Cannon v. Griffith & Ewing

43 P. 829, 3 Kan. App. 506, 1896 Kan. App. LEXIS 114
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kansas
DecidedFebruary 6, 1896
DocketNo. 77
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 43 P. 829 (Cannon v. Griffith & Ewing) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cannon v. Griffith & Ewing, 43 P. 829, 3 Kan. App. 506, 1896 Kan. App. LEXIS 114 (kanctapp 1896).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Dennison, J.:

This action was brought in a justice’s court in the.city of Emporia, Lyon county, Kansas, by Griffith & Ewing against Joseph Cannon to recover the purchase price of a “ Buckeye frameless binder, complete with bundle carrier and trucks.” Judgment was had against Cannon, and he appealed to the district court. The case was there tried with a jury and judgment rendered against Cannon for $130. He brings the case here for review.

The plaintiff in error contends that the court erred in sustaining a motion for a- continuance of this case to the .nest term of the court. The question of continuing a case is very largely in the discretion of the court, and where the continuance is granted there is less cause for a reviewing court to interfere than where the continuance is refused. Was the plaintiff in error prevented from having a fair trial by reason thereof? We think not.

The evidence in this case is in some things very conflicting, but the following facts may be considered as established by the evidence Griffith & Ewing were [508]*508■selling binders ; Cannon wanted to buy one ; he would not give an order, but he offered to take one home and test it, and, if he was satisfied with it, to keep it and pay $130 cash for it; Griffith & Ewing acceded to his proposition and he took the machine home ; on Thursday of that week, Eastman, an agent of the manufacturers of the machine, and Smith and Wells, who were in the employ of Griffith & Ewing, went out to Cannon’s place and set up the machine, and Smith and Cannon both run it in Cannon’s wheat; t,h¿ machine, with the exception of the bundle carrier, performed well, and Cannon testified that he told Eastman and Smith that he was satisfied with it as far as it had gone, and that, if upon further trial he was still satisfied with it, he would come in and pay for it. Eastman testified that Cannon said he was satisfied with the machine and^tliat he would pay for it the first time he was in. Smith testified:

.“We set up the machine and run it an hour or two, until we seen it had given satisfaction, or at least he said it had ; and it was getting along 6 o’clock, T suppose, in the evening then, and Mr. Cannon said to me, 'Tell the boys I’ll be in Saturday and settle for the machine.’ ”

Wells, who isa son-in-law of Cannon, did not seem to remember much about it. Cannon testified that he continued to run the machine until Saturday noon, and then came to the store of -Griffith & Ewing, and said to Mr. Griffith, “ I guess I ’ll take the machine.” He also testified that he. was thoroughly convinced Saturday noon that he was not satisfied with the machine: He also testified that he said to Griffith on Saturday evening, “I could have paid you for that machine to-day, if the bank had not been closed.” Griffith and Ewing both testified that he said he had hurried to [509]*509get in before the bank closed and pay them for the machine, but that it did not matter as he would be in the first of the week and pay them for it. The testimonyof all the parties was, that the bundle carrier did not do good work, but there was some evidence tending to show that Griffith & Ewing had agreed that they would furnish a new one or deduct the price if it did not finally work all right, and that Gannon seemed to be satisfied with this arrangement. Gannon continued to use the machine until he had cut his wheat and that of one of his neighbors, and had commenced up.on the field of another neighbor. The axle and one of the drive-wheels had begun to wear and cut each other until the, wheel leaned over and would catch into some of the other parts of the machinery, and, when it would run no more, Cannon took it back to Griffith & Ewing. It is not our province to weigh this conflicting testimony. We are willing to concede this pleasure to the jury. We can only determine whether any error was committed in the introduction of evidence and in the instructions given to the jury. The instructions complained of are contained in the following:

"5. It appears from the evidence that the only condition upon which the defendant would buy the machine was, that he would try it, and if upon, trial it should work satisfactorily, then he would keep it and pay cash therefor. It further appears that defendant was permitted to take the machine upon these cohditions, with no definite time fixed in which the trial should be made nor as to the manner and extent of the trial.
“ 6. • Under such an agreement, the defendant would have the right to make such reasonable tests as he might' desire, and for that purpose he might keep the machine a reasonable time.
“7. If after a trial, great or small, long or short, [510]*510the defendant became satisfied with the machine, and fully concluded in his own mind to buy the same, this would complete the sale, and the title to the machine would immediately pass to the defendant.
“8. The delivery of the machine to the defendant, . under the conditions agreed upon, was a compliance with the conditions of the sale on the part of the plaintiffs ; and when, if at all, the defendant determined to accept the machine as satisfactory, then at that mo- . ment there was such a meeting of the minds as would complete the sale.'
“9. Of necessity there is always some point of time when a transaction between the parties thereto becomes final and fixed. In this transaction, this point of time is, if at all, when the defendant becomes satisfied, and determined in his own mind to buy the machine and pay for it. "
“10. If you find that the sale at any time became completed, then the machine became the property of the defendant, and no defects subsequently discovered could change the relation of the parties and nullify such'sale.
“11. If the defendant did not fully conclude at any time to accept the machine, and pay for it, then no sale was made, and the plaintiffs have been the continuous owners of the machine, and in that event you will find for the defendant.
“12. In determining whether the defendant fully accepted said machine as satisfactory, and as a completed sale or not, you will consider what he said and what he did in relation thereto, and all the circumstances shown.”'

There is no prejudicial error'in these instructions. The attorney for the plaintiff in error argues the question of the acceptance of the machine entirely upon the theory that there must be a contract of acceptance. In this case the contract of sale was made ; its terms and conditions had all been agreed to. If the sale should be made at all, contract of sale was entered into before Cannon took the machine. The only ques[511]*511tion left open was, Shall there be a sale? This was to be decided, not by anything Griffith & Ewing might, do or say, but by the satisfaction of Cannon. When Cannon was satisfied the sale was completed, and he was liable for the purchase price' agreéd upon.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
43 P. 829, 3 Kan. App. 506, 1896 Kan. App. LEXIS 114, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cannon-v-griffith-ewing-kanctapp-1896.