Dick v. James Clark, Jr., Electric Co.

171 S.W. 198, 161 Ky. 622, 1914 Ky. LEXIS 131
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedDecember 15, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 171 S.W. 198 (Dick v. James Clark, Jr., Electric Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dick v. James Clark, Jr., Electric Co., 171 S.W. 198, 161 Ky. 622, 1914 Ky. LEXIS 131 (Ky. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by Judge Carroll

— Affirming.

The appellee, Electric Company, brought suit against the appellant, Dick, to recover $545.09, consisting of $525, the price of a vacuum cleaner, tbe remainder being for fixtures. Tbe suit was brought in March, 1912, and it was alleged, and is not denied, that the vacuum cleaner was furnished and installed in November, 1910, and further alleged that thfe sum sued for was due in December, 1910.

For answer to this suit, Dick, after admitting the purchase of the cleaner at the time and for the price mentioned, averred that, as a part of the purchase, the electric company gave him a guarantee that the cleaner would give him entire satisfaction, and that he would not have to pay for the same unless it worked to his satisfaction. He further averred that it had never done satisfactory work and that the electric company, on numerous occa.sions, had promised to repair it so that it would operate in a satisfactory manner; that, relying upon tbe promises to repair, he retained the cleaner, but, when all efforts to repair it had failed, and in March, 1912, after suit was brought, he notified the electric company that he would not accept the cleaner and that he held the same subject to their order.

To this answer a reply was filed, completing the issues.

After this, the case went to trial before a jury, and, by direction of the court, there was a verdict for the electric company for the amount claimed.

The question for decision is, did the court err in taking the case from the jury?

[624]*624Dick testified, in substance, that when he bought the cleaner in 1910 the electric company guaranteed that it would operate in a manner satisfactory to him in every respect, or else he did not have to pay for it; that shortly after it had been installed it made so much noise that the tenants in the building complained. He further said that for one cause and then another the cleaner had failed to-give satisfaction, or operate properly from the time it had been installed; that, although the electric company sent its men to repair and adjust it time and again, they failed to make it work in a satisfactory manner or to do the work it was intended to do.

Asked if he ever notified the company to take the cleaner out of his house, he said: “Well, I think I wrote them one time about it.” In this connection it might be noted that the first letter written by Dick to the electric company complaining of the manner in which the machine worked was on December 26, 1911, some thirteen months after the cleaner was installed.

Farther in his examination this occurred: “Q. Was any time mentioned as to when you should determine as to whether or not it was satisfactory to you? A. No, sir. Q. What was the agreement about the time? A. The agreement was it was to work satisfactory to me in every way; but it never did from the start. Q. How long did you have to determine that? A. There wasn’t nothing said that I recall about that. Q. You were to choose your own time to determine whether or not this machine was satisfactory? A. I say the same thing over; I don’t recall anything about that part. Of course, naturally, if a business man buys anything, he expects to pay for it if it is satisfactory. Q. And you expected to have as long a time as you wanted to determine that? A. Oh, no; when it didn’t work at the start that settled it with me; but as long as they kept on trying and still it didn’t work, I knew it wasn’t going to be satisfactory. Q. You, have still got this cleaner in your apartment house ? A. Yes, sir. Q. When did you first make any objection to it? A. Eight at the start on account of the noise. Q. Was that remedied? A. Yes; but then some other troubles come up. I can’t recollect what. It was first one thing and then another all the time. Q. Is it not a fact that you had that machine out there at your apartment house and used it and operated it and never made any complaint about the motor until the fall of 1911, one year after you bought it? A. There was always some[625]*625thing the matter with it. Q. Mr. Dick, answer the question; is that not a fact? A. Could not tell you that at all. Q. What was the matter with the motor, do you know? A. I could not tell you, only he said it was not large enough to do the work. Q. After you made this complaint about the motor, did Mr. Clark agree to give you a larger motor? A. Mr. Clark said he would put a larger one in if I would pay the difference, which I declined to do. Q. Didn’t he finally offer to give you a motor? A. Yes, sir. Q. Why didn’t you take it? A. Because he wanted me to accept it if he put the motor in, and I said, ‘I don’t know whether that is the whole cause of it, and if you put the motor in and it works all right, I will take it.’ ”

There was further introduced during the examination of Mr. Dick a letter dated April 10, 1912, in which, for the first time, he made a tender of the cleaner to the electric company.

James Clark, Jr1., manager of the appellee company, introduced as a witness for Dick, said, in substance, that after the motor had been installed Mr. Dick complained about the noise it was making, and that he sent a man out to see what the trouble was every time complaint was made; that some changes were made to eliminate the noise, and afterwards some other changes were made. He said the noise was attributable to some conditions in the construction of the building and not to defects in the cleaner.

Without relating further of the evidence, it is sufficient to say that Mr. Dick complained often to the electric company about the cleaner not working in a satisfactory manner, and that whenever he made complaint, the company sent a man out to remedy it or see what the trouble was; and that after some repairs eliminating the noise had been made, the cleaner worked in a satisfactory manner when it was operated by the employes1 of the company, but failed to give good service when operated by the janitors in charge of the building where it was located.

The lower court, in directing a verdict for the electric company, was influenced to do so by the fact that it was the duty of Dick, if the cleaner did not work to his satisfaction to return or offer to return it within a reasonable time, and that, as he retained the cleaner for about seventeen months without offering to return it, he waived his right to return and must keep and pay for [626]*626it, notwithstanding the fact that he was continually protesting that the cleaner did not work to his satisfaction, and the electric company, as often as he complained, sent its men to remedy the trouble.

For the electric company the argument is made that when a machine is sold and guaranteed to work to the satisfaction of the purchaser, it is the duty of the purchaser to inspect and test the machine within a reasonable time after it is delivered, and, if it is unsatisfactory, to return or offer to return it to the vendor within a reasonable time after discovering that it is not satisfactory.

While counsel for Dick argue that this general principle, which is conceded to be correct, is not applicable or controlling in this case, because the electric company, by its promises to repair and its attempt to repair the cleaner, had waived its right to make the defense that Dick had failed to return or tender the cleaner within a reasonable time after he discovered it did not operate in a satisfactory manner.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
171 S.W. 198, 161 Ky. 622, 1914 Ky. LEXIS 131, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dick-v-james-clark-jr-electric-co-kyctapp-1914.