133 Iowa 655 | Iowa | 1907
On- or about August 10, 1903, plaintiff purchased of defendant a threshing outfit consisting of an engine, separator, band cutter, weigher, stacker, etc., for the agreed price in the aggregate of $3,371.50. The order called for certain machinery, naming it and fixed a price on each article, that is to say, the engine was valued at $2,115.60, the separator at $645, the band cutter at $210, the stacker at $250, and other items at smaller amounts. The purchase price was represented by an old threshing outfit taken in exchange at the agreed price of $1,575, and by notes in various amounts maturing during the years 1903, 1904, 1905, and 1906, making an aggregate of $3,371.50. Plaintiff, according to agreement, paid- $160 freight upon the property, which was shipped from Des Moines to Ceylon, Minn. The notes for the purchase price were secured by mortgage upon the machinery running to defendant. The machinery was sold under the following warranty:
The machinery order herewith is warranted by Reeves & Co. to be well-made, of good material, and with proper use and management to do as good work as any other machine of the same size manufactured for a like purpose; but if inside of six days from the day of its first use the said machinery fails to fill said warranty, written notice shall be given Reeves & Co. by registered letter, and also written notice to the local agent from whom the same was purchased, stating wherein it fails to fill the warranty, and if it be of such a nature that remedy cannot be suggested by letter, a reasonable time shall be allowed to get to the machinery to remedy the defects, if any there be, and an opportunity offered for a trial thereafter, the purchaser rendering necessary and friendly assistance. Defects or failure in one part shall not condemn any other part or attached mechine, and if after a fair opportunity to remedy a defect the part or parts containing such cannot be' made to fill the warranty, that part which fails shall be returned immediately by the undersigned to the place where it was received, with the op*658 tion in the company to furnish another machine or part in place of the machine or part so returned, or credit the settlement with the same. If Reeves & Co. shall furnish another machine or part in place of the one returned, the terms of this warranty shall be held to have been fulfilled, and the company shall be subject to no further liability under this order. It is hereby expressly agreed that all claims for damages against Reeves & Co. _ by reason of the nonperformance of the machinery above, are ■ hereby waived. It is mutually agreed that the failure by the purchaser to give said written notice of defects, as above provided, within six days from the day of its first use, or to return the said machinery or part to the place whence it was received, within six days from the day of its first use, shall be conclusive- evidence of the fulfillment of the warranty and full satisfaction of the undersigned who agrees to make no claim thereafter against Reeves & Co., or to make any defense to the notes given therefor, on account of any breach of warranty. It is also expressly agreed that if at any time after the expiration of the six days from the date of its first use, Reeves & Co. should furnish to the undersigned any improvements or attachments for said machinery or replace any old part with new, or should the undersigned notify Reeves & Co. in any wise whatever, of any imperfections in said machinery, and if upon receipt of such notice Reeves & Co., or any agent or employe should act thereon and remedy, or attempt to remedy such imperfections, the so doing of all such acts will not extend the liability of Reeves & Co. under this warranty beyond the expiration-of the six days from the-date of its first use. . . . It is also agreed and understood that no agent or employe of Reeves & Co. (officers of the company not included) is authorized to alter, change, modify, or waive this warranty, or any part thereof, or to make any other or different warranty; or any notice to any agent or employe of Reeves & Co.,' or any act at any time of any agent or employe, shall not constitute a waiver of the written notices herein provided for, nor a waiver of any other stipulation of this warranty. By the title or name Reaves & Co. in this -warranty it is understood to mean Reeves & Co. of Columbus, Ind., only.
Upon arrival of the machinery at Ceylon plaintiff took it to a farm and within two- days after its receipt started the
Pursuant to promise, an expert was sent to remedy the defects in the machine, and this expert put in one and one-half days upon it. There is a dispute in the testimony as to the results of his efforts, but a jury was authorized to find that he did not and could not remedy the defects. Plaintiff also claims that at this time the expert, one Lenhart by name, agreed to take the machine with a crew, and wdthout expense demonstrate that the machinery would work properly. Plaintiff wrote the manager at Des Moines of his arrangement, and in response thereto the manager denied
The trial court withdrew from the consideration of the jury all defects in any of the machinery save the engine and separator, and the jury found plaintiff was not entitled to recover for defects in the separator. As to the engine there was testimony that the boiler leaked badly, that it was hard to get up steam, was not of the capacity it should have been, that the engine was weak, would not start readily, and that the jacket was burned off. Plaintiff also introduced testimony to show that the engine was worthless. The jury found especially that the engine was defective, and it allowed. plaintiff $1,163.25 on account of
There is no doubt that plaintiff did not give any notices by registered letter; but defendant through its manager at Des Moines received a letter with reference to defects in the engine, and responded thereto by' sending men who undertook to make repairs thereof. Under the rule announced in Natl. Bank v. Dutcher, 128 Iowa, 413, the notice was sufficient although not sent to the company at its home office and notwithstanding it was not registered.
The contract makes rescission, or return of the defective machinery, the exclusive remedy for breach of warranty, and plaintiff had no right to return the entire outfit and demand the surrender of his notes and property. Aultman v. Lawson, 100 Iowa, 569; Fahey v. Esterley Co., 3 N. D. 220 (55 N. W. 580, 44 Am. St. Rep. 554). It is wéll settled that one who is entitled to rescission of part of a divisible contract cannot rescind as to the whole. See cases hitherto cited, and Nichols & Shepard Co. v. Chase, 103 Wis. 570 (79 N. W. 772). .That the contract in suit is divisible, or that the parties made it divisible in so far as the warranty is concerned, is very clear. See Nichols v. Weidman, 72 Minn. 344 (75 N. W. 208, 76 N. W. 41); Aultman v. Lawson, supra; Young v. Wakefield, 121 Mass. 91; Barrett v. Wheeler, 71 Iowa, 663.
We are not to-be understood as holding that the statements of Mason or of the defendant itself in its letter to plaintiff constituted a waiver of the provisions of the contract. That question is not now before us. But see Wendall v. Osborne, 63 Iowa, 101; Thresher Co. v. Shirmer, 122 Iowa, 703. As plaintiff did not, in his return or offer to return, give or offer to give defendant the option provided for in its contract, and did not comply with the terms thereof on his part, he is in no position to sue for damages for breach of warranty until defendant was in some manner in default in the matter of rescission; unless defendant waived its right to insist upon its option to replace the defective machinery. This theory was not presented to the jury, and in this respect the trial court was in error. It also committed affirmative error in instructing that recovery might be had notwithstanding plaintiff did not comply with his contract as to the return of the defective machinery, and although he made a demand for -all his notes and property given for the machine without reference to any waiver on the part of the defendant. In this there was error for
It appears from the record in the instant case that when Mason visited plaintiff and attempted to remedy the defect in the machinery, he received a signed statement from plaintiff that the machinery was working in a satisfactory manner while he, Mason, was there, and that if it continued for a few days he thought it would be O. X. On November 11th, a little over a month after this, defendant wrote ■ plaintiff, calling his attention to this statement, and stating that if there is anything wrong with the machinery due to fault of workmanship or material, they were willing to make it right; but suggesting that the machinery had met the guaranty, and that they had done their part in the matter and trusted that plaintiff would see the matter in that light. To this plaintiff responded saying that the machine was a total failure, and that he would turn the machine over, and demanding the return of his notes and -property. These facts distinguish the case from the one relied upon by appellee’s counsel.
For the errors pointed out, the judgment must be, and it is, reversed.