Duncan v. Dean

266 S.W. 20, 205 Ky. 470, 1924 Ky. LEXIS 151
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedNovember 11, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 266 S.W. 20 (Duncan v. Dean) 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
Duncan v. Dean, 266 S.W. 20, 205 Ky. 470, 1924 Ky. LEXIS 151 (Ky. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

[471]*471Opinion op the Court by

Judge McCandless

Reversing.

In a suit in the Henry circuit court, W. J. Dean recovered a judgment against the firm of Duncan & Shirley for the sum of $350.00 for breach of contract in the sale of certain grass seed to him in the spring of 1920. Defendants have prayed an appeal and a reversal.

It is alleged in the petition “the defendants represented and warranted said seed to be first class seed and free from foreign seed and the best quality of such seed to be obtained and that he relied on said warranties; that the seed were not first class seed, but contained a' large mixture of daisy seed; that he sowed same without any knowledge of this fact, and that the daisy seed germinated and grew to his great injury, &c.” All of which was controverted.

On the trial plaintiff testified as to the contract: “I ealled Mr. Duncan and told him, talked to him about some seed, orchard grass seed, and he gave me a price on two kinds of seed, one $2.50 (two dollars and fifty cents and one $3.50 (three dollars and fifty cents). He says, ‘Now, Mr. Billie, I would not advise you to buy the $2.50 seed. . . . The $3.50 seed is our very best re-cleaned seed, and seed we stand behind.’ ” He further testified that prior to that time there were no daisies on his farm, that he sowed the seed purchased,, but in so doing did not discover the daisy seed, and such seed germinated, and while the grass and clover also came up, fully fifty per cent of the crop produced was daisies. The daisy is of no value for feed, is very tenacious of life and hard to eradicate from the soil; that he mowed this field while the grass was green in order to prevent the daisy seed from maturing and thereby the hay was moulded, and while he hauled part of it to his barn and ♦fed it, the hay was of very little value; that there were about fifteen tons of hay that otherwise would have been worth about $20.00 a ton. Also for the reasons indicated the presence of the daisies decreased the value of his farm materially. As to the presence of the daisies in his crop and their effect, as well as their former absence from his farm, he is corroborated by a number of witnesses.

On the other hand, Mr. Duncan, the one with whom the contract was made, denies appellees’ version. He testified that he is engaged in the implement and seed [472]*472business, and does not.produce seed for sale to retailers; that his firm purchases seed from various wholesale firms and handles only the best they can buy; that the seed in question was sacked and tagged in accordance with the pure seed law of this state, and the only knowledge he had of its quality and condition was derived in this way; that he did not tell plaintiff that the seed in question was the best recleaned seed or that he would stand behind it; that he probably recommended to- him that it would be safer and more advantageous to him to buy the better quality of seed, but otherwise gave no guarantees at all; that the tags showed the germination and purity test of the seeds, and that daisies are not condemned by the pure seed law of this state.

There is evidence to the effect that the plaintiff procured hay the preceding year in which there were daisies, and scattered the manure produced therefrom over his farm, also that, daisies are common on the different farms in the neighborhood.

The defendant offered the following instruction:

“Unless the jury believe from the evidence that the defendant or defendants warranted and represented to the plaintiff that seeds sold were free from -daisy seeds, then they should find for the defendants unless they further believe they knew at the time when seed was sold to the plaintiff it contained daisy seed.”

This was refused and the court instructed the jury on its own motion:

“If the jury believe from the- evidence that the orchard grass seed bought by plaintiff from defendant contained daisy seed, and after sowing said seed a large crop of daisies sprung up as a direct result 'ftomthe sowing of said orchard grass seed and injured the field for hay the following year and in-' jured tile saleable value of defendant’s farm, the law mor the plaintiff and the jury should so find. Un-léss the jury so believe it should find for the deendants. ’ ’

Refusing the first and giving the second instruction constitute the- alleged errors of the court.

In disregarding the issue of fact as to express warranty, and instructing the jury to find for the plaintiff if daisy seed were mixed with the seed he bought and [473]*473were sown by him to his injury, the court evidently considered the appellants liable on an implied warranty.

Ordinarily where a manufacturer, producer or dealer sells an article for a particular purpose, he impliedly warrants that it is suitable and fit for that purpose, Parsons on Contracts, section 586; Lawton on Contracts, section 57; 35 Cyc., page 402; Benjamin on Sales, section 987; Gardner v. Winter, 117 Ky. 382; Hobdy v. Siddens, 198 Ky. 201, and authorities cited; though this depends on the fadts and circumstances attending the sale, as these may indicate or repel such warranty. Yandell v. Anderson, 163 Ky. 702.

A different rule applies where the purchaser selects a specific article, as it is deemed that he then relies on such selection and not on the implied warranty that otherwise exists. (See same authorities.)

Also, “A dealer who sells mill feed to a 'customer in the original packages, without any representation as to its quality, is not liable to the customer for the loss of his oxen to which the mill feed was fed, they having died by reason of ground glass contained in the mill feed.” Syllabus, Walden v. Wheeler, 153 Ky. 181. See also Peaslee-Gaulbert v. McMathis’ Admr., 148 Ky. 265.

We deem it unnecessary at this time tó either distinguish or harmonize the above cases, for the reason in our opinion the matter is now regulated by statute.

The General Assembly at its 1904 session passed an act to prevent the adulteration, mixing or misbranding of grass seed. This was amended at the 1906 session, and again by an act aproved March 1,1916, entitled, “An act regulating the sale of agricultural and other seeds,” being sections 1376b-l to 1376b-13, Carroll’s Kentucky Statutes.

In this act, by the first section, various agricultural seeds are defined; by the third, noxious seeds are defined and a sale of a mixture of the two is forbidden.

By the second section it is provided, that every lot of agricultural seed, as defined in the first section, which is offered for sale shall be accompanied by a plainly written .or printed .statement in the English language stating (a.) the name of the seeds, (b) name or names of the person or persons offering the seeds for sale, (c) the approximate percentage by weight, of purity or freedom from foreign matter or from other seeds, . . . (e) tbe approximate percentage of germination as shown by laboratory tests.

[474]

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

Related

Wedding v. Duncan
220 S.W.2d 564 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1949)
Graham v. John R. Watts & Son
36 S.W.2d 859 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1931)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
266 S.W. 20, 205 Ky. 470, 1924 Ky. LEXIS 151, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/duncan-v-dean-kyctapp-1924.