making of similar warranties to others secure in the knowledge that it would not be required to answer in damages for their breach.
The judgment appealed from followed an order sustaining a demurrer to the amended complaint without leave to amend further. The facts alleged are as follows: Appellant at all times mentioned in the pleadings was the owner and operator of a ballroom and cafe; respondent was engaged in the business of fabricating, assembling and selling carpet throughout the United States; in April or May, 1943, appellant and respondent entered into an oral agreement whereby the latter agreed that if appellant would purchase the carpet required for its place of .business from one Jack Freeman, who in turn would purchase the same from respondent, such carpet when installed in appellant’s place of business wоuld, by reason of its quality and the manner in which it would be assembled and installed, last for a period of six to eight years following its installation; pursuant to and relying on said agreement appellant on or about August 18, 1943, purchased the carpet required for its place of business from Freeman and he purchased it from respondent; the latter fabricated and assembled the carpet, delivered it to appellant’s place of business and through its own employees laid and installed it in September, 1943; appellant paid Freemаn the purchase price; within two
1. The statute of limitations. The action was commenced on December 13, 1945, more than two years after the purchase of the carpet and more than two years aftеr it was installed in appellant’s place of business but less than two years after the appearance of the only defects complained of, to wit, the opening of the seams and the raveling of the edges.
The question is when the two-year statute of limitations (Code Civ. Proc., § 339, subd. 1) began to run, whether (1) at the date of the contract or, at the latest, the date of the installation of the carpet, in which event the action is barred; or (2) when the defects complained of appeared, in which case it is not barred. Was the warranty in its nature present or prospective f
The allegations of the amended complaint are clear and definite that respondent warranted that the carpet would, by reason of (a) its quality and (b) the manner in which it would be assembled and installed, last for a period of from six to eight years following its installation.
The trial court erred in sustaining the demurrer without leave to amend. There is no allegation in the amended complaint that the body of the carpet, its quality, was defective, or that it suffered even the slightest amount of wear. The defect complained of and the alleged breach of the warranty relate solely to fabrication and workmanship—the seams opened and the edges raveled. The failure of the carpet to last for the period warranted was occasioned by the defective sewing of the seams and binding of the edges, constituting a breach of the warranty as it related to good workmanship in
The cause of action is on a warranty of a future happening and it did not arise and the statute of limitations did not bеgin to run at the date of sale but was postponed until the future event failed to materialize. In Crawford v. Duncan,
The rule stаted in the Restatement of the Law is in accord with the cases cited. Under a contract for the sale of goods the failure of the buyer, after acceptance of the goods, to give notice to the seller of the latter’s breach of warranty “within a reasonable time after the buyer knows or has reason to know of such breach, discharges the seller’s duty to make compensation.” (Emphasis added.) (2 Rest., Contracts, § 412, p.777.) Illustration two under that section is that where a horse is sold with a warranty of soundness, and owing to a latent defect it is unsound аnd the unsoundness does not become obvious until after delivery, the purchaser can recover if he makes demand on the seller immediately after discovery of the defect. Absent a defect there could be no cause of action; absent the purchaser’s knowledge or means of knowledge of a defect the cause of action would not accrue.
If “the warranty as to kind or quality of the article is construed as prospective, and its truth cannot be ascertained until the happening of a future event to which the warranty relates, then it is not broken until the happening of that event, and the statute of limitations does not begin to run until that date.” (
Whether a cause of action for breach of a warranty arises (1) at the date of the sale or (2) when the defect is discovered, the statute of limitations is tolled as long as the vendor claims that the defect in the article can be remedied and he is attempting to correct the error. (Louisville Silo & Tank Co. v. Thweatt,
There was no defect in the quality оf the workmanship in assembling the carpet, which is the only failure of the warranty of which appellant complains, that could have been determined by observation at the time of sale or installation. If respondent had warranted that the carpet was all wool, or that the warp consisted of a stated number of threads to the inch, or that the color would not be affected by the application of water, the truth of such statements could have been ascertained by inspection and test. If untrue the cause of action would have accrued when the carpet was made available for appellant’s examination, either when it was delivered to its place of business or when it was installed. Since the warranty was not restricted to a fact ascertainable at the date of the contract but related also to a future event, to wit, that the carpet would last for the time warranted, only by the happening of such future event could the truth of the entire warranty be ascertained. Until then the cause of action did not accrue and the statute of limitations did not begin to run. (1 Williston on Sales, 2d ed., § 212a, p. 411.)
Since appellant does not allege that a failure to fulfill the warranty was in a particular that could have been made the subject of an action at the time the carpet was laid on the. floor the statute of limitations is not available as a defense. If prior to the appearance of the imperfections appellant had commenced an action for damages based on defective workmanship in assembling the carpet, it is not to be presumed that respondent would have failed to present the defense that since no flaw had appeared there was no cause of action.
The cases relied on by respondent do not support its contention that appellant’s cause of action for breach of the warranty arose at the time of the sale and that the statute of limitations began to run at that time. The inapplicability of the case of Lattin v. Gillette,
The Lattin and Pickford cases are further distinguishable from the instant case in that the warranty in each ease was that the facts stated were true at the time the warranty was made. There was no warranty in those cases of a future event or that any change would or would not occur, whereas in this case respondent warranted that the carpet would last at least four years longer than the two-year period of the statute of limitations, to which respondent contends appellant was restricted in commencing its action for breach of the warranty.
In the Pickford ease (p. 521) the court quoted from 1 Willis-ton оn Sales (2d ed. § 212a, p. 411) as follows; “The typical warranty, being an undertaking regarding the quality of goods at the time of their sale must, if ever broken, be broken at that time; and the statute of limitations, therefore, begins to run immediately.’’ (Emphasis added.)
A litigant cannot find shelter under a rule announced in a decision that is inapplicable to a different factual situation in his own case, nor may a decision of a court be rested on quotations from previous opinions that are not pertinent by reason of dissimilarity of facts in the cited cases and those in the case under consideration. An extract from an opinion must be read in the light of the subject there under discussion and with reference to the facts in that case, and rules applicable to the decision in which they appear cannot be repeated in exemplification of a theory different from that to which they were applied in the case wherein the opinion was rendered. Principles that may serve to illustrate a point are considered by the court in relation to the case decided but аre not necessarily announced as universally applicable. So it is with quotations from text books. For the purpose of illustrating a point the writer may state a principle that is sound and sustained by the authorities but it may have no
The quotation in the Pickford case from Williston on Sales refers to a warranty of the quality of goods and it is apt in that case only by reason of the facts (a) that the warranty was of a fact stated to be true at the time of the sale which was not true, and (b) that the truth of the matter there warranted could have been readily. ascertained from the public records on the day the warranty was made. The quotation is inapt in the instant ease because (a) the warranty was that the good condition of the carpet as to the manner of assembling and installation would continue over a period of years, a future contingency, and (b) the truth of the warranty could not be determined at the time it was made but was asсertainable only through a subsequent occurrence.
The quotation bears no relevancy to the question involved in the case at bar, since (a) the breach complained of by appellant was the inadequate sewing and binding of the carpet, not that the quality of the carpet was poor; and (b) the warranty here breached was not concerning a matter that could have been determined by an immediate examination of the seams and binding of the carpet but was in respect to a condition that would continue into the future, the verity of the warranty not being ascertainable at the time it was made and possibly not until the expiration of the period covered by it.
The rule governing the instant case is stated by Mr. Willis-ton immediately following the above quotation, and in the same section, where he says concerning a warranty of a future event: ‘ ‘ On the other hand, if the seller promises that something shall happen or shall not happen to the goods within a specified future time, the promise though it may be called a warranty cannot be broken until that time has elapsed and until then the statute will not begin to run. As shown in the preceding section what is in terms a promise for the future may also involve a representation as to the present. This should not deprive the buyer, however, of the full statutory period after the promise is actually broken in the future.”This statement of the law clearly exhibits the important feature distinguishing a warranty of present quality (the structure of the body of the carpet) from a warranty of a future event (that the seams would not open nor the edges ravel), and reveals the proper effect to be given to a warranty that includes both present and future events.
There is no lack of harmony between the decisions of the Supreme Court of California and those of other jurisdictions. The distinction between the two groups of cases is that the California cases, as we have pointed out, relate to warranties of the genuineness and validity of matters stated to have been actualities when the warranties were made and therefore are not applicable to the facts in the instant case аnd do not guide our decision, while the decisions of other courts that we have cited pertain to situations parallel with the circumstances here under consideration in which not present but future events must determine the truth of . the warranty. Until the warranty is broken the cause of action does not arise, and until the cause arises there is no occasion to consider what proof is necessary to establish appellant’s right of recovery.
In support of its demurrer and of the judgment respondent cites Brackett v. Martens,
To sustain respondent’s theory would be to hold that the action was barred before the falsity of the warranty could be ascertained.
What facts the еvidence will bring forth we do not know. We are concerned only with the allegations in the amended complaint that respondent made .an express agreement with appellant. Respondent is presumed to have known the character of appellant’s place of business and the approximate amount of traffic that would pass over the carpet during the term of the warranty. It was necessary for it to have had that knowledge in order to prepare the carpet for installation. Respondеnt acknowledged the warranty and its responsibility thereunder by its attempts to repair the defects of which appellant now complains.
There is nothing in the pleading from which it may be inferred that the agreement that the carpet would last for a period of six to eight years was merely an expression of opinion or what is sometimes referred to as “sales talk” or “puffing.” The amended complaint alleges a warranty of a fact, not a statement of opinion.
Respondent’s agreement was not to answer for the debt or obligation of another and therefor was not required to be in writing. There is no allegation that any person other than respondent became obligated to appellant in' connection with the sale. Moreover, a promise to answer for the obligation of another is deemed to be an original obligation of the
3. Allegations of the amount of damages suffered by appellant. It is alleged that appellant paid $5,181.65 for the carpet; that in spite of respondent’s attempt to replace and repair the carpet it became frayed and ragged, “constituted a hazard to plaintiff’s customers on the premises,” “is unfit for the use of the plaintiff,” “is of no value or service to the plaintiff, ’ ’ and as a result thereof plaintiff has been damaged in the sum of $5,181.65. The allegation that the carpet, in its ragged condition, сonstituted a hazard to plaintiff’s customers, was unfit for use, and was of no value, is sufficient as an allegation of the damages alleged to have been suffered by appellant.
Since appellant is entitled to amend its pleading it may supply all of the uncertainties complained of by respondent and it is not necessary for us to take note of them.
Judgment reversed with directions to the trial court to allow appellant to amend its pleading further if it so desires.
Moore, P. J., concurred.
Dissenting Opinion
I dissent. It will be assumed for the purposes of this opinion, without deciding, that the complaint as amended alleged an oral agreement by defendant warranting that if plaintiff purchased certain carpeting from Jack Freeman, its quality, the manner in which it would be assembled and installed would cause it to last for a period of from six to eight years following its installation; that such agreement was made in May, 1943; that in September, 1943, the carpeting, pursuant to such agreement, was installed in plaintiff’s place of business; and that since January, 1944, the carpeting has been unfit for use by plaintiff.
The present action was commenced December 13, 1945. Defendant filed a demurrer on the ground, among others, that the purported cause of action was barred by the statute of limitations. (Code Civ. Proc., § 339, subd. 1.) This demurrer was sustained without leave to amend.
Did the statute of limitations commence to run at the time of the sale of the carpeting or at the time plaintiff discovered that the carpeting was defective?
It is the general rule in this state that a cause of action for breach of a warranty of the quality of merchandise arises at the time of the sale, and the statute of limitations commences to run at that time. (Mary Pickford Co. v. Bayly Bros., Inc. (1939),
Applying the foregoing rule to the facts of the present case, since the agreement was not in writing, plaintiff had two years after its cause of action arose within which to file suit for breach of the alleged warranty. (Code Civ. Proc., § 339, subd. 1.) It is alleged that the carpeting was delivered in September, 1943, and the complaint was not filed in the instant case until December 13, 1945. Thus more than two years had elapsed from the time plaintiff’s cause of action arose before the present suit was commenced, therefore the alleged cause of action was barred-by the statute of limitations.
Sweet v. Watson’s Nursery (1937),
In my view the majority opinion fails to recognize that there is a distinction between the time that a cause of action arises and the proof necessary to establish such cause of action. Decisions from other states cited in the majority opinion are, of course, inapplicable in view of the contrary decisions of our Supreme Court. I am therefore of the opinion that the judgment should be affirmed.
Respondent’s petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied May 22, 1947. Edmonds, J., and Spence, J., voted for a hearing.
