J. B. Colt Company v. Berry

290 S.W. 1059, 218 Ky. 119, 1927 Ky. LEXIS 103
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedFebruary 4, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 290 S.W. 1059 (J. B. Colt Company v. Berry) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
J. B. Colt Company v. Berry, 290 S.W. 1059, 218 Ky. 119, 1927 Ky. LEXIS 103 (Ky. 1927).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Dietzman

Appeal granted and judgment reversed.

On August 27, 1920, the appellant sold to the appellees for the purpose of lighting their home a carbide gas generating plant, together with certain fittings and fixtures to be used in connection therewith. By the written contract of sale the appellant warranted this generating plant as follows:

“It is agreed that in accepting this order the company warrants the apparatus furnished to be a thoroughly durable galvanized steel acetylene generator, automatic in action, and of good material and workmanship, and that it is on the permitted list of the National Board of Fire Underwriters.”

The purchase price of this plant, $269.55, was represented by a note executed by the appellees and payable to the appellant one year thereafter. The appellant did not contract to install this plant or the fittings and fixtures, but it seems that it did send a man to the •appellees’ home to install them for the latter; the appellees paying this man for his work. The generating plant consisting of twP tanks, one of which worked into the other, was erected in a little house built for that purpose some distance away from the appellees’ home, but •on their premises. When the installation work was com *121 pleted, the appellees signed a statement that the plant had been installed and was working to their satisfaction. When the year was np the appellees failed to pay their note. By a series of letters extending over a period of about three years, the appellant undertook to get the appellees to pay this note or to explain their failure to do so, but they utterly ignored the correspondence and never answered any of the many letters which they received. Finally in May, 1924, the appellant brought this suit to recover on the note. The appellees answered, asserting a counterclaim against the appellant. They claimed that the appellant had breached the warranty above mentioned, in that the plant furnished was not thoroughly durable or durable at all, was not a galvanized steel acetylene generator, and was not automatic in action, by reason of all of which it was worthless for the purpose for which it was purchased, and for which reason they had been damaged in the sum of $500.00. The counterclaim was duly controverted. The evidence shows that after the plant had been installed it worked satisfactorily for some six or seven months, but that at the end of that time it was not always automatic in action.. It seems that when the light was turned on in the house the plant out in the yard ought to have started generating gas, but that after this six or seven months of use above mentioned when the light was turned on in the house the generating plant out in the yard did not start generating gas until some one had gone out into the yard and given one of the tanks comprising the plant a; kick, after which gas would be generated. Appellees also say that at the end of the period mentioned when the light was lit in the house it flared up to the ceiling, almost setting the house on fire, and that they then ceased to use the plant and had never used it thereafter. The evidence does not show that this flaring up of the light occurred on more than this one occasion. There is no showing this flaring up of the light was due to any defect in the generator or to anything other than a defect in or a maladjustment of the burner. With the flaring up of the light eliminated, the only question left was whether the warranty had been breached in the failure of the generating plant to work automatically. While the evidence for the appellant shows that there are many reasons why the plant might not work automatically, some of which are the collection of water in the pipes due to the way in which the fixtures are installed in the house, the failure *122 to clean out the refuse of the old carbide after it has been used in the generation of the gas, and the failure to replenish the tanks with a good quality of carbide and fresh water, yet where, as here, the seller warrants his plant to be “automatic in action,” without more, and the buyer shows that the plant is not automatic in action, it then devolves on the seller to show that the failure of the plant to work automatically is due to some neglect of the buyer. This the seller did not do here, but contented itself with showing what might have caused the plant to get out of order without showing what did cause it to get out of order. The court told the jury in substance to find for the appellant on its note, and then to find for the appellees on their counterclaim if the jury thought that the generating plant, when operated in a reasonably skillful and careful manner, was not automatic in action and did not continue so to be when so operated for a reasonable length of time after its installation, and, further, that, if they should find for the appellees on their counterclaim, they should award them such a sum in damages as the jury believed fairly and reasonably represented the difference in value, if any, in the lighting outfit if it had been as warranted and the condition it was actually in, the whole finding on the counterclaim not to exceed the purchase price of the plant. Under these instructions the jury found for the appellant on its note and found for the appellees on their counterclaim in exactly the sum of the purchase price of the plant. From the judgment entered on this verdict the appellant prays this appeal.

It first insists that, inasmuch as the appellees never tendered the plant back to the appellant, they could not recover on the counterclaim herein asserted. The appellant confuses the cause of action asserted by this counterclaim with an attempted rescission. The appellees did not undertake to rescind the contract here involved, but. only sought damages for the alleged breach of warranty. In the case of Missouri Moline Plow Co. v. Render, 199 Ky. 776, 251 S. W. 977, a case curiously like the instant one, this court pointed out the applicable law in these words:

“It is next insisted that plaintiff waived his right to rely on the warranty by failing to return, or offering tojretum, the tractor within a reasonable time, or at all, but as this is an action for breach of warranty, and not for rescission of the contract, and as the warranty was not conditioned upon a trial and *123 return of the tractor if found unsatisfactory, it was not incumbent upon the plaintiff to return or offer to return it. He had Ms election to sue for a rescission, in which event he would have had to return, or offer to return, the tractor, unless it had been worthless for any purpose; or he could, as he did, retain the tractor and sue for damages on the warranty.”

It is next contended that the court erred in its construction of this warranty as evidenced by his instructions to the jury. It is insisted that the warranty that the plant was automatic in action relates only to the condition in which it was in at the time of the sale, and that, as the evidence shows the plant was automatic in action at that time, the warranty was not breached, though the plant in a reasonable time thereafter ceased to be automatic in action. We cannot agree with this contention of the appellant. The warranty that the plant is automatic in operation is simply a warranty that it is so constructed in design and in quality of material and labor used as to be automatic when in operation.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
290 S.W. 1059, 218 Ky. 119, 1927 Ky. LEXIS 103, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/j-b-colt-company-v-berry-kyctapphigh-1927.