Advance-Rumely T. Co., Inc. v. Wenholz

258 P. 1085, 80 Mont. 82, 1927 Mont. LEXIS 37
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 16, 1927
DocketNo. 6,145.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 258 P. 1085 (Advance-Rumely T. Co., Inc. v. Wenholz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Advance-Rumely T. Co., Inc. v. Wenholz, 258 P. 1085, 80 Mont. 82, 1927 Mont. LEXIS 37 (Mo. 1927).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE GALEN

delivered the opinion of the court.

This action was instituted by the plaintiff to recover from the defendants the sum of $2,650 on six promissory notes executed by the defendants to the Rumely Products Company on August 17, 1924, for the purchase price of a steam tractor engine, a grain separator with attachments, and an Oliver six-bottom gang plow. These notes were secured by a purchase price chattel mortgage on the equipment sold and delivered to the defendants. Upon default in payment of the notes, under power of sale contained in the mortgage, the property was sold for the net sum of $970, which was by the plaintiffs credited upon the indebtedness. The money so applied, together with the sum of $100 paid on account on November 24, 1914, shortly after the execution of the notes, was the only money paid on account thereof. The complaint, after setting forth the execution and delivery of the notes to the Rumley Products Company, avers that thereafter and *87 before tbe maturity of any of them the Rumely Products Company, “for a valuable consideration, sold, assigned, indorsed, transferred, and delivered each and all of said promissory notes together with the chattel mortgage * “ * to Rumely Company, a corporation”; which latter company in turn “sold, assigned, indorsed, transferred and delivered each and all of said promissory notes and said chattel mortgage to this plaintiff, who is now the owner and holder thereof.” The answer made certain admissions and denials of the averments made in plaintiff’s complaint, and in defense of the liability of the defendants for the amount remaining unpaid on the promissory notes affirmatively pleaded want of consideration because of certain false and fraudulent representations made by the agent of the Rumely Products Company at the time of and by way of inducement for the execution of the notes. Issue was joined by a reply, and the cause was tried to the court sitting with a jury. At the conclusion of all of the evidence, both parties moved the court for a directed verdict. The court thereupon granted the defendants’ motion, and judgment was entered for the defendants accordingly. The appeal is from the judgment.

Plaintiff’s several assignments of error present for determination the sole question as to whether the court erred in granting the defendants’ motion for a directed verdict.

It appears that on July 29, 1914, the defendants executed a written contract with the Rumely Products Company, through its agent, Al Turpening, for the purchase of an Advance 26-horsepower “single cylinder” steam engine, a separator and an Oliver plow, together with equipment for all. By the terms of the agreement, upon the delivery of the chattels covered thereby, the defendants were to receive the property subject to the terms and warranties therein stated, and to pay therefor by the execution and delivery of the promissory notes made the basis of this action; and it was further provided in the contract, that “said machinery is *88 warranted to be well made and of good material, and with proper use capable of doing as good work as any other machines of the same kind, size, and rated capacity, working under like conditions, but any machine or part thereof not manufactured for or by the vendor, or which is second-hand, rebuilt, or repaired, is not warranted, by statute or otherwise. # «= * There are no representations, .warranties, or conditions, express or implied, statutory or otherwise, except those herein contained, and no agreement collateral hereto shall be binding upon vendor unless in writing hereupon or attached hereto and accepted by vendor or its home office.”

Over plaintiff’s objection, the defendants were by the court permitted to prove that by way of inducement to the defendants to make purchase of the property and execute the contract, A1 Turpening, as agent for the Rumely Products Company, had before the contract was executed, although on the same day, represented to the defendants that the engine and separator were new and not second-hand; that the engine would be capable of pulling the separator anywhere on the field or on the road and would pull eight or ten plows; and that it would be in first-class condition and “everything in running order and good shape.”

The defendant Wenholz, manager of the association of men who made purchase of such supplies and equipment, testified in substance: “We ordered a threshing outfit from the Rumely Products Company or its agents. By we, I mean myself and the other defendants. The names of the men with whom I dealt was Bob Forney and A1 Turpening. I only knew Mr. Turpening as an agent coming around. I never met him before. Q. How did Turpening represent himself? A. He represented to be an agent for the Rumely Products Company. He was trying to sell us a 26 horse power single cylinder engine, rear mounted, and a 34-56 separator, including a weigher, wind stacker, thresher, water tank, pump, hose, belt, and 8-bottom plow — Oliver plow.”

*89 Before the contract for the purchase of the equipment was executed by the defendants, Turpening represented to the witness and his associates that the engine and separator were new, and in the course of negotiations the defendants told Turpening that they wanted an engine with which to thresh and to pull the separator, and also to pull an eight-bottom plow. Turpening was acquainted in the country, and most of the negotiations were conducted on the ranches or homesteads of the defendants, and none of the machinery was in Rosebud county where it could be examined by the defendants. As to the power of the engine, Turpening represented that it would be capable of pulling the separator anywhere in the field or on the road, and that it would pull ten-bottom plows in sod. He said the engine would be new and in first-class condition, and the defendants all placed reliance on his representations. Further, the witness states: “I had not used any such machinery as we were ordering from the Rumely Company, and had no previous experience with it, and relied on the statement made by the agent Turpening. We would not have bought any of those articles if these statements had not been made to us.”

The type of engine ordered was an Advance one-cylinder simple engine, 26-horsepower. The negotiations with Turpening were had just previous to the signing of the contract by the defendants, on the twenty-ninth day of July, 1914, and as a result thereof the defendants were induced to sign the contract. The engine was delivered at Forsyth on August 16, 1914, and the notes in suit were thereupon executed on the following day. Upon delivery the engine was found to be a compound rather than a simple one-cylinder engine, as ordered. The engine looked new, but proved to be a secondhand engine. Many of the articles ordered were not delivered with the engine. A main drive belt was missing, and the plows were not delivered until about two months later. The defendants did not try to put the plows to use until a year *90 and three or four months after the receipt of the engine. The witness further testified: “When the engine and separator arrived here we were called upon to unload it over at the N. P., on the loading chute, and it had water in it, and we undertook to steam it up.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
258 P. 1085, 80 Mont. 82, 1927 Mont. LEXIS 37, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/advance-rumely-t-co-inc-v-wenholz-mont-1927.