Heath Dry Gas Co. v. . Hurd

86 N.E. 18, 193 N.Y. 255, 1908 N.Y. LEXIS 642
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 23, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 86 N.E. 18 (Heath Dry Gas Co. v. . Hurd) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Heath Dry Gas Co. v. . Hurd, 86 N.E. 18, 193 N.Y. 255, 1908 N.Y. LEXIS 642 (N.Y. 1908).

Opinion

Hiscock, J.

The appellants are seeking to defend against the attack made by plaintiff’s demurrer on their answer, as concededly they may do, by attacking in turn the sufficiency *257 of the latter’s complaint, and the questions thus raised are the only ones submitted to us on this appeal. '

The action was brought to recover damages because as claimed the appellants had not fulfilled their obligations under an executory contract with respondent for the manufacture of carbureters, complaint being made as to the quality of those which were supplied. Respondent accepted and has never returned the goods thus manufactured for it, and while the learned Appellate Division thought that notwithstanding this acceptance and retention of the goods its complaint might be sustained if necessary as alleging a cause of action on an implied warranty, the counsel for the respondent on the argument before us expressly conceded that it must be sustained, if at all, as alleging a cause of action on an express warranty, which survived acceptance and failure to return after discovery of the defects. Therefore, the sole question has become, does the complaint allege an express warranty covering the defects in the carbureters, and the material allegations bearing on this question are as follows:

That on or about the-day of April, 1906, the plaintiff and the defendants' entered into a contract whereby the defendants agreed to construct carbureters for the plaintiff in such lots as should be ordered by the plaintiff; that the said carbureters were to be constructed in a careful, workmanlike and skillful manner, and in accordance with the plans and specifications which were furnished to the defendants by the plaintiff, and at the prices quoted by the defendants to the plaintiff. "x" "" " That the defendants entered upon the performance of the aforesaid work under the said contract, and did construct 151 carbureters for the said plaintiff; and the said plaintiff, relying upon the said contract, and believing that the said carbureters were constructed in a careful, workmanlike and skillful manner, and not otherwise, received the said carbureters under the terms of the said agreement; •* * * that said carbureters failed to do the work for which they were intended; that plaintiff was unable to see the defects in said carbureters at the time they were deliv *258 ered * * * ; that plaintiff did not learn of said defects in said carbureters until it had sold a great many as aforesaid. * * * That by carelessness, negligence, unskillful ness and poor workmanship on the part of the defendants and their servants, all of the said carbureters constructed by them have been improperly, carelessly, unskillfully and negligently constructed, and made useless and valueless to the plaintiff herein, and solely because of such careless, improper, unskillful, unworkmanlike construction the said carbureters have failed in all respects to conform to the conditions of said agreement and to answer the purpose and to do the work intended to be done by them as provided in said agreement.”

Amongst all of these allegations, the specific ones of course upon which the respondent must rely as setting forth an express warranty are those that “'the defendants agreed to construct carbureters for the plaintiff in lots as should be ordered by the plaintiff ; that the said carbureters were to be constructed in a careful, workmanlike and skillful manner and in accordance with the plans and specifications which were furnished to the defendants by the plaintiff.”

It is well settled, as contended by counsel, that no specific words are necessary to constitute an express warranty, and that this complaint is not to be deemed insufficient because it does not use some particular formula. If the requirements essential to an effective contract of express warranty are otherwise satisfied by the language which has been used, that effect will not be denied because the word “ warranty ” has been omitted.

We do not think that the allegation that the carbureters were to be constructed “in accordance with the plans and specifications which were furnished to the defendants by the plaintiff,” helps to sustain .respondent’s theory. The form and purport of these plans and specifications is nowhere disclosed by the complaint, but we shall assume that they were of the usual character and served to describe and identify the articles which were to be manufactured by the appellants. Ho importance seems to be attached to them in con *259 nection with the question now under consideration and there is no allegation in the complaint as we understand it that appellants defaulted in respect to them. But, aside from this, while there may have been some difference of opinion on the subject, it is the better rule “ to treat such words (that is, terms of description of- the articles to be sold or manufactured) as part of the contract' of sale descriptive of the articles sold and to be delivered in the future and not as constituting that collateral obligation which sometimes accompanies a contract of sale and known as a warranty.” (Carleton v. Lombard, Ayres & Co., 149 N. Y. 148; Coplay Iron Co. v. Pope, 108 N. Y. 232, 236.)

Eespondent’s claim, therefore, of an express warranty must substantially rest upon the agreement “ that the said carbureters were to be constructed in a careful, workmanlike and skillful manner.” We shall assume that the words of agreement in form were equivalent to those of warranty.

In this executory contract for the manufacture of goods to be delivered in the future, the law implied a warranty that the articles to be manufactured should be reasonably fit for the purposes for which they were intended and that they should be free from latent defects produced by the process of manufacture. (Maurer v. Bliss, 6 N. Y. S. R. 224; affirmed, 116 N. Y. 665; Hoe v. Sanborn, 21 N. Y. 552; Gutwillig v. Zuberbier, 41 Hun, 361; Kellogg Bridge Co. v. Hamilton, 110 U. S. 108.)

The obligations thus implied are quite as broad as and fully equivalent to the obligations created by the words relied on as constituting the express warranty! This being so, we think that it is settled that a party cannot in such a case as this build up and secure the benefits of an express warranty simply by using words expressly stating the very obligations which the law implies without such words.

Reed v. Randall (29 N. Y. 358) involved the consideration of an executory contract for the sale of a growing crop of tobacco. The contract expressly provided that the tobacco was to be delivered well cured and in good condition,” and *260 it was held that this agreement would not be interpreted as an express warranty because it created no greater or different obligation than the law implied.

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Bluebook (online)
86 N.E. 18, 193 N.Y. 255, 1908 N.Y. LEXIS 642, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/heath-dry-gas-co-v-hurd-ny-1908.