Barnett v. Hagan

108 P. 743, 18 Idaho 104, 1910 Ida. LEXIS 13
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedApril 21, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 108 P. 743 (Barnett v. Hagan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barnett v. Hagan, 108 P. 743, 18 Idaho 104, 1910 Ida. LEXIS 13 (Idaho 1910).

Opinion

STEWART, J.

This is an action to recover the contract price of a Victor safe sold by the Victor Safe & Lock Company to the defendants upon a written contract assigned to ■this plaintiff. The order for the safe was as follows:

“THE VICTOR SAFE AND LOCK CO.,
Cincinnati, Ohio,
Moscow, Idaho, January 19, 1907.
Ship to Cold Storage Market, Town Moscow, County Latah, State Idaho, our No. 8 F. & B. Victor safe, for which I agree to pay to your order the sum of Three Hundred Dollars ($300.00) us follows: One Hundred and Twenty ($120.00) net cash on arrival and $25.00 each 30 days until fully paid less $60.00 for 2nd hand safe in exchange in our office, balance due, $240.00, to be delivered on board cars at Cincinnati.
Paint on safe the following name: Cold Storage Market.
It is agreed no money shall be paid for, or on account of this order except as above stated, and- that the title to said property shall not pass until it is paid for in full, but shall remain the property of The Victor Safe & Lock Co. until such payment is made, and in default thereof said Company, its agent or attorney, may take possession and remove said property without legal process and for which purpose may enter in or upon the premises without prejudice.
It is also agreed that nothing but shipment shall constitute an acceptance of this order, and that this paper contains all the agreement and understanding between the parties hereto and that upon default in any of the payments herein stipulated for, all of the remaining payments shall thereupon become immediately due and payable.
HAGAN & CUSHING,
By G. H. Cushing.
Spokane Safe & Lock Co.,
No. 3 Bernard St.,
Spokane, Wash. By Barnett.”

[108]*108The defendants interposed two defenses: First, that at the time the order for the safe sued upon was given, the Victor Safe & Lock Co. was a foreign corporation doing business within the state, and had failed and refused and neglected to comply with the constitution and laws of this state regulating and governing foreign corporations; second, breach of warranty; that the safe received was not the safe ordered; that the safe received was defective and was not a No: 8 F. & B. Victor safe under the general terms in the guaranty of said number, and the safe to be supplied thereunder; that upon the arrival of said safe and before the defendants were allowed to inspect the same they were compelled to pay $68.44 freight, express and moving charges; that they notified plaintiff of the condition the safe was in, and that they would not accept the same, and that it was subject to the order of the defendants and that defendants have been damaged in the sum of forty-five dollars in caring for said safe subject to the plaintiff’s order.

'Upon the issues thus joined a trial was had to a jury and a verdict rendered for the defendants' in the sum of sixty-eight dollars. A motion for a new trial was made and overruled. This appeal is from the judgment and the order overruling the motion for a new trial.

The first defense, that the Victor Safe & Lock Co. was a foreign corporation doing business within the state and had failed and refused to comply with the constitution and laws of the state, seems to have been abandoned by the defendants. There is no evidence in the record or any question argued upon this appeal involving the issue presented by this part of the answer. The entire defense made and the questions raised upon this appeal grow out of the defense of breach of warranty.

When the safe arrived two of the wheels or castors were broken and the defendants notified the plaintiff, as the agent of the Victor Safe & Lock Co., of such fact and the company advised the defendants to accept such safe and file a claim for damages against the railroad company for the damages, and that the safe company would assist the defendants in col[109]*109lecting the same, and that the fireproof qualities of the safe were in no way impaired by such damage. This defendants refused to do. After these wheels had been received they were placed on the safe and it was removed into the defendants’ place of business for inspection, when an examination of the same was made, and the defendant Hagan testified as to its condition as follows:

“In taking hold of the door of the safe, it being locked, I shook it and it shook like a bam door, and I went to work and took the combination and opened it, and examined, and found that the door in being made has five offsets or what you would call steps, and that the door fits against similar offsets in the frame, and on the inner offset, the offset No. 1, as I would call it, I could place eight pennies.I could place these on the inner offset and shut the door and turn the combination; on offset No. 2 I can place four pennies on and shut the door; on offset No. 3 at one place I could place five pennies, in one place a little farther back, only three. In offset No. 4 I can place at one place five pennies and shut the door, and in another place on the same offset I can put four pennies, and close the door; offset No. 5, or the outer one, I can put at one place five pennies, and at another six pennies and shut the door.
“I find that the safe is bulged, what I would call warped on top, and on the right-hand side, I should judge the safe is bulged or warped to the extent of perhaps five-eighths of an inch, and on the left-hand side it is warped to the extent of about 3/16.Around the inside, in the main frames, the packing or filling has penetrated, and it has penetrated more especially from the top coming down, and there is some on the left-hand side, not as much as on the right-hand side and at the top, but it is coming down through. It shows that the filling was green. The mold on the casing itself is a kind of a gray; the filling that comes through has an iron color, I should say it was, or rather dark.I find this coming through the walls of the safe, the opening between the last step or offset and the inner door, offset No. 5.
[110]*110‘ ‘ The outside door is very loose. I can place on the side of the door that has the lock on fourteen thicknesses of butcher’s paper, butcher manila, between the door and the flanges, shut the door, turn the combination and pull it out. I did the same thing on the top. At the bottom of the door I placed ten thicknesses of this butcher paper, shut the door, and the combination and pulled it out. On the back side, the side the hinges are on, I placed three thicknesses, and shut the door and pulled it out.The filling in that door is cracked; I think it has three cracks leading from the combination up.”

The defendants wrote the plaintiff about the condition of this safe and the plaintiff advised them as follows:

“We fully understand your idea about the safe door being-loose.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
108 P. 743, 18 Idaho 104, 1910 Ida. LEXIS 13, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barnett-v-hagan-idaho-1910.