63 Minn. 464 | Minn. | 1896
On March 1,1892, at St. James, Minnesota, defendant delivered to plaintiff a written order, by tbe terms of wbicb defendant agreed to purchase of plaintiff a certain soda-water apparatus. “Meridian No. 5723, Star marble, second-hand”; “2 10-gal. Cop. Fountains” ; “to be shipped Apr. 15”; price, $310; $60 cash, and balance in instalments, — for wbicb defendant agreed to execute a promissory note, title not to pass until paid for. !Tbis is about all of tbe contents of tbe order that it is necessary to state. A second-hand soda-water apparatus was shipped by plaintiff to defendant about April 16, a part of it from Boston, Massachusetts, and a part of it from Minneapolis. It arrived at St. James April 28 or 30, was taken to defendant’s drug store, and examined, when defendant discovered that tbe fountains were only of tbe capacity of eight gallons each, and could not be connected with tbe rest of tbe apparatus, as tbe connections were never made to fit each other at all. Plaintiff bad agreed to reline tbe fountains with tin, and this bad not been done, but tbe fountains were rusty and corroded on tbe inside. Thereupon, on May 2, defendant wrote as follows to plaintiff’s agent at Minneapolis, with whom be bad negotiated tbe purchase: “I have a kick to enter on founts: First, they are not 10 gallons; second, they have not been relined, as per agreement; third, they do not fit tbe attachments sent with tbe fountain. What have you to offer? I * * * want this matter straightened out at once. I ask a satisfactory and substantial answer.” Receiving no answer to .this letter, on May 9 be wrote to plaintiff, at Boston, as follows: “Fountain and founts have arrived. I decline to accept same, and give as reason a copy of letter to your ‘special’ at Minneapolis, Minn. A week has brought no answer. He is the party I dealt with, and
This action was brought by plaintiff to recover as damages the amount of the purchase price, for defendant’s alleged breach of the contract in failing to pay the instalments due, and execute his, notes for the others, as provided in said order. On the trial all the foregoing facts appeared in evidence, and were wholly uncontradioted. The court ordered a verdict for defendant, and from an order denying his motion for a new trial plaintiff appeals.
We are of the opinion that the order appealed from should be affirmed. Appellant concedes that defendant, not having received the kind of fountains ordered by him, was under no obligation to accept them, but claims that instead of rescinding at once, and offering to return the property, he demanded that the defects be remedied, and that, when plaintiff acted on this demand, defendant refused to receive the new fountains, and repudiated the contract. Conceding that defendant’s letters of May 2 and 9 indicate an intention on his part to accept the soda-water apparatus if the defects were remedied promptly, it sufficiently appears that these defects
The allegations of the answer are sufficient to admit proof of all of the foregoing facts.
There was nothing in the written order to the effect that plaintiff agreed to reline the copper fountain, and it is contended by appellant that the evidence received to prove a contemporaneous oral agreement so to reline the fountains was incompetent, ás varying the terms of a written agreement. We cannot so hold. Defendant never saw either of the two fountains afterwards delivered to him, and the order does not identify any two particular copper fountains. Any two 10-gallon copper fountains in the country, old or new, of any gi'ade, make, type, or kind whatever, in existence or not in existence, would have answered the description in the order. Then, in this respect, the written order cannot be considered a complete written contract. It is altogether too indefinite for that. The parol evidence did not contradict the written contract, and was not inconsistent with its tenns, and was competent. See Browne, Parol Ev. 4, 9, and 126.
None of appellant’s exceptions to the adxixissions of evidence are well taken.
This disposes of the case, and the order appealed from is affirmed.