D. M. Osborne & Co. v. Henry

70 Mo. App. 19, 1897 Mo. App. LEXIS 238
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 22, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 70 Mo. App. 19 (D. M. Osborne & Co. v. Henry) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
D. M. Osborne & Co. v. Henry, 70 Mo. App. 19, 1897 Mo. App. LEXIS 238 (Mo. Ct. App. 1897).

Opinion

Smith, P. J.

LEADI ' This is a suit on two promissory notes each for $40. The answer admitted the execution of the notes and alleged that the same, with a third for a like amount already paid off, were executed and delivered to plaintiff for the purchase price of an Osborne binder with trucks and bundle carrier machine. It was further therein alleged that at the time of the purchase of said machine the plaintiff and defendant entered into an agreement in writing which contained the following representations and covenants of warranty, to wit:

“This machine is hereby purchased and sold subject to the following warranty and agreement, and no one has any authority to add to, abridge, or change it in any manner. All our machines are warranted to be well built, of good material, and capable of cutting, if properly managed, from ten to fifteen acres per day. If, on starting a machine it should in any way prove defective- and not work well, the purchaser shall give prompt notice to the agent of whom he purchased it and allow time for a person to be sent to put it in order. If it can not then be made to do good work the defective part will be replaced, or the machine received back from the' purchaser at the office of the agent from [24]*24■whom it was purchased, and the money or notes returned. Keeping the machine during harvest, whether kept in use or not, sháll be deemed conclusive evidence that the machine fills the warranty.” And that defendant, at the time he executed said promissory note, relied upon the representations and warranties contained in said agreement believing the same to be true but that .the same were untrue and false in that the said machine was not well built, nor of good material, nor would not properly cut fifteen acres per day nor any other number of acres. It was therein further alleged that upon starting said machine and as soon as defendant learned that the same was defective and would not do the work as it was intended to, he promptly and repeatedly notified plaintiff of the defects therein and that the same would not' work; and repeatedly requested it (plaintiff) to make the same good and put it in order under the said agreement and to replace the defective parts which it (plaintiff) refused to do. There was also the further allegation that the machine was not worth the purchase price of $120, and that the defendant had been damaged in the sum of $50. Judgment was demanded for the cancellation of the notes sued on and for $50 damages, etc. -

The replication admitted that said notes were given for the purchase price of said machine and that one of them had been paid by defendant as alleged in the answer. The agreement referred to in the answer and hereinbefore set forth was likewise pleaded haec verla in the replication. It was alleged that the plaintiff had and the defendant had not complied with the terms and conditions of the said agreement. Upon this state of the pleadings there was a trial resulting in judgment for defendant. .

[25]*25SpLerformancenty: [24]*24Manifestly the agreement pleaded contained a warranty to the effect that the machine was well built, [25]*25of good material and capable of accomplishing certain results. Such warranty was, however, subject to the condition, first, that if on starting the machine it should, in any way, prove defective and not work well, the purchaser was required to give prompt notice to the agent of whom he purchased it and allow time for a person to be sent to put it in order and if it could not be put in good order, second, the plaintiff had the right either to replace the defective part, third, or to receive back the machine from the purchaser at the office of the agent from whom purchased and return the purchase money or notes.

The evidence of the plaintiff tended to prove that the machine was defective in several particulars and incapable of accomplishing the results for which it was warranted; and that as soon after the starting of the machine as this was discovered by defendant he gave notice thereof to the agent of the plaintiff of whom such machine had been purchased. The defendant's right of action was then complete. This right, under the agreement, was subject to avoidance in one of three ways, that is to say, first, by putting the machine in good working order within a reasonable time after the receipt of the notice to the ágent already alluded to, or second, if this could not be done, then to either replace the defective parts of the machine, or, third, to take it back and return the purchase money and notes. * The replication does not plead and the evidence does not tend to prove either of these facts. The most that the evidence shows is that the plaintiff’s agent on receipt of notice, made a vain attempt to put the machine in good working order. Although the plaintiff did not succeed in putting the machine in good working order it might still have avoided the defendant’s right of action by exercising one of the two options [26]*26still open and accorded to it by the agreement, namely, to either replace the defective parts of the machine or to take back the same and return the purchaser’s money and notes. The exercise of this right was not within the compulsory power of the defendant. The plaintiff was still in default when it failed to put the machine in good working order, and by failing to exercise either of said options it so continued.

If the plaintiff had, as it did not, offered to replace the defective parts of the machine or to take it back and return the purchase money and notes and the defendant had refused to accept either of such offers, this would have been sufficient to avoid defendant’s action for the breach of the covenant of warranty. The conditions in the agreement were material and dependent obligations and covenants and the party seeking to enforce the warranty therein must show compliance before he can insist on performance by the other party. Kingman v. Schulenberger, 64 Mo. App. 548. And it has been authoi’itatively declared that no principle of law is better settled in respect to such conditions in these machine contracts, than that they are conditions precedent, to be observed and performed by the purchaser, and he must show a fair and reasonable compliance with the terms' of the contract, or he will not be permitted to enforce it against the contractor. Nichols v. Larkin, 79 Mo. 264; Kingman v. Schulenberger, supra.

t¡on INmachSe. The evidence discloses that defendant performed-all the conditions of the warranty on his part and that therefore he was in a situation to exact compliance on the part of the plaintiff. Defendant, after the plaintiff’s agent had failed to make the machine work satisfactorily, did not return or offer to return the same and demand a return of, the purchase money and notes, nor did the plaintiff [27]*27offer to take back the machine and return the purchase money and notes so that there is no question of rescission of the agreement in the case. The fact that the defendant did not return or offer to return the machine forms no impediment to the defense interposed by him. .It has long been the well established law in this jurisdiction that the right of a vendee to maintain, as a defense in an action of this kind, the defective quality of the warranted article in diminution of the price is not lost by the vendee receiving and accepting the article. Werner v. O’Brien, 40 Mo. App. 483; Tall v.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Stephens Industries, Inc. v. American Express Co.
471 S.W.2d 501 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1971)
Fairbanks v. . Supply Co.
86 S.E. 1051 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1915)
Fairbanks, Morse & Co. v. Twin City Supply Co.
170 N.C. 315 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1915)
J. I. Case Threshing Machine Co. v. Gardner
140 S.W. 318 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1911)
Laumeier v. Dolph
130 S.W. 360 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1910)
Alabama Steel & Wire Co. v. Symons
110 Mo. App. 41 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1904)
Osborne v. Mullikin
88 Mo. App. 350 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1901)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
70 Mo. App. 19, 1897 Mo. App. LEXIS 238, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/d-m-osborne-co-v-henry-moctapp-1897.