J. I. Case Threshing Machine Co. v. Dulworth

288 S.W. 994, 216 Ky. 637, 1926 Ky. LEXIS 953
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedNovember 17, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 288 S.W. 994 (J. I. Case Threshing Machine Co. v. Dulworth) 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. I. Case Threshing Machine Co. v. Dulworth, 288 S.W. 994, 216 Ky. 637, 1926 Ky. LEXIS 953 (Ky. 1926).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Sampson

Reversing.

This suit was commenced in the Green circuit court hy appellee, Dulworth, against the J. I. Case Threshing Machine Company to -obtain a rescission of a contract of purchase of a farm tractor, and, if that could not he done, for judgment on a warranty for the price, $1,-217.92,'agreed upon to be paid for the tractor, the purchaser having executed his negotiable-note and it having-passed in due course of business to a banking institution. The firm of Leaehman & Walton, dealers in farm machinery and implements at Greensburg, Kentucky, sold the tractor to Dulworth -about the 8th of March, 1920-, and took from him his promissory note for the purchase price,x with Ms father, J. A. Dulworth, as surety. Previous to that time Leaehman & Walton had entered into a contract with the J. I. Case Threshing Machine Company hy which the former were to have the exclusive privilege of handling and selling- in Green county farm machinery manufactured by the company. At the time of the mailing of the contract Leaehman & Walton purchased the tractor now in controversy and soon thereafter paid the full purchase price to the company and the tractor was delivered to Leaehman & Walton. They put it on sale and young . Dulworth purchased it from them as stated above. The tractor was carried to the farm of the father of young Dulworth, in Green county, and there tested out. The firm of Leaehman & Walton attempted' to assist him in this work. The ’tractor, according to young Dulworth, proved unsatisfactory. Its power was not great enough to pull plows on the farm and to do satisfactory plowing. *640 This is denied by the company and its agent who examined the tractor and operated it on the farm. According to the evidence Dulworth called upon the agents-of the company about April 28th to send an experienced person to his farm to put the tractor in condition and to-operate it. This was almost two months after the tractor was delivered to the farm of young Dulworth.

Appellant, Threshing Machine Company, insists that, there was no privity of contract between appellee, Dulworth, and it, and consequently that it is not liable toDulworth upon any warranty made by Leachman & Walton concerning' the tractor. It is a well-settled rule recognized at common law that the .benefit of a warranty does not run with -a chattel on its resale so as to give the-sub-purchaser anv right of action against the original seller. 24 R. C. L. 159, 51 L. R. A. (N. S.) 1111; The Asher Lumber Co. v. Cornett, &c., 22 R. 569; Prater v. Campbell, 110 Ky. 23, 35 Cyc. 370.

While there is some evidence upon the subject it does-not clearly appear that there was any written contract of sale between the firm of Leachman & Walton and appellee, Dulworth. However, Dulworth says that the firm of Leachman & Walton warranted the farm tractor to him as being a first class machine, “the best tractor made and warranted to do.g-ood work in plowing, harrowing and disking farm lands.” It is averred in the petition that “this warranty induced the plaintiff to pur- , chase the tractor and to execute his note therefor for the-sum of $1,217.92, with his father, J. A. Dulworth, as his 'surety; that said note was made negotiable and payable-to bearer and was assigned to the People’s Bank, Grreensburg, Kentucky, for a valuable consideration before maturity, and thereafter when said note became due same was paid by plaintiff.”

He also stated in evidence that he received a written contract from the firm of Leachman & Walton containing a warranty of the tractor but that his copy of the contract had been lost or misplaced, and he gives no indication of the terms of the warranty. Apppellee intimates he received the usual printed contract containing the company’s standard warranty of tractors, and if he did the warranty was a limited one as shown by a copy of such contracts filed in the record, and which we will later consider, and the warranty ran not from the Threshing Machine -Company but from Leachman and Walton, and *641 rested upon many conditions, one of which required the purchaser of a tractor to return or offer to return the tractor to the seller within six days from its delivery, if it were unsatisfactory. There is no pretense on the part of Dulworth that this condition of the contract was complied with by him. In fact, it seems that he did not call upon the appellant company to make the tractor good or to keep its warranty until the tractor had been in his possession for something like two months. Courts have frequently held that contracts for the purchase of machinery like the one in question, providing that the purchaser shall take steps within a certain time to rescind the contract or to obtain the services of the seller in making the machinery work, are valid and enforceable. 35 Cyc. 424-425 and 426, 24 R. C. L. 241; City of Bardwell v. Southern Engine and Boiler Co., 130 Ky. 223.

Inasmuch as appellee, Dulworth, failed to call upon the company within the time specified in the contract upon which he relies to rescind the contract, if contract he had, or to make the machinery good, he waived his cause of action and is not now entitled to have a rescission of the contract or to recover damages of the company for deceit, or upon the warranty, all of which-rests upon the contract, if indeed he had such contract. There is, however, a much more potent reason why apppellee, Dulworth, is not entitled to a recovery in this case. He did not purchase the tractor from the Threshing Machine Company and had no contractual relation with that company at any time concerning- the tractor. True, the company at the request of the dealers and Dulworth sent its experts to the farm of Dulworth to examine the tractor and make it operate. This was done, as the company explains, long after the delivery of the tractor in order ,to facilitate the sale of its machinery by demonstrating to all doubters that its tractors were all they were claimed to be, and not as a duty owing under the contract. If there were in fact no privity of contract between Dulworth and the company, then plaintiff has no cause of action against the company. On the contrary, if he had a written contract with the firm of Leachman & Walton, dealers, at G-reensburg, he could have enforced that contract and that firm in turn could have enforced any contract of warranty existing between it and the company. The court below adjudged Dulworth entitled to the relief sought and adjudged the contract for the sale of the trac *642 tor rescinded, and the company entitled to the tractor on demand; that appellee, Dulworth, recover of the company the sum of $1,217.92, with interest. There was no judgment against Leachman & Walton although they had been made parties defendant -on cross-petition and had filed their answer and joined issue. As indicated above, the court was ill error in adjudging appellee, Dulworth, entitled to recover over against the company unless he had contractual relation with it.

In avoidance of the note and contract appellee, Dulworth, in his petition pleaded that he was an infant under twenty-one years of age at the time he made the contract and gave the note for the tractor. The evidence shows that he was about twenty and a half years old at the time the note was given and the tractor purchased.

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Bluebook (online)
288 S.W. 994, 216 Ky. 637, 1926 Ky. LEXIS 953, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/j-i-case-threshing-machine-co-v-dulworth-kyctapphigh-1926.