Hart-Parr Co. v. Duncan

1919 OK 114, 181 P. 288, 75 Okla. 59, 4 A.L.R. 1434, 1919 Okla. LEXIS 20
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedApril 15, 1919
Docket8655
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 1919 OK 114 (Hart-Parr Co. v. Duncan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hart-Parr Co. v. Duncan, 1919 OK 114, 181 P. 288, 75 Okla. 59, 4 A.L.R. 1434, 1919 Okla. LEXIS 20 (Okla. 1919).

Opinion

HARRISON, J.

The governing facts in this case are that in June, 1914, plaintiff in error, the Hart-Parr Company, a corporation of Charles City, Iowa, sold to defendant in error, Jos. T. Duncan, a certain 40 horse power oil tractor engine and two six-furrow disc plows, taking in payment Duncan’s five promissory notes, aggregating $2,785, secured by mortgage on the engine and plows.

The engine was warranted to do good work, but would not do so, and could not be made to do so. Duncan notified the Hart-Parr Company of such fact, and refused to pay the notes because of the worthlessness of the engine, whereupon the Hart-Parr Company brought suit on the notes. Duncan answered, denying liability on the notes because of breach of warranty by the company, and also asked for affirmative relief in damages alleged to have been caused by the company in selling him a defective engine.

The company replied to Duncan’s answer, and the case was tried upon the issues thus formed, resulting in a verdict aqd judgment releasing Duncan from liability on the notes and giving him damages in the sum of $294.-68, the amount paid by him for freight on the engine.

Prom such judgment and order overruling motion for new trial the Hart-Parr Company appeals upon 15 specific assignments of errors, including the assignment that the court erred in overruling motion for new trial, which motion itself contained 14 grounds for a new trial.

The entire assignment of errors, however, is presented and argued in the plaintiff in error’s brief under the following topics:5

(1) The question of tender.

(2) A refusal to give requested instructions.

(3) Errors in the instructions given by the court.

(4) The defendant not entitled to rescind.

(5) Errors in the verdict and judgment in *61 releasing defendant from liability on the notes given for the plows.

Under the first proposition it is contended by plaintiff in error that the defendant had not complied with the provision of the contract as to tender of the engine, and was therefore not entitled to a rescission of the contract. The contract in question consisted of a printed order furnished by the company which Duncan had signed and sent in to the company for the shipment of the engine and plows, which order was made subject to the warranties contained therein.

Among the provisions of warranty was the provision that the engine would develop certain horse power; also the provision that the oil-cooling device would keep the cylinders sufficiently cooled for the successful operation of the engine; and the further provision that:

“If inside of six days from the date of its first use it shall fail to fill the warranty with respect to the development of power, notice shall be given the Hart-Parr Company at their office at Charles City, Iowa, by registered letter or telegram, stating particularly wherein it fails to fill the warranty, and reasonable time given said company to send a competent person to remedy the defects, if any there be; the purchasers rendering necessary and friendly assistance. If the engine cannot be made to develop the guaranteed power, it shall be returned by the purchasers free of charge to the shipping point where received, and the payments made will be refunded, and no further claim is to be made on the company.
“If the purchasers fail to make the engine do satisfactory work through improper management, inefficient operators, or neglect to observe the printed or written directions of the manufacturers, then the purchasers are to keep the engine, also to pay all necessary expenses incurred by any man sent at their request to put the engine in condition for successful operation.
“It is further mutually understood and agreed that the use of said engine after the expiration of the six days named in the above warranty shall be conclusive evidence of the acceptance of the same, and full satisfaction to the undersigned, who agrees thereafter to make no other claim on the Hart-Parr Company. * * *”

The company contends that the defendant, by keeping the engine more than six days after he had received it and by not returning it at the end of six days, had not complied with the conditions precedent to his right to rescission and was not in position to ask for a rescission.

A number of cases are cited in support of this contention, among which are several Oklahoma cases as well as eases from other states in support of the general rule:

“Where a contract of sale is coupled with an express warranty which stipulates the course to be pursued by the purchaser in the event the warranty fails, such stipulation must be followed by the purchaser in order to enforce the warranty.”

But the above rule is not applicable to the facts in this case. The testimony discloses that this engine was brought to Duncan’s place about the 18th day of June and put to work by one of the Hart-Parr Company’s experts, but failed to do good work from the very beginning; that the first expert remained with the engine from about June 18th until about June 27th, the engine from the beginning and at all times failing to give satisfaction. After the first expert left, Duncan called up the company and informed them that the engine was not working satisfactorily, and was requested by the company to try to get along with it until they could get a man; that they had no available man at that time, but would send one as soon as possible. The man came in about a week, and other men came later; and they continued to try to make the engine run until about the 26th of September, having spent more than two months in a vain endeavor to make it work, and all this delay at the instance and request of the company.

The company’s expert set up the engine on the 18th of June, and continued from then until the 27th day of June trying to make it run, but he could not make it do satisfactory work, and, when the company was informed of this fact, it requested Duncan to get along with it until another expert could be iput. Thus the failure to return the engine according to the stipulation relied upon by the company was brought about at the instance and request of the company and for the benefit of^ the company. In fact, it appears from this testimony that all the delay in failing to return the engine and ask for a rescission of the contract was at the request of the company and for the benefit of the company. The company continued to send experts to try to make the engine do satisfactory work for a period of over two months, which delay was of no benefit whatever to Duncan. In fact, as the testimony shows, Duncan was materially damaged by reason of the delay. The company was getting all the benefit of the delay in the hope of ultimately making this engine do the work instead of having to take it back or replace it with another engine.

Under these circumstances there is no rule _ of law, at least none recognized by this court, that would deny Duncan the benefit of the *62 provision of warranty and force Mm to take a wortMess engine and pay $2,785 for it.

It is contended also that no sufficient tender was made by Duncan. This contention is not supported by the evidence.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1919 OK 114, 181 P. 288, 75 Okla. 59, 4 A.L.R. 1434, 1919 Okla. LEXIS 20, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hart-parr-co-v-duncan-okla-1919.