70 Iowa 340 | Iowa | 1886
The ease was tried in the district court on the theory that the defendant, as a defense, pleaded that the notes were given in consideration of a reaping-machine purchased by him of the plaintiff, which had been warranted, and that it had failed to conform to the warranty, and was worthless. It is difficult to ascertain from the answer the nature and extent of the warranty. The statements in relation thereto are exceedingly loose and general. "Whatever the warranty was, it was not in writing, but was in parol, and made by the agents of the plaintiff.
I. The plaintiff furnished to its agents a printed warranty, and there is testimony tending to show that they were not auth-
As applied to the evidence, the instruction amounts simply to this: If a person constitutes another his agent for the sale of any article of merchandise, and furnishes him with the kind of warranty he may give, and the purchaser has knowledge that such a warranty was furnished the agent yet the purchaser may accept a parol warranty, different in its terms, from the agent, and require the principal to comply with such oral warranty. We do not believe this is the law; and certainly no such rule is laid down in Eadie v. Ashbaugh, 44 Iowa, 519, or Farrar v. Peterson, 52 Id., 420. In those cases the extent or character of the warranty was not in question, and the holding simply is that, having accepted the notes taken by the agent, they had ratified what the agent did in making the sale, although he acted beyond the scope of his authority. In this case a form of the warranty to be given by the agent was furnished. This the defendant knew; but, for some reason, he took a different parol warranty from the agent. Having the knowledge he had, it was his duty to see that the agent had not exceeded his authority. Having furnished a printed form of warranty to its agent, the plaintiff had the right to assume that such a warranty was given to the defendant. The instruction, it will be observed, casts the burden in this respect on the plaintiff. The court erred in giving the foregoing instruction.
II. A person by the name of James Fisk was introduced by some one to the defendant ás “general agent for the Wal-
There are other errors assigned and argued by counsel which we do not deem it necessary to refer to. What we have said sufficiently indicates our view of the case.
REVERSED.