Clark v. Wooster

64 A. 10, 79 Conn. 126, 1906 Conn. LEXIS 24
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJune 8, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 64 A. 10 (Clark v. Wooster) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clark v. Wooster, 64 A. 10, 79 Conn. 126, 1906 Conn. LEXIS 24 (Colo. 1906).

Opinion

Torrance, C. J.

The complaint in this case, as it stood when suit was begun, alleged in substance the following facts : The defendants on October 21st, 1902, offered to sell *128 to the plaintiff the horse in question, and both then warranted that it was sound, kind, gentle, and would not balk. Relying upon said warranty the plaintiff' bought said horse and paid to the defendants therefor the sum of $125. At the time of said warranty said horse was balky, unsound, unkind, and worthless, “all of which was well known by the defendants.”

At the trial of the case the complaint was amended by adding the following paragraph: “ As a result of the aforesaid false representations and statements the plaintiff on the day of October, 1902, returned said horse to the defendants, who took the same into possession, and boarded and kept it, and on the 8d day of December, 1902, the defendant Gilbert B. Rogers began legal action against the plaintiff for the board and keep of said horse, and recovered judgment against the plaintiff for the sum of $98.88, with costs, and the plaintiff was compelled to pay to the defendant Rogers the sum of $49.88 for the board and keep, as aforesaid, and the payment of said sum by the plaintiff was a loss and damage, the result of the false representations of the defendants, aforesaid.”

The allegations of the complaint were denied by the answer of each defendant.

The verdict and judgment were against both defendants for the sum of $164.88, and from that judgment Rogers alone appeals.

The evidence for the plaintiff tended to prove the following facts: The sale of the horse was made by Wooster alone, in the absence of Rogers, on the 21st of October, 1902. About this there was no dispute. The warranty and conditions of sale, claimed by the plaintiff, were made by Wooster alone at the time of sale ; and the agreed price of the horse, less $5, was then paid by the plaintiff to Wooster. As part of the consideration of said sale contract, Wooster warranted, among other things, that said horse would not balk, and agreed that “if said horse did not prove as warranted it could be returned, and money refunded.” At the time of said sale Rogers was, with *129 Wooster, part owner of said horse. The plaintiff accepted the horse, and it proved to he a balky horse, and for this reason he returned it to Wooster and Rogers by leaving it on the premises of Rogers, in the presence of both, saying that he returned it because it was balky. He also then demanded of Wooster and Rogers the sum he had paid to Wooster as the price of the horse, and told them that in default of such payment “ he would bring action against them.” The money was not paid. “ Rogers, at that time, made no claim that he had no interest and was in no way the owner of said horse.”

The evidence for Rogers tended to prove the following facts: On the 7th of October, 1902, Rogers sold said horse to Wooster, and then was paid in full for the same. Said sale was an absolute one, and the title to the horse then passed to Wooster. When subsequently Wooster sold said horse to the plaintiff, Wooster was acting for himself, Rogers was not present, and had then no interest, direct or indirect, in said horse or in said sale. Within a short time after the sale to the plaintiff, he and Wooster brought the horse to Rogers’ house, and asked him to hitch it up to some light and heavy wagons there, in order to see if it would balk, as the plaintiff claimed it would. While Rogers was testing the horse for such purpose, the plaintiff, refusing to take or keep the horse, drove away, leaving it on the premises of Rogers. Thereupon Rogers unhitched the horse, kept it in his barn, and notified the plaintiff that he’ would look to him for its board.

Wooster was not personally present at the trial below, but his deposition was put in evidence by his attorney who acted for him during the trial. So far as his evidence tended to prove anything, it tended to prove that he bought the horse from Rogers, and afterward sold it to the plaintiff and received from him therefor $115; and that he did not warrant the horse.

The evidence offered by the plaintiff and by Rogers, relating to the special damages claimed by the plaintiff in the amendment made to the complaint, was substantially the *130 same, and'tended to prove the following facts: Rogers brought suit against the plaintiff for the board of the horse, and attached the horse as the plaintiff’s property; and in that suit, in the District Court of Waterbury, Rogers recovered a verdict and judgment against the plaintiff for $98.88. The horse was sold in that action according to law for $49, which amount was paid into court and applied on the judgment, and the remainder, $49.88, was paid to Rogers by the plaintiff.

The errors assigned are somewhat numerous; but as we are of opinion that a new trial must be granted, only a few of them need he considered. ' The rights of the parties depended largely upon the nature of the cause of action set forth in the complaint, and upon the law relating to the circumstances under which a vendee may rescind an executed sale and return the things sold, and the effect of such rescission; and the charge of the court upon these points was not at all clear and adequate. The cause of action set forth in the complaint is not one for fraud or deceit in the sale. It alleges merely that the defendants warranted the horse, that the plaintiff bought it relying upon such warranty, that the' horse was not as warranted, and that the defendants knew it was not. Such a complaint is regarded in this State as counting upon a' mere breach of warranty. Bartholomew v. Bushnell, 20 Conn. 271; Booth v. Northrop, 27 id. 325, 331. Under his complaint the plaintiff was entitled to prove that a warranty had been made and broken, and the lawful damages caused to him thereby; but he was not entitled to prove that he had rescinded the sale contract and returned the horse, and had the right to do so under the contract, for nothing of this kind was alleged in the complaint, nor was it in' issue under the pleadings. Notwithstanding this, however, evidence that a term of the sale contract gave the plaintiff right to return the horse, was received without objection by Rogers; and the case was apparently tried upon the theory, entertained by both court and counsel, that under the complaint the plaintiff had a right to return *131 the horse and rescind the sale if he proved fraud on the part of the seller, or a term of the contract authorizing such rescission and return, or a mere breach of warranty.

A vendee has the right to rescind an executed sale contract and to return the thing sold, (1) if the contract was induced by the fraud of the vendor; Shupe v. Collender, 56 Conn. 489, 492, 15 Atl. 405; 2 Mechem on Sales, § 932; and (2) if a term of the sale contract gives him such right. But on an executed sale contract, in this and most of our States, a mere breach of warranty does not give to the vendee the right to rescind and return. Scranton v. Mechanics Trading Co., 37 Conn. 130, 132; Buckingham v. Osborne, 44 id. 133, 139; Trumbull v. O'Hara, 71 Conn.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
64 A. 10, 79 Conn. 126, 1906 Conn. LEXIS 24, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clark-v-wooster-conn-1906.