delivered the opinion of the court.
Defendant appeals from a judgment for $28,500 entered against it in plaintiff’s action for alleged breach of a written warranty in the sale of a reconditioned steel barrel.
Plaintiff, a dealer in petroleum products, sold and delivered barrels for the storage of its products. Defendant’s .business included the cleaning and reconditioning of used steel barrels or drums and selling them at wholesale. On October 28, 1938, plaintiff, confirming a telephone order of the previous day, sent defendant a written order on its printed form for 1,200 fifty-five gallon 18-gauge reconditioned steel barrels “To be thoroughly cleaned and painted. These barrels are to be entirely satisfactory in every respect or they will be returned for full credit at no expense to us. For resale.” In conformity with this order defendant delivered 100 barrels to plaintiff’s Courtland street yard. Ten days later plaintiff sold and delivered a barrel, claimed by it to have been received from defendant, to a customer for the storage of fuel oil. Plaintiff’s driver placed the barrel in the basement and returned to the truck for a wrench. In his absence Lawrence Veneigh, the 12-year-old son of the customer, lighted a match near the barrel, causing an explosion and severe injury to himself. When clаims were made against plaintiff it tendered the defense to defendant and informed defendant that it would demand indemnification for any loss and expense incurred or to be incurred because of the injuries to the boy. Defendant refused to accept the tender. In 1939, the father of the boy, as next friend and on his own behalf, brought suit to recover damages sustained, charging plaintiff and defendant here with negligence in selling the barrel containing explosive substances, etc., and.further charging plaintiff with breach of an express and implied warranty that the barrel would be safe and adequate for the storage of fuel oil аnd had been properly cleaned.
Further proceedings in that suit were as follows:— The answer of plaintiff here denied the charges of negligence and breach of warranty and alleged that the barrel delivered by it had been received from defendant. Defendant here denied the charge of negligence and asserted that all barrels delivered by it to plaintiff had been thoroughly cleaned and that none contained explosive substances. The jury was instructed at the request of plaintiff here that if it believed the barrel in question was purchased by plaintiff from defendant, a reputable company; thаt the barrel was sold and received as being clean; that plaintiff here in the exercise of ordinary care could not know what. the barrel had previously contained and that nothing was put into the barrel after it was received by plaintiff here but the barrel was delivered to plaintiff’s customer in the same condition as when received from defendant, then the jury should find the plaintiff here not guilty. The jury was instructed at the request of defendant here that before it could find the issues against defendant it must find that the barrel in question was sold and delivered by defendant to plaintiff herein and that Veneigh’s injury and damages were the natural and probable consequence of the negligence of defendant. By their general verdicts the jury found defendant not guilty and the plaintiff guilty. After remittitur judgments were entered against plaintiff herein for $22,500. These judgments were paid December 26, 1941. In 1942, plaintiff brought this action to recover from defendant the amount paid on the judgments and the money necessarily expended in defense of the Veneigh suit. Ho question is raised as to the sufficiency of the complaint.
Plaintiff’s claim is based on an alleged breach of an express warranty in the contract of sale that the barrels were to be thoroughly cleaned. Defendant moved to dismiss the complaint under section 48 of the Civil Practice Act [Ill. Rev. Stat. 1947, ch. 110, par. 172; Jones Ill. Stats. Ann. 104.048] “on the ground of estoppel by verdict, because the controlling question, i. e., whether or not defendant delivered to plaintiff the barrel involved in the accident had been decided adversely to plaintiff” in the Veneigh suit. In support of the motion defendant filed the affidavit of John F. Arnold, one of its attorneys in the trial of the Veneigh suit, stating in substance the pleadings, instructions, verdicts and judgments in that suit as heretofore outlined. Attached to the affidavit were the pleadings and affidavits of eight of the jurors. These affidavits are identical in form, eаch stating that one of the questions presented to the jury was whether the barrel involved in the accident was sold and delivered to plaintiff by defendant, and that in deciding the question it was affiant’s opinion, and, he believed, the opinion of all the jurors trying the case, that the barrel was not sold and delivered to plaintiff by defendant, and that because of that opinion he, and in his opinion the other jurors, found the defendant not guilty. By order of court restoring lost files there is now in the record the affidavit of one of the jurors in the Veneigh case which counsel for plaintiff say was presented to the trial court with a memorandum of рoints in opposition to defendant’s motion to dismiss. In this affidavit the affiant states that from the evidence she was convinced that the barrel involved in the accident had been sold and delivered to plaintiff by the defendant and that she found the plaintiff herein guilty because it had sold the barrel to Veneigh, and she believed at the time that it had a good claim against the defendant here. Defendant insists that the court erred in restoring this affidavit to the files. For reasons hereafter appearing we do not consider it necessary to decide that question. As said in People v. Wyanet Elec. Light Co.,
After denial of its motion defendant answered, putting in issue, with other matters, the origin of the barrel. There is no substantial conflict in the evidence, which clearly shows: Defendant bought many barrels for reconditioning from the American Can Company, which wrote defendant December 14, 1937 that “Many of the empty barrels which we sell to you have been used in shipping highly inflammable coating materials, solvents, compounds, etc., with the result that the fumes remain in the drums after they have been emptied.” Defendant replied, “. . . we take these drums with full knowledge of any inflammable or explosive material therein.” The barrel in question was originally filled with lаcquer, which is inflammable and explosive when ignited with an open flame. It was shipped from Pittsburgh, Pa., to the American Can Company in Chicago. To comply with the law the ends of the barrel were painted red and a red label warned “Keep away from eire, Heat and Open-flame Lights — caution—Leaking Packages Must be Removed to a Safe Place.” In draining there is a residue of one-half to a pint of lacquer, which can be detected by its odor by anyone close enough to screw up the bung. Defendant got the barrel from the American Can Company, painted it black but did not clean it before delivering it tо plaintiff, who accepted it without inspection. The cleaning process used by defendant would have removed the residue in the barrel. The black paint concealed and covered the red paint and red “caution” label so that when delivered to plaintiff there was nothing on the barrel to indicate its former contents or danger of an explosion. The lighted match held by the boy caused the explosion.
Delivery of barrels under plaintiff’s telephone order, confirmed by its written order, constituted an acceptance of the latter order with all its terms and conditions. Defendant thereby promised and represented to plaintiff that all barrels would be thoroughly cleaned and painted before delivery. This promise and representation was an inducement to plaintiff without which it would not have entered into the contract. That it relied upon the promise and representation is shown by the testimony of the man who gave the order and by the fact that the shipment to the Cortland street yard was accepted without inspection. There is, therefore, an express warranty that the barrels tendered under the contract would be thoroughly cleaned and painted. Uniform Sales Act, secs. 11 and 12, Ill. Rev. Stat. 1947, ch. 121½ [Jones Ill. Stats. Ann. 121.15, 121.16]. There being an express warranty, plaintiff was not required to inspect the barrels. Underwood v. Wolf,
Defendant further contends: “If it be assumed that the barrel in controversy was one of the barrels delivered to plaintiff by defendant and that the language of the drder created a warranty, nevertheless the injury to the Yeneigh boy was not the proximate result of the failure to clean the barrel but was brought about by an independent, intervening cause over which defendаnt had no control whatever; that is, the Yeneigh boy lighting a match and-applying it to the bunghole of the barrel.” In support of this contention defendant cites Sycamore Preserve Works v. Chicago & N. W. Ry. Co.,
Defendant contests the allowance of interest, amounting to $6,000. Interest is recoverable only if the damages are liquidated or ascertainable by a simple computation or by reference to generally recognized standards such as market prices. Duncan Lumber Co. v. Leonard Lumber Co.,
Defendant’s objections to evidence received cannot be sustained. The correspondence between the Americаn Can Company and the defendant was competent and material on the question of notice to defendant that some of the barrels it was reconditioning had contained inflammable material the fumes of which remained in the barrel. The testimony of plaintiff’s agent that he relied on defendant’s undertaking that the barrels would be thoroughly cleaned was competent to prove an essential element of a warranty. Defendant’s objection to instruction 14 given on behalf of plaintiff and telling the jury it should find for plaintiff if plaintiff had proved its case as alleged in its complaint, is answered by Lerette v. Director Generаl of Railroads,
Because of the'error in awarding interest to plaintiff the judgment is reversed and the cause remanded for a new trial, unless plaintiff shall within 20 days remit in this court the sum of $6,000. If such remittitur is entered the judgment will be affirmed for $22,500.
Judgment reversed and cause remanded for new trial unless plaintiff shall within 20 days remit in this court $6,000, in which event judgment will be affirmed for $22,500.
Feinberg and O’Connor, JJ., concur.
