40 Mo. App. 483 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1890
Plaintiff brought suit against the defendant in the circuit court of Pettis county on a jpromissory note for one hundred and sixty-five dollars. The defendant in his answer admitted the execution of the note and alleged that it was the last one of a series given plaintiff for the purchase price .of leaf tobacco which the plaintiff warranted to be of such quality and in such condition as to be fit and suitable to be used by defendant for wrappers of fine cigars, and that said tobacco proved wholly unfit and unsuitable for that purpose, etc. There was a further allegation that the tobacco was purchased by sample, and that it was warranted to be equal to the sample by which the purchase was made; that it was inferior to such sample in quality and grade and would not burn, and could not
At the trial the defendant introduced evidence tending to sustain the allegations of his answer. The evidence of the plaintiff tended to prove the facts which he had affirmatively alleged in his replication. The plaintiff asked a number of instructions which were by the court refused. The first told the jury that if the note sued on was one of a series given at one time as one transaction in settlement for a lot of tobacco, and defendant paid said notes as they became due after having a reasonable time and opportunity to test the tobacco, defendant could not then question the consideration of the note sued on. The second declared that if the defendant wrote a letter to plaintiff asking for an extension of the time of the payment of the third note when it became due, and promising therein to pay said note at the end of such time, then defendant should be deemed to have waived the right to set up the defense of a failure of consideration of said note. The third was in effect the same as the second. . The fourth declared that if the sale of said tobacco was by sample, and that which was delivered to defendant was equal to the sample, the plaintiff should recover. The fifth declared that if the defendant retained the tobacco in his possession and used a part thereof in the business
I. The plaintiff’s contention is that the several instructions asked by him should have been given as the law of the case. We cannot regard this contention favorably because the defendant interposed the defense that there was a warranty of the quality and condition of the tobacco, which defense stood admitted by the replication. In such case if the tobacco was not as warranted defendant had two remedies: He could have returned the tobacco to the plaintiff 'provided he acted seasonably and rescinded the contract; or he could have retained the tobacco and when sued for the purchase money pleaded a total or partial failure of consideration. The evidence tended to show that the tobacco was purchased for wrappers for fine cigars, and that the plaintiff warranted it to be fit to work for that purpose and that it would burn all right; that defendant tested the samples thoroughly and they burned all right, but it was found that the tobacco delivered, after a thorough test, would not burn when used in the cigars which were manufactured by defendant; that the defendant was told when he made the complaint to plaintiff’s traveling agent and salesman about the inferior quality of the tobacco that it would be all right when he got down into it; that it was purchased at forty-nine cents per pound, and was not worth more than twenty-two cents.
It has been long and well settled that the right of a vendee to maintain, as a defense in an action of this kind, the defective quality of the warranted article in diminution of the price was not lost by the vendee receiving and accepting the article. Branson v. Turner, 77 Mo. 494; Compton v. Parsons, 76 Mo. 455; Murphy v. Gay, 37 Mo. 535; Voss v. McGuire, 18 Mo. App. 477; Benjamin on Sales, secs. 1351-2.
II. No error is perceived in the action of the trial court in permitting the witnesses, Honkomp and Behrens, who had examined the -tobacco more than a year after the sale thereof to defendant, to testify as to its quality and condition at that time, since they testified as experts that if the tobacco was of good quality when purchased it would still be so,, as it did not deteriorate by age, but generally grew better. The tendency of such evidence was to show, though perhaps but slightly, that the quality of the tobacco at the date of purchase was the same as that at the date of examination.
III. The trial court did not by its instruction directly or by implication assume a material fact in issue. The instruction given by the court contains no such vice as the plaintiff seems to suppose. When the whole instruction is read and considered it will be seen that plaintiff’s objection arises from a misconception of the purport and meaning.
IY. There was no plea of estoppel in the replication, or if so there was no evidence upon- which to base an instruction embodying that theory. The plaintiff admitted the warranty but alleged a compliance with its requirements on his part and a waiver thereof by defendant. Upon the first of these defenses the court instructed tlie jury, and as to the latter it'did not, there being no evidence to support the same