Case Threshing Machine Co. v. Cook

67 S.E. 890, 7 Ga. App. 631, 1910 Ga. App. LEXIS 437
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedApril 19, 1910
Docket2147
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 67 S.E. 890 (Case Threshing Machine Co. v. Cook) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Case Threshing Machine Co. v. Cook, 67 S.E. 890, 7 Ga. App. 631, 1910 Ga. App. LEXIS 437 (Ga. Ct. App. 1910).

Opinions

Hill, C. <7.

The plaintiff in error sued the defendant on a promissory note for $475 and interest. The defendant admitted the execution of the note, and pleaded total failure of consideration, resulting from breach of express warranty. The note was given for a balance due on the purchase-price of one 12 horse-power, portable, wood-burning- engine, the purchase-price being $675, of which the defendant paid $200 on receipt of the engine.

The defendant asked judgment against the plaintiff for the $207, and for $40.53 paid by him as freight. The verdict was for the defendant for the full amount claimed, $247.53, with interest. The plaintiff’s motion for a new trial was overruled.

The evidence was as follows: An order for the engine, signed by the defendant, stated that the engine would be received subject to the following warranty: “The above engine is warranted to be made of good material, durable with good care, to do as good work under the same conditions as any made in the United States of equal size and rated capacity, if properly operated by competent persons with sufficient steam, or horse-power, and the printed rules and directions of the manufacturers intelligently followed. If by so doing, after a trial of ten days by the purchaser, said machinery shall fail to fulfil the warranty, written notice thereof shall at once be given to the J. I. Case Threshing Machine Company at Hacine, Wisconsin, and also to the agent through whom received, stating in what parts and wherein it failed to fulfil the warranty, and the company will send a competent person to remedy the difficulty, the purchaser rendering necessary and friendly assistance, said company reserving the right to replace any defective part or parts, and then, if the machinery can not be made to fulfil the warranty, the part that fails is to be returned by the purchaser, free of charge, to the place where received, and the company notified thereof, and at the company’s option another substituted therefor that shall fill the warrant}', or the notes or money for such immediately returned and the contract rescinded to that extent, and no further claim made on the company. Failure so to make-such trial or to give such notice in any respect shall be conclusive evidence of the fulfilment of the warranty on the part of said compairy, and that the machinery is satisfactory to the purchaser, and the company shall be released from any liability under the contract. . . Failure ,. . to comply with any of the conditions of this warranty on the [633]*633purchaser’s part, . . or any abuse, misuse, unnecessary exposure of machinery, or waste committed or suffered by the purchaser, discharges the company from all liability whatsoever. ... In consideration of the expense incurred by the company; soliciting, investigating, and taking this order, the purchaser promises and agrees to pay all freight charges on said machinery from the factory and fifteen per cent, of the price above stipulated, in cash, in case he should cancel this order or decline to accept said machinery.” This order was accepted by the plaintiff, and the engine delivered to the defendant at Pope’s warehouse at Monticello, Georgia, January 28, 1907. The defendant testified that after the engine had been operated in the sawing of twenty thousand feet of lumber, it broke down; and on -February 11, 1907, he wrote to the plaintiff of the trouble with the engine. On February 20, 1907, he again wrote to the plaintiff, saying, “Your engine has given out, the steam valve is worn so badly, and the face of the steam-chest also worn so badly in eight days run, that I had to shut down. I call on you now to make good your guaranty, or consider the engine yours.” A man was sent by the company to repair the engine, and, after inspection, a new valve was sent. This was in May, 1907. After being repaired, the defendant again used the engine, sawing an average of 3,000 feet of timber a day until July, 1907, when it again broke down from the same cause. The defendant went at once to Atlanta to see the company’s agent, and complained of the defect, and then stated to the agent that he would not pay for the engine, unless it was fixed. The defendant testifies that from that time he heard nothing from them about the engine, until ¡November, when he received a dun from the company, and he wrote that he would not pay for the engine unless they would get it in good running order. In January, 1908, a lawyer representing the company came to see him, and he told the lawyer that he would not pay for the engine; that the company had agreed to take the engine back or give him his money back, and that he would give him what he had paid for the engine, if he would give him back his note. This lawyer said he would make the engine good, but he never did. He told the lawyer, if he did not put the engine in good condition, “this is your engine.” In reply the lawyer remarked, “The Case people never take back an engine.” When this conversation was had, “the engine was down [634]*634on the creek where it had been used pulling the saw-mill.” The defendant testified, “I am using the pumps of this engine now. I have taken off the steam-gauge and injector. The pump is worth $10 or $15.” After the second cylinder was put on in May, he sawed 80,000 feet of lumber with the engine. He “could not swear that the engine was oiled properly. If the engine is not properly lubricated, great friction will be caused by the steam in the steam chest, which will cause the valve seat to wear out. . . The engine 'remained down on the creek where I sawed last until I was served with notice of this suit; then I brought it back to Machen and placed it back of Bullard Brothers’ store. The whistle was broken by the falling of some planks, . . the grates'are not in the engine; they are gone. The boys tore up the ash-pan.” The plaintiff contended that the engine was as represented and the trouble.was altogether due to improper method and the use of incompetent men in operating it. The motion for a new trial is based on the general grounds and numerous special grounds. The view we entertain of the merits will indicate our opinion of the special assignments.

1. The verdict for the defendant was not authorized by the evidence and the law. His own testimony shows that he did not comply with the conditions of the contract, which were binding upon him. If the engine did not work after a trial of ten days, and if the plaintiff, on notice of the defect, exercised its option of remedying the defect, and still the engine did not fulfil the warranty, it was the duty of the defendant to return this defective part to the plaintiff, “to the place where received.” He did not do so. . The letters to the plaintiff in which the defendant said that unless the plaintiff made the engine good, “the engine is subject to your order,” or “I call on you now to make good your guarantee, or consider the engine yours,” were in no sense a compliance with this condition. In the case of Malsby v. Young, 104.Ga. 205 (30 S. E. 854), the warranty was almost identical with that under consideration, and the Supreme Court held: “Where a contract gives to the purchasers of personalty sold to them under an express warranty the right, upon compliance with specified conditions, to return the same to the sellers by delivery at a designated place free of freight charges, a mere notice to the latter that the property is held subject to their order is'not a compliance with the terms of the contract.” There the property was an engine, and, as said, the warranty was sub[635]*635stantially in the same words. In Dickey v. Winston Cigarette Machine Co., 117 Ga. 131 (43 S. E.

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Bluebook (online)
67 S.E. 890, 7 Ga. App. 631, 1910 Ga. App. LEXIS 437, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/case-threshing-machine-co-v-cook-gactapp-1910.