Knight Soda Fountain Co. v. Dirnberger

256 N.W. 657, 192 Minn. 387, 1934 Minn. LEXIS 914
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedOctober 12, 1934
DocketNo. 29,862.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 256 N.W. 657 (Knight Soda Fountain Co. v. Dirnberger) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Knight Soda Fountain Co. v. Dirnberger, 256 N.W. 657, 192 Minn. 387, 1934 Minn. LEXIS 914 (Mich. 1934).

Opinion

HOLT, Justice.

Plaintiff appeals from the order denying its motion for a new trial after verdict for defendant.

The action was in replevin, the plaintiff alleging that it was the owner and entitled to the immediate possession of a soda fountain and attachments, including an electric carbonator, and that defendant retains possession thereof after demand. The answer alleges that defendant bought the property of plaintiff and that title thereto is in defendant, denies the other allegations of the complaint, and prays judgment- that plaintiff take nothing. Defendant re-bonded and retained possession.

The evidence establishes these facts conclusively: One Brown, a sales agent of plaintiff, after several days of negotiations with defendant at his home in Sauk Center and at Brown’s home and office in St. Paul, obtained on J uly 14, 1931, a written order for the purchase of a fountain of plaintiff’s manufacture described in the order. Plaintiff’s factory and place of business is in Chicago, Illinois. The order contains a provision that the title to the fountain is to remain in the seller until all the payments of $42 each month for 35 months, beginning with September, 1931, and one of $39.14 for the 36th month, are made. It recites a down payment of $422.95. In the order defendant agrees that upon receipt of the fountain he will execute his promissory note for the deferred monthly payments *389 and secure said note by executing and delivering to plaintiff a chattel mortgage on the fountain. This order was signed by defendant and accepted by plaintiff in writing. A copy thereof was given to defendant at that time, or a few days later, as he contends. Sometime in the first part of August the fountain was shipped from Chicago to Sauk Center, and plaintiff, by letter dated August 4, advised defendant to go to the bank at the latter place and execute the papers necessary to complete the deal. In the letter plaintiff says:

“For your convenience we are enclosing herewith a copy of the promissory note, showing the payments as they fall due.”

Defendant went to the bank and executed the note and chattel mortgage on the 12th day of August, 1931. The instruments were dated August 3, 1931. Thereupon he obtained the bill of lading and received from the carrier the fountain ordered. Plaintiff caused the fountain to be set up and installed where it ivas to be used. The refrigeration needed in the fountain was to be supplied by a machine called a compressor run by an electric motor. Defendant was to provide and install the compressor, a machine weighing about 300 pounds and costing around $300. The fountain did not refrigerate as desired. It was thought that the two first compressors used were not suitable, and then a third compressor was attached of the sort recommended by plaintiff, but still the fountain failed to operate to defendant’s satisfaction. It is' admitted that none of the monthly payments called for by the note have been made. The testimony of plaintiff is that the fountain was worth from $1,500 to $1,600 when the action was begun. Defendant, whose lack of experience and Ioav intelligence, according to his counsel’s claim, scarcely qualified him to testify as to value, did, however, testify that this fountain Avas worth from $500 to $600. He has paid therefor $422.95 and no more. It appears that there are two main separate compartments in the fountain so designed and arranged that a different temperature can be had in the two. The compartment for ice cream requires a lower temperature than the one holding the syrups and the Avater for the drinks. The latter *390 compartment is the chief cause of the complaint. Defendant says that he- has disconnected that compartment from the refrigeration system. He has continued to operate and use the ice cream compartment, but also claims inefficiency in the operation thereof.

Defendant refused to assert a counterclaim at the trial, basing his defense solely on the proposition that plaintiff had practiced fraud and deception, and that therefore the chattel mortgage and note, upon which plaintiff’s right to possession depends, were void' and ineffectual for any purpose. The case was submitted to the jury on that theory.

The assignments of error are: (a) The verdict is not justified by the evidence and is contrary to law; (b) the court erred in refusing to grant judgment notwithstanding the verdict; (c) the charge and parts of the charge to which exceptions were taken prejudiced plaintiff.

Before taking up these assignments of error it is well to refer to the case of M & M Securities Co. v. Dirnberger, 190 Minn. 57, 250 N. W. 801. The $1,635 promissory note there in suit represented the balance of the purchase price of the fixtures, furniture, and equipment for defendant’s hotel purchased of Brown-Jaspers Company by defendant under a conditional sales contract, executed July 15,1931. That deal was conducted for the seller by Mr. Brown, who in this action acted as agent of this plaintiff. Mr. Brown was an officer and managing agent of the Brown-Jaspers Company. The two deals were negotiated during the same period, and the property in both deals went to equip the hotel and restaurant defendant was to operate. At the same time that defendant paid this plaintiff $122.95 upon the order for the fountain, he paid Brown-Jaspers Company $1,551 on the conditional sales contract mentioned. The note given to Brown-Jaspers Company was transferred before maturity to M & M Securities Company, which, in the action referred to, alleged that it was a good faith purchaser thereof for value. In that case Brown did not testify, and no testimony was offered by the plaintiff therein relative to the transaction out of which the note came to be executed, and, as to that, defendant and his wife were the only witnesses called. The facts and infer- *391 enees therefrom are recited in the above cited decision and may have been given too, much effect by court and counsel in the trial of the instant case. There the defense was that by trickery and fraud defendant had been induced to sign a promissory note when he thought he was merely signing a conditional sales contract or order for the goods. Here the issue, to be sure, is also fraudulent representations; but by defendant’s admissions and other corroborative testimony it conclusively appears that defendant knew that he signed an order for the purchase of a fountain of the make, kind, and style called for by the order and that he knew it was a promissory note, correctly stating the payments to be made and a chattel mortgage securing the same when he executed those instruments. There can be no inference drawn from the evidence that there was any intention on the part of Brown to sell a fountain with a known defect; for he had never seen it, and it appears not to have been fully completed when ordered. On the contrary, the evidence indicates that plaintiff is a known manufacturer of several styles of fountains, which it deems equal, if not superior, to any fountain of the same sort in the market. The fountain was in that class of merchandise, manufactured in various sizes and styles for the market and so advertised, as in the case of automobiles, tractors, threshing machines, and the like.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
256 N.W. 657, 192 Minn. 387, 1934 Minn. LEXIS 914, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/knight-soda-fountain-co-v-dirnberger-minn-1934.