89 P. 1009 | Utah | 1907
This action was brought to recover an alleged balance of $225 for goods and wares sold and delivered to the defendant by the plaintiff. The allegations of the complaint were admitted in the answer, and by counterclaim it was alleged that during the year 1904 the plaintiff sold and delivered, to the defendant over two hundred-thousand cans guaranteed by-plaintiff to be suitable for canning peas, to be made of standard material and properly soldered so as to. withstand the pressure and requirements when filled with peas, according to the
The evidence before us consists of mere recitals in the bill of exceptions that the defendant introduced evidence tending to prove the allegations of the counterclaim; that it used the cans in canning peas in the usual way; that about twenty-nine thousand cans were defective because not properly soldered, by reason of which the cans became worthless and their contents spoiled; that some of the defects manifested themselves during processing, and others not until several months after the canned goods had been stored in the warehouse, and that the defendant was required to haul away and bury the cans and contents; that the contract of sale was oral, and that the defendant had not agreed to return any of the cans; that the plaintiff'introduced evidence tending to prove the allegations of its reply; that the defendant did not use the
The defendant requested the court to charge the jury in substance that if defective cans exceeded four in every one-thousand, and such defects were discovered prior to the cans being used, then it was the duty of the defendant under the contract, if the jury found the same had been proven, to have returned such cans to' the1 plaintiff’s factory, but, if the defects, as alleged in the counterclaim, were only discovered after the cans had been filled with peas, and that the cans were valueless and of no use after such filling, then the defendant was' not required to return the defective cans, and that if the jury found, when the plaintiff and the defendant entered into the agreement for the sale of the cans, it was agreed between them that the cans were to be suitable for canning peas, and that the samé should be thoroughly tested before leaving plaintiff’s factory, and were guaranteed that not to exceed four cans in a thousand would be defective, and that they would be made of standard material, and properly soldered so as to withstand all pressure and requirements when filled with peas, according to' the usual course and practice, and if the jury further found that the cans were not suitable for canning peas, and that by reason of the foregoing warranties the defendant, while engaged in the usual' method of canning, suffered a loss of over four cans out of each one-thousand, then the plaintiff would be liable to the defendant for such loss in excess of four cans in each one-thousand, and the defendant would be entitled to recover whatever damages it may have sustained by reason theréof, regardless of the agreement made by the defendant to return to plaintiff’s factory any or all cans which might be found defective. The court charged the jury as to the law of an implied warranty, and that the defendant had the right to recover all damages sustained by it by reason of the failure of such warranty, and as requested by the defendant,
It is next urged that an implied warranty may arise notwithstanding an express one, where it relates to a different subject-matter and the implied has not been expressly excluded. The principle of law is well stated in the case of Bucy v. Pitts Agricultural Works, 89 Iowa 464, 56 N. W. 541, where the court say:
“The rule deducible from the authorities is that an implied and an express warranty may exist under the same contract, as when the expressed does not relate to the obligations created by the implied; but when the expressed warranty does provide as to the same obligation, it excludes the implied. In other words, the law will not imply anything as to matters about which the parties have expressly agreed.”
And in Blackmore v. Fairbanks, 79 Iowa 282, 44 N. W. 548, where it was said:
“It is true that, as a general rule, no warranty will be implied where the parties have expressed in words the warranty by which they mean to be bound; but the rule does not extend to the exclusion of warranties implied by law, where they are not excluded by the terms of the contract. Thus an express warranty of title does not exclude an implied warranty of quality.”
We' do not see anything in the record to give application to the principle. Appellant’s position on this question is nor very clear. But, as we understand it, it is claimed that the stipulation .to return the cans is limited only to defects in cans discovered during the process of canning, and not to those manifested thereafter, and that the stipulation can
We.think the law with respect to the rights of the defendant was fairly stated to the jury, and that the defendant has: no cause to complain of the rulings. The judgment of the court below is therefore.affirmed, with costs.