The trial court, sitting as a jury, awarded appellees damages of $1,000 against appellant Walker Ford Sales and $1,000 against appellant Ford Motor Company for breach of warranty. Appellants first assert for reversal that the court erred in ruling that appellants breached an implied warranty of merchantability because such warranty had been conspicuously excluded by the express warranty and because appellees had examined the car and were aware of its alleged defect at the time of the sale.
Appellees bought a 1974 Ford Thunderbird on July 13, 1974, from appellant Walker Ford Sales, an authorized dealer. The car was a demonstrator and had been driven 4,~ 250 miles. Appellees test drove the car and agreed to pay $6,-300 for it. They paid $1,400 down and signed a $4,900 note plus interest for the balance. After making payments, the appellees refused to pay the $2,000 balance. On May 17, 1976, appellant Walker Ford filed a replevin action. Appellees counterclaimed against Walker Ford and cross-complained against appellant Ford Motor Company, alleging that the car was defective in that it had a persistent and intolerable vibration when driven at highway speeds; that the defective condition had existed since the appellees purchased it; that notice of the defect was given to appellants) that at the time of purchase, appellants jointly gave an extension of a new car warranty on the automobile to the appellee purchasers to the effect that the selling dealer would replace or repair, free of charge, any part, except tires, found to be defective in factory materials or workmanship under normal use up to a maximum of 12 months or 12,000 miles from the date of sale of the demonstrator; and that appellants had not complied with the warranty by failing and refusing to correct the vibration by replacing parts or repairing the automobile. The appellants denied that the car was defective and that the warranty had been breached by them. The trial court found that Ford Motor Company had breached the express and implied warranties with respect to the merchantability of the car and Walker Ford Sales and Ford Motor Company were unable to diagnose the specific defective parts which caused the vibration. As indicated, appellants cnntend this was error.
An express warranty may exclude an implied warranty of merchantability if the exclusion mentions the word “merchantability” and, if written, is conspicuous. Ark. Stat. Ann. § 85-2-316 (2) (
As to the express warranty, the appellants argue that the evidence is insufficient to support a judgment for a breach of it. They insist that the appellees failed to prove the demonstrator car had defective factory materials and workmanship. Appellants correctly state that we have held that a party, seeking to establish a breach of warranty against a manufacturer, must show that the automobile was in a defective condition at the time it left the control of the manufacturer. Ford Motor Co. v. Gornatti,
However, in Ford Motor Co. v. Reid,
Here the alleged vibration existed and persisted constantly from the very date of the sale and appellant’s joint extension of the new car warranty. It is not contended that the appellee purchas? s failed to properly maintain, operate and care for the vehicle. It appears there was normal use of it. True, the appellees were never able to tell appellants specifically what defective condition caused the vibration. However, they promptly complained and appellants’ mechanics repeatedly worked on the automobile to correct the vibration, described as a “rocking motion,” when driven at approximately 55 m.p.h. If you were sitting in the car with your legs crossed, “ [y]ou just sit there and rock your legs like that, back and forth.” “[Y]ou can feel it through the seats, the whole thing shakes.” Appellants’ mechanics and others, who worked on the automobile for appellees, were unable to locate a specific defective part. Appellees’ witnesses testified that the car retained the vibration even when mounted on blocks and run at highway speeds without the tires. During the three years appellees had the car, efforts by them to correct the vibration consisted of placing seven new sets of tires on the car (one being “ramp tested”), aligning the front end, switching wheels, replacing the drive shaft, turning the rear brake drums, and changing the rims three times.
A contract, as here, should be construed “in accordance with what the ordinary purchaser would understand from its language.” Vernon v. Lake Motors,
Appellants assert that, should we find that the express warranty was breached, there is insufficient evidence to support the award of $2,000 damages. We agree. The measure of damages for a breach of warranty is “the difference at the time and place of acceptance between the value of the goods accepted and the value they would have had if they had been as warranted . . . . ” Ark. Stat. Ann. § 85-2-714 (2) (
Appellants did not seek to limit appellees’ remedy to repair or replace defective parts. Obviously, they recognize that the situation is controlled by Kohlenberger v. Tyson’s Foods,
It would seem that the evidence introduced on this trial conclusively showed that the attempted modification and limitation failed of its essential purpose, as a matter of law. It has been held, properly, we think, that when there is substantial evidence, as there is here, tending to show that a particular piece of machinery obviously cannot be repaired or its parts replaced so that the same is made free from defects, a jury verdict, which implicitly concludes that a limitation of the remedy to repair and replacement of nonconforming parts deprived the purchaser of the substantial value of the bargain, should be sustained ....
For the error indicated, the judgment is reversed and the cause remanded for a new trial.
Reversed and remanded.
