Jones v. Allen

318 P.2d 637, 7 Utah 2d 79, 1957 Utah LEXIS 195
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 2, 1957
Docket8709
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 318 P.2d 637 (Jones v. Allen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jones v. Allen, 318 P.2d 637, 7 Utah 2d 79, 1957 Utah LEXIS 195 (Utah 1957).

Opinion

WORTHEN, Justice.

Plaintiff, a truck repairman, ordered two barrels of oil from defendant which the jury found to be different from and inferior to the oil ordered-. Plaintiff ordered oil specified as 200 Kendall S.A.E. 140 gear lubricant, but received much thinner oil. Plaintiff used the oil in two trucks and damage resulted. Plaintiff sued to recover for breach of implied warranty. Sec. 60-U14, U.C.A.1953 provides:

“Implied warranty in sale by description. — Where there is a contract to sell or a sale qf goods, by description, there is an implied warranty that the goods shall correspond with the description',' and if the contract or sale is by sample ás well as by description, it is not sufficient that the bulk of the goods corresponds with the sample, if the goods do not also correspond with the’ description.”

The jury answered five special- interrogatories in favor of plaintiff and returned a verdict for $1,168.86. The jury found:

1. That the oil delivered was not 200 Kendall S.A.E. 140.

2. That plaintiff relied on the oil being 200 Kendall S.A.E. 140.

3. That the use of the oil delivered caused damage to two trucks.

4. That under all the circumstances an ordinarily prudent truck repairman would have relied on the oil as being 200 Kendall S.A.E. 140.

5. That the damage would not have occurred if 200 Kendall S.A.E. 140 oil had been used.

The trial court entered judgment on the verdict and defendant appeals and assigns error as follows:

(a) The court improperly instructed the jury as to the burden of proof on the question of whether a prudent repairman would have discovered that he had received the wrong oil;

(b) Defendant should have been protected by the doctrine that goods sold in a sealed container with the factory label are only warranted to be manufactured by a reputable manufacturer;

(c) Plaintiff should have been barred from recovery because he^inspected the oil before he used it, and

(d) A letter from the Kendall Company to defendant should not have been admitted in evidence because it was hearsay.

*82 As to the first assignment it should be observed that the court submitted the five special- verdicts to the jury in the form of A and B propositions as follows: (without the “X’s”)

“Group No. 1.
“Proposition (a) The defendant sold to the plaintiff, two barrels of oil other than 200 Kendall S.A. • E. 140. X
“Proposition (b) The oil defendant sold to plaintiff in Í9SS was 200 Kendall S.A.E. 140. -—
“Group No. 2.
“Proposition (a) The plaintiff used the said oil in the two trucks referred to as R 190 and R 191 in reliance on the representation of the defendant that .it was 200 Kendall S.A.E. 14°. X
“Proposition (b) The plaintiff used the said oil in the said trucks without reliance on the defendant’s representations that it was 200 Kendall S.A.E. 140. --
"Group No. 3.
“Proposition (a) The use of said oil caused damage to the said trucks. X
“Proposition (b) The said oil did not cause any damage to the said truck. --■
“Group No. 4.
"Proposition (a) Under all of the conditions surrounding the sale and purchase of the said oil, and ordinary, prudent truck repairman would not have relied on the said oil as being 200 Kendall S.A.E. 140. -
“Proposition (b) Under all of the conditions surrounding the sale and purchase of the said oil, an ordinary prudent truck repairman would have relied on the said oil as being 200 Kendall S.A.E. 140. X
*83 "Group No. 5.
“Proposition (a) The said damage to the trucks would have occurred with the use of 200 Kendall S.A.E. 140 oil. -
“Proposition (b) The said damage would not have occurred to the said trucks with the use of 200 Kendall S.A.E. 140 oil. X”

In its instruction No. 2 the court advised the jury as to which party had the burden of proof on the several propositions. That instruction was as follows:

“The plaintiff has the burden of proving each proposition lettered (a) of Groups 1, 2 and 3 by a preponderance of the evidence before you can adopt each respective proposition as part of your verdict by placing a cross thereafter.
“The defendant has the burden of proving each proposition lettered (a) of Groups 4, and 5, by a preponderance of the evidence before you can adopt each respective proposition as part of your verdict by placing a cross after it * *

The jury marked the verdicts as indicated by the “X’s” above.

Defendant complains that by Special Verdict Group 4 and instruction No. 2 the court improperly instructed the jury as to the burden of proof; that the court placed upon the defendant the burden of proving that an ordinarily prudent truck repairman would not have relied on the said oil as being 200 Kendall S.A.E. 140. We think the court properly placed upon defendant this burden.

Defendant contends the plaintiff, having alleged reliance, which is one of the elements to be proved by plaintiff, had the burden of showing such reliance.

The court charged the jury that plaintiff had the burden of proving Proposition (a) of Group No. 2, which proposition stated that plaintiff used the said oil in reliance on the representation of the defendant that it was 200 Kendall S.A.E. 140.

Plaintiff had the burden of proving that he relied on the representation of Allen. Likewise, the affirmative defense set up by Allen that an ordinarily reasonable and prudent repairman would not have relied on such representation was a proposition which required Allen to assume the burden with respect thereto.

Plaintiff alleged only that he relied on the representation that the oil delivered was 200 Kendall S.A.E. 140. He did not allege that as an ordinary, reasonable and prudent repairman he was justified in such reliance. *84 Defendant set up as an affirmative defense that plaintiff’s reliance on the oil being 200 Kendall S.A.E. 140 was not justified; that an ordinary, reasonable and prudent repairman would not have relied on Allen’s representation that it was 200 Kendall S.A.E. 140.

Defendant confuses reliance with the right to rely. Plaintiff had the burden of proving that he did rely and the court so instructed the jury. Defendant had the burden of proving that plaintiff was not justified in relying on the representation that he was furnished what was ordered (by description) to-wit, 200 Kendall S.A.E. 140.

We find no merit to defendant’s complaint as to instructions given and requested instructions refused.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
318 P.2d 637, 7 Utah 2d 79, 1957 Utah LEXIS 195, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-v-allen-utah-1957.