International Harvester Co. of America v. Edwards

233 P. 164, 76 Colo. 531, 1925 Colo. LEXIS 360
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedFebruary 2, 1925
DocketNo. 10,938.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 233 P. 164 (International Harvester Co. of America v. Edwards) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
International Harvester Co. of America v. Edwards, 233 P. 164, 76 Colo. 531, 1925 Colo. LEXIS 360 (Colo. 1925).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Campbell

delivered the opinion of the court.

In an action by G. L. Edwards against the International Harvester Company of America, for rescission of a contract of sale of a motor truck, the district court cancelled the sale and required the defendant company to return to the plaintiff the amount he paid it as part of the purchase price and to cancel promissory notes and a chattel mortgage he gave to secure the payment of the balance. The defendant is here with its writ of error.

In separate issues of a Denver newspaper there appeared a short time before the making of the alleged contract several advertisements:

“Look Here.

“A truck hauling proposition you cannot beat. Average earnings $24 per day. Work will last over a year, a written contract if you want it. Down payment of $1,144 on new truck required. International Harvester Co. of America 2308 15th Street.”

“Truck Hauling.

“Money-making job that will pay for a truck, give you a good living, and save money. Man that can invest $1,189 can find a real opportunity here with a firm that has *533 a 90 year old reputation of square dealing. We investigated this work thoroughly and found an average earning of $24 a day, counting rainy days and all delays of the work will take from a year to 18 months to finish. Out of town inquiries telephone please as this will be gone shortly.

“International Havester Company, 2308 15th Street.” “Truck Hauling.

“Good job, big pay, steady; last over a year; written contract by responsible party, must have few hundred dollars for down payment on new truck. Mr. Hewitt or Mr. Doss. International Harvester Co., 2308 15th St.”

The plaintiff read them and went to the office of the defendant in Denver and there had conferences with Mr. Hancock, the agent of the company in apparent authority, concerning their subject matter, who informed plaintiff, in substance, that when a truck was sold the company gave with and as part of the contract of sale thereof, a hauling job which would continue for a period of at least one year. Belying upon the advertisements and the representations made, and believing the same to be true, the plaintiff bought, as he supposed, a hauling contract and a truck, the two together being the subject matter of the sale, and as a consideration paid $1,200 in money, and for the balance of the purchase price of $3,500, gave his promissory notes and secured the same by a chatel mortgage; that at the time the truck was delivered plaintiff signed what purported to be, and was headed, “Order for International Truck”, which seems to be a standard form of the company’s sales contract. In this written order or contract was a clause that the writing contained the entire agreement relating to the sale of the motor truck, and there was another clause that the warranties contained therein are in lieu of all other warranties, express or implied, between the parties, and that no person, agent or dealer is authorized to give any other warranties on the company’s behalf or to assume for it any other liability in connection with any other motor truck. When the plaintiff produced the published advertisements and showed them to Mr. Han *534 cock, the latter was asked if he could use any more men on the job and was told that the company could use two or more men, and then turned the plaintiff over to Mr. Doss, a salesman, and it was with Mr. Doss and Mr. Hewitt, both salesmen of defendant, that the contract for the job and the truck was thereafter consummated at defendant’s place of business. Doss and Hewitt thereafter came to the plaintiff’s residence and the matter was gone over at great length. Plaintiff was told by them that in reality by entering into the contract of sale he would be working for the defendant company, a responsible and well established business concern. They said they, defendant’s salesmen, were selling to the plaintiff the job, and talked about the truck only when plaintiff asked questions about it and plaintiff evidently thought, and the trial court doubtless believed him, and found that plaintiff supposed that the subject matter of the sale was the job and the truck, and not that the plaintiff was buying only a truck which he might be able to use in doing a hauling business. Plaintiff said that he could not use the truck at all without the job, and was assured by these agents that he would get the appropriate contract and that it would be signed by the defendant company. In pursuance of these conversations and negotiations the plaintiff thereafter went to the defendant’s office where Hewitt and Doss were, and there were then presented to him the notes and the written agreement, or order, all of which he signed.

Hewitt and Doss, at the time these instruments were signed, had another business or contract that they were carrying on, hauling different kinds of material for several contractors. They gave to plaintiff what they called a written contract for hauling, although the paper was signed only by Edwards and not by Hewitt or Doss, and it was this alleged contract that they told Edwards he must sign, if anything, which they evidently intended him to believe, and which he did believe, was, in substance and effect, the completion of the contract; in other words, that the entire contract between the defendant company and the plaintiff *535 consisted of the written contract or order for the sale of the truck and the purported hauling agreement which the defendant’s agents palmed off on him, but did not themselves sign. The trial court found that the contract as testified to by plaintiff was entered into by him because of fraudulent misrepresentations of facts made by defendant’s agents and that the equities were with the plaintiff, and upon these findings entered the decree of rescission as' above stated.

Counsel for the defendant company devotes his argument largely to legal propositions which he says were violated by the trial court, and by reason of errors therein concludes that the decree should be reversed. In substance, the contention is that as the order signed by the plaintiff for the purchase of the truck was in writing, all previous representations and negotiations were merged therein; that the warranties contained in the written order were in lieu of all other representations and this order was a notice to the plaintiff that no agent of the company could assume for it any liability in connection with the sale other than those expressly contained in the order itself; that the complaint does not state a proper cause for rescission, but, if it does, any claim based on fraudulent representations was waived by plaintiff since at the time he entered into the contract he was informed that the defendant company would not sign a contract calling for a job; that he waived the alleged fraud by not rescinding promptly and in entering into an independent contract concerning a job with the agents of the defendant; that the agents of the defendant with whom plaintiff dealt were mere salesmen, and plaintiff was in law charged with knowledge that, as such, they did not have the authority to enter into a contract with him for a job in connection with the sale of defendant’s truck; that, at most, if the defendant incurred any liability it would be merely for breach of a promise to do some act in the future for which an action for damages, but not rescission, lies.

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Bluebook (online)
233 P. 164, 76 Colo. 531, 1925 Colo. LEXIS 360, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/international-harvester-co-of-america-v-edwards-colo-1925.