Holcomb Hoke Manufacturing Company v. Fish

7 S.W.2d 313, 177 Ark. 631, 1928 Ark. LEXIS 161
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJune 18, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 7 S.W.2d 313 (Holcomb Hoke Manufacturing Company v. Fish) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Holcomb Hoke Manufacturing Company v. Fish, 7 S.W.2d 313, 177 Ark. 631, 1928 Ark. LEXIS 161 (Ark. 1928).

Opinion

Smith, J.

Appellant is a corporation engaged in the manufacture and sale of machines used in popping corn and roasting peanuts, and sold appellee two machines, one being a popcorn machine, for the sum of $337.50, the other a combination machine intended to pop com and roast peanuts, for the price of $895. This suit was brought bv appellant to collect the balance alleged to be due on each of the machines.

Appellee did not question the balance due on the popcorn machine, but as to the other machine it was alleged that there had been a breach of the implied warranty under which it was sold that it was adapted to its intended nse. It was also alleged that, in an attempt to repair and adjust and nse the machine, a large expense had been incurred and much electricity wasted, as the machine was an electrical one. It was also alleged that the machine was worth $450 less than its purchase price or the sum it would have been worth had it been in good condition.

Notwithstanding the fact that the plaintiff offered testimony to the effect that both machines were tested at the factory before they were shipped and were found to he in perfect condition, the jury was fully warranted, under the testimony in the case, in finding that the combination machine was in >a defective condition. The testimony was conflicting as to the extent of these defects, but that on the part of the defendant was to the effect that repeated attempts were made to repair and adjust the machine, but with only partial success, and that expenses amounting to about $75 were incurred in these attempts, including wasted electricity, and thalt ithey were never able to make it roast peanuts, although, after two electricians had worked on the machine, it could he used for popping corn, and that the machine was worth $450' less than its purchase price.

The .jury returned a verdict for appellant for the balance due upon each of the machines, but found also that the balance due upon the larger machine should be credited with the sum of $450, with interest from April 8, 1925, this being the date of the sale, and judgment was rendered accordingly. From this judgment the plaintiff has appealed and the defendant has cross-appealed.

The only error assigned by appellant (plaintiff below) for the reversal of the judgment is that the court erred in the instructions given on the measure of damages. On this question appellant asked the following instruction:

“6. In arriving at the measure of damages which defendant claims he is entitled to recover by reason of the defects in such'machine, the court tells you he would be entitled to the cost of correcting snoh defects if the machine could be corrected at reasonable expense, or the difference in value between the value of the defective machine and one which was free from defects, and such as was contracted for. ’ ’

The court modified this instruction by adding thereto the following clause:

“and also for the time of his employees, if any, lost in trying to operate and repair the said machine, and the cost of electricity ineffectively used in the operation caused by the defect, if any, and the sums paid out, if any, in an effort to repair same.”

Appellant excepted to this modification, also objected and excepted to the instruction given at the request of the defendant numbered 2, which was to the same effect as the modified 6th instruction set out above.

Under the issues joined in this case we think there was no error in modifying the instruction as indicated. If the machine was defective, and it appeared that these defects might be remedied at a reasonable cost, the purchaser had the right to affirm the sale and make the necessary adjustments, and to recoup the cost thereof when sued for the balance of the purchase money.

In the ease of E. A. Stevens Co. v. Whalen, 95 Ark. 488, 129 S. W. 1081, the purchaser of a pool table, when sued for the balance of the purchase price, sought to rescind the contract for a breach of warranty, after having elected, as the court held, to affirm the sale. It was there said:

“He had no right to keep the property and use it, and at the same time insist on a rescission of the contract. By keeping the property and using it, he elected to pursue the other remedy — that of demanding damages sustained by reason of the defect, which would be the cost of correcting the defect, if it could be corrected at a reasonable expense, or the difference between the value of the defective table and one which was free of defect, such as was contracted for. If the damages found by the jury, by reason of the defective condition of the table, exceeded the amount of the mortgage notes, then the plaintiff could not recover judgment for possession of the property” (Citing authorities).

At § 1826 of Mechem on Sales, vol. 2, page 1457, it is said:

“Expenses incurred in preparing for -what the seller is to do but fails to perform, or in doing that which the seller ought to have done, or in undoing thait which he did improperly, fall clearly within the doctrines of the preceding sections, and may be included within the damages to he recovered. For like reasons money expended in a reasonable endeavor to avoid or diminish the injury resulting from the breach of warranty, as, for example, to cure an animal sold as sound, but found to be diseased, may be recovered. Expenses, however, in an unreasonable, hopeless or useless endeavor, or losses caused by continuous use after the defects were patent and evidently incurable, could not be recovered. ’ ’

The testimony on the part of appellee is to the effect that, while the defects were not entirely remediable, they were partly so, and that, without the work done on the machine, it would neither pop corn nor roast peanuts, but, as a result of this work, the machine could be used to pop corn, although peanuts could not be roasted, and the machine was given a value as the result of the labor expended upon it which it would not otherwise have had.

This right to repair is upon the theory that, by making the repairs, the damages are not only minimized but the cost of the repairs which would place the machine in the condition it was warranted to be would properly measure the damages which the purchaser would be entitled to when sued for the balance of the purchase price. The purchaser would not be required to attempt the repair, and would n.ot be permitted to do so, at the expense of the seller, unless it reasonably appeared, in the exercise of an honest judgment, that the repairs would remedy the defect and at a reasonable cost. If, after such an attempt had been made without success, the machine did not conform to the warranty, the purchaser might, when sued for the balance of the purchase money, recoup, as damages for the breach of the warranty, the difference between the value of the machine as repaired and its sale price.

In the ease of Western Cabinet, etc., Co. v. Davis, 121 Ark. 370, 181 S. W. 273, a purchaser, who was sued for the balance of purchase money due upon a soda fountain, defended on the ground that there was a breach of the warranty of the fitness of the fountain, and in an attempt to repair the fountain certain expenses had been incurred.

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Bluebook (online)
7 S.W.2d 313, 177 Ark. 631, 1928 Ark. LEXIS 161, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/holcomb-hoke-manufacturing-company-v-fish-ark-1928.