95 Neb. 689 | Neb. | 1914
This action was brought to recover the balance due. plaintiff upon a contract for the sale of a computing scale. Plaintiff failed in the action, and appeals to this court.
Defendant bought the scale on September 5,1910, under a printed and written contract, which in substance provided that the scale will be used in the grocery business, that the price should be $150, $50 of which was paid in cash when the contract was signed, and $100 was to be paid in 30 days. The contract also provided: “It is expressly agreed that this contract shall not be countermanded, and in the event of a refusal to accept said scale when tendered, the full purchase price, less any previous payments, shall at once become due and payable as liquidated damages, not as a penalty. The signing and delivering of instalment note shall not be deemed nor considered a payment or
Defendant asks that the case be affirmed because plaintiff’s brief is not prepared in accordance with the rules of this court. We would probably be justified in so doing if the record was large and the points sought to be made were not clear, but with a short record and an orderly, logical and concise arrangement in the brief, we do not now feel warranted in taking such summary action. In \iew of the unnecessary labor heretofore imposed upon the court by carelessly prepared and defective briefs, neAv rules, more specific and definite, have been adopted to aid the bar in the preparation of briefs and the court in the disposition of cases. Briefs prepared after such rules are in effect will be more strictly scrutinized, and if not in accordance with the instructions given in the rules may receive scant consideration.
Plaintiff, Avhile admitting that a party to an executory contract may rescind it at any time before receipt, of the goods, and that under certain circumstances a buyer may examine the goods before acceptance, and if not found as represented may refuse to receive the same, insists that the right of inspection by the purchaser Avas taken away under the terms of the contract, and, further, that by receiving it in his place of business and unpacking it, defendant received and accepted the scale and that the transaction became an. executed and complete sale and delivery, and defendant’s only recourse was under the terms of the warranty in the contract. Defendant maintains that he had a right to examine and inspect the scale before acceptance, and to rescind and return it if defective and not according to contract, that he did no more than this, and that the scale was defective and unfit for use when tested. We find no restrictive provisions in this contract which take the transaction out of the ordinary rule with respect to the right of inspection before acceptance. The quoted provision with respect to countermand is not applicable to the
We think there was an implied wan*anty that the scale purchased should be fit “for use in the grocery business.” Kellogg Bridge Co. v. Hamilton, 110 U. S. 108, 3 Sup. Ct. Rep. 537; Gilchrest Lumber Co. v. Wilson, 84 Neb. 583; Omaha Coal, Coke & Lime Co. v. Fay, 37 Neb. 68. We are also of opinion that the reasonable right of inspection remained in the defendant, nothing to the contrary being contained in the written contract. The condition of the scale justified its rejection. The provision “no scale placed on trial” evidently means that the buyer shall not have the privilege of receiving, retaining and using the scale in his business for the purpose of trial, and does not affect the right of inspection before acceptance.
Under the evidence the defendant was justified in refusing to accept the scale, and the judgment of the district court was right, and is
Affirmed.