Fite v. McEntyre

49 S.E.2d 159, 77 Ga. App. 585, 1948 Ga. App. LEXIS 601
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedJuly 8, 1948
Docket31925.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 49 S.E.2d 159 (Fite v. McEntyre) 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
Fite v. McEntyre, 49 S.E.2d 159, 77 Ga. App. 585, 1948 Ga. App. LEXIS 601 (Ga. Ct. App. 1948).

Opinion

MacIntyre, P. J.

The petition in the instant case, while it may not be perfect or free from defects which might have been taken advantage of by a special demurrer based upon the proper *589 grounds, is not subject to a general demurrer. The action is essentially one for the breach of an implied warranty in law under Code § 96-301 (2), which is: “If there is no express covenant of warranty, the purchaser must exercise caution in detecting defects; the seller, however, in all cases (unless expressly or from the nature of the transaction excepted) warrants that . . 2. The article sold is merchantable, and reasonably suited to the use intended.” The effect of a breach of the warranty provided by this section is set out in Code § 96-306 as follows: “A breach of warranty, express or implied, shall not annul the sale if executed, but shall give the purchaser a right to damages.”

In Snowden v. Waterman & Co., 100 Ga. 589 (28 S. E. 121), it was said: “The seller of personal property, in all cases, unless expressly, or from the nature of the transaction, excepted, warrants: . . second, that the article is merchantable and reasonably suited to the uses intended. [Code, § 96-301.] Each clause in the section cited provides for a separate and distinct warranty, and a breach of any one is a breach of the implied warranty of the law. . . If the article is totally worthless and useless, and the buyer, in the exercise of ordinary care, could not detect the defect, then there is-a breach of warranty under the second clause, and this too when the seller was ignorant of the existence of the defect which caused the article to be of no value. . . The petition, before it was amended, in effect alleged that the article sold was not merchantable and was not reasonably suited to the use intended, and was ‘wholly and utterly worthless.’ Therefore the court committed no error in overruling a general demurrer thereto.”

When the same case was again before the Supreme Court of Georgia (Snowden v. Waterman & Co., 105 Ga. 384, 31 S. E. 110) it was further stated: “Where one purchases a lot of mules some of which are infected with a contagious disease that they soon afterwards, without fault of the purchaser, communicate to others in the lot; and the disease is of such a nature as to render the stock infected with it absolutely worthless, such a defect is covered by an implied warranty; and the vendee, in a suit for damages growing out of a breach of such warranty, is entitled to recover the purchase-price of all the stock thus lost, together with expenses that he has properly and reasonably incurred in *590 quarantining the stock to prevent a spread of the disease and in doctoring, and in otherwise taking care of them . . [p. 385 (4) ]. It is not contended in this case that there was any express warranty by the vendor; but section [96-301] of the Civil Code declares that in all cases, unless expressly or from the nature of the transaction excepted, the vendor warrants that the article sold is merchantable, and reasonably suited to the use intended. . . But in cases of latent defects, the existence of which can not be ascertained by an examination of the property, the law protects a purchaser by imposing upon the vendor an implied warranty, whenever the defect is of such a nature as to render the article sold unsuited to the use intended. In case's of latent defects, therefore, the doctrine of caveat venditor applies . . [p. 387], All damages which accrue as a direct and natural consequence of a breach of warranty, whether express or implied, are recoverable. A natural consequence of stock infected with glanders is to communicate it to all other stock with which the diseased animal comes in contact. In 2 Sedgwick on Damages,. § 769, it is declared: ‘Where animals sold are warranted free-from disease, loss through communication of disease to other animals of the purchaser may be recovered. It is not necessary to the recovery of such damages to show that the vendor knew that the diseased animal was to be placed with others belonging, to the plaintiff. The defendant is presumed to anticipate that the animals he sells will be placed with others as a natural consequence of his act. The expense of nursing and curing other animals, which contract disease from those sold, may be recovered.’ If any of the stock sold, therefore, was infected with a deadly and contagious disease, which was communicated to other stock of the plaintiffs, whether before or after the sale, it would give a right of action for damages for all the stock of the plaintiffs that had thus been lost from the effects of the contagion;, provided the plaintiffs by the exercise of ordinary care, could not have avoided the injury thus sustained. Plaintiffs would further be entitled to recover not only for such loss, but also any expenses, that were properly and reasonably incurred in taking care of the-stock, trying to cure them, and endeavoring to prevent them from spreading the disease to other animals.” (p. 391.)

The foregoing quoted excerpts from opinions of the Supreme- *591 Court of this State we take to be the law to which the courts of this State are committed in the class of cases within which the present case falls. Under these excerpts, it is seen that the law under Code § 96-301 (2) implies a warranty that the purchased animals are free from latent contagious disease which would render them totally worthless, in the absence of an express or implied waiver of the warranty. The essential elements of a damage action for the breach of such a warranty then are: (1) an executed sale of animals; (2) the absence of a wáiver of the warranty implied by the law; (3) breach of the warranty by the existence of the contagious disease in the animals at the time of the sale; (4) that the defects were latent and not discoverable by the exercise of ordinary care on the part of the buyer; (5) that the animals are totally worthless as a result of the disease (total worthlessness supplanting a stipulation that the animals are unmerchantable and not reasonably suited to the use intended); (6) the damages accruing as a direct and natural consequence of the breach; and (7) that the buyer exercised due diligence in avoiding the consequences of the breach. Applying these essentials to the petition in the present case, we see: first, the executed sale set out in paragraph three; second, affirmation that the sale was made under the implied warranty in paragraph four; third, breach of the warranty by the existence of the disease in the hogs at the time of delivery in paragraph five; fourth, the defects were latent and not discoverable by the exercise of ordinary care in paragraph five; fifth, the animals were totally worthless because 60 of them died from the disease and had to be buried to prevent the spread of the disease in paragraphs six and nine; sixth, the damages accruing as a direct and natural consequence of the breach are alleged in paragraphs six, eight and nine; and seventh, that the plaintiff was reasonably diligent in avoiding the consequence of the breach is alleged in paragraph six, eight and nine. • The petition therefore alleged a cause of action under the rule of the Waterman cases, supra; and it was not subject to a general demurrer.

It is true, as the defendant contends, that a general demurrer admits only facts properly pleaded, and does not admit conclusions.

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Bluebook (online)
49 S.E.2d 159, 77 Ga. App. 585, 1948 Ga. App. LEXIS 601, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fite-v-mcentyre-gactapp-1948.