Holcomb & Hoke Manufacturing Co. v. Osterberg

233 N.W. 302, 181 Minn. 547, 72 A.L.R. 722, 1930 Minn. LEXIS 1029
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedNovember 28, 1930
DocketNo. 28,138.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 233 N.W. 302 (Holcomb & Hoke Manufacturing Co. v. Osterberg) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Holcomb & Hoke Manufacturing Co. v. Osterberg, 233 N.W. 302, 181 Minn. 547, 72 A.L.R. 722, 1930 Minn. LEXIS 1029 (Mich. 1930).

Opinion

*548 Coring, J.

In a suit upon a note given for a popcorn and peanut machine, the defendant had a verdict upon the theory of rescission of the sale. This is an appeal from an order denying plaintiffs’ alternative motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict or a new trial.

The defendant on January 12, 1927, bought from the plaintiff manufacturing company, hereinafter called the company, a combination corn popping and peanut roasting machine for use in connection with his restaurant business.

The contract of purchase was in writing signed by both parties, the company signing by its salesman. It provided that:

“It is not subject to countermand, and is not subject to any conditions whatsoever unless such conditions are set forth herein, * * *. No agreement, representation, or claim of any kind shall be binding or of any force unless herein contained.”

The defendant however refused to make the purchase or sign the contract until the salesman wrote on a duplicate blank which was left with defendant a “guarantee” in the following form:

“Guarantee to Customer: We guarantee every Butter-Kist Popcorn Machine and Peanut Machine to be free from defects and to perform the work for which it was designed and sold. Holcomb & Hoke Mfg. Co. by H. J. Vollmer.”

The blank on which this was written was not otherwise signed nor was it filled out in other respects, but as to printed matter was identical with the original contract transmitted to the company as an order.

The machine was received by defendant about January 20, 1927, and was immediately set up and operated by him. It did not perform the work of buttering the popcorn nor properly separate the unpopped kernels before buttering; neither did it roast peanuts according to defendant’s expectations. The nickeled parts on the machine were dull, and there was a board in the bottom part which caused the defendant to suspect that the machine was not new but rebuilt.

*549 The defendant began to complain about the machine’s being rebuilt and evidently made such complaint to Vollmer, because the company wrote the defendant in January assuring him that the machine was not rebuilt and explaining that the nickeled parts were covered with a rust-proof dressing and giving him instructions about removing it. It also offered the services of its service department. Later in the correspondence the company offered to replace the parts to which defendant objected. On February 1, 1927, the defendant wrote the company stating that the machine was “not as it should be” and specifying that there were parts “that show they are not of new material” and that the “flasher” light on top did not work.

The defendant claims that the faults in the operation of the machine developed at once upon its receipt and that within a month he realized that he could not overcome them. He states that before he wrote the company on February 1 he told Vollmer “what the matter was with the machine.” Defendant’s letters subsequent to February 1 were not offered in evidence, but the company’s letters offered by defendant indicate that until April 23 the subject of the correspondence was the question of whether or not the machine was rebuilt. There is no discussion of its failure to operate. In the first part of April Vollmer came to the defendant for the purpose of collecting the note the defendant had given as part of the purchase price. At that time defendant told Vollmer: “You can take your machine because I will never pay for it unless they sue me for it and I have to pay it.”

Defendant however conferred with a firm of lawyers and on April 23 caused them to write a letter to the company in which the defects uoav complained of were enumerated, and the defendant’s claim that the machine Avas not a ucav one was reiterated. They then said:

“It is for the foregoing reasons that they have not made any further payments and unless you can make this machine fulfil its guarantee and work satisfactorily as your contract provides they refuse to make any further payments * * *. We might also add that in ho event will this machine be accepted if it is established that it is a rebuilt machine.”

*550 To this letter the company replied, giving instructions how to operate the machine and again assuring defendant’s attorneys that the machine yms new when sold to defendant. Nothing further transpired in the relations between the parties. The defendant kept the machine and did not renew his effort to rescind until in January, 1928, this suit was brought to recover on his note. He then interposed an answer which ivas subsequently amended so that it set up a rescission of the contract of purchase by defendant and asked for damages in the amount of the purchase price. The case was tried to a jury, which returned a verdict for the defendant. The court denied the plaintiffs’ alternative motion, and they have appealed, amongst other matters assigning error upon the court’s action in submitting to the jury the questions of rescission and the timeliness thereof.

We are squarely confronted with the question of the sufficiency of defendant’s claimed rescission in early April and the effect thereon of the letter of April 23. It should be here remarked that upon the trial the court did not submit to the jury the question as to whether or not the machine was a rebuilt one. In this we are of the opinion that the court was correct. There was not sufficient evidence that the machine was rebuilt to make a question of fact.

In discussing the question of the defendant’s alleged rescission we shall approach it from the standpoint of the effect of the letter of April 23 upon the conversation which the defendant had had with Vollmer, assuming for the present but not deciding that an offer of the character defendant described was as effective as if made directly to the company. The conversation as related by defendant was an unqualified demand that the company take back the 'machine, but before the demand was acted upon and before many days had passed the ‘ defendant’s legal representatives (not his present counsel) wrote the letter of April 23 which stated defendant’s position as being that of unwillingness to pay “unless you ■can make this machine fulfil its guarantee and work satisfactorily as your contract provides.” In effect it was a demand to put the machine in condition to fulfil the warranty, and consequently it was *551 inconsistent Avith and an abandonment of the previous attempt to rescind. In our opinion it superseded and nullified any offer to turn back the machine. It indicated a purpose to refuse to accept only in case it Avas established that the machine Avas rebuilt. This last matter is noAv outside the issues because it Avas not established to be a rebuilt machine, and the trial court so held. Therefore the letter for our present purposes can be construed as if that clause had been omitted. Without it the letter amounts to a request to make the Avarranty good, not an attempt to rescind. As before stated herein, the company replied to this letter Avith instructions about hoAv to adjust and operate the machine.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
233 N.W. 302, 181 Minn. 547, 72 A.L.R. 722, 1930 Minn. LEXIS 1029, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/holcomb-hoke-manufacturing-co-v-osterberg-minn-1930.