Kuelling v. Roderick Lean Manufacturing Co.

75 N.E. 1098, 183 N.Y. 78, 21 Bedell 78, 1905 N.Y. LEXIS 600
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 21, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by57 cases

This text of 75 N.E. 1098 (Kuelling v. Roderick Lean Manufacturing Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kuelling v. Roderick Lean Manufacturing Co., 75 N.E. 1098, 183 N.Y. 78, 21 Bedell 78, 1905 N.Y. LEXIS 600 (N.Y. 1905).

Opinions

This action has been twice tried. The first trial resulted in a verdict for the plaintiff in the sum of $3,040.00; the judgment entered on this verdict was reversed and a new trial ordered. The second trial resulted in a nonsuit, the trial judge ordering the plaintiff's exceptions to be heard in the first instance by the Appellate Division; the latter court overruled the exceptions, denied motion for a new trial and ordered judgment for the defendant upon the nonsuit. The Appellate Division wrote no opinion, but rested its decision on the opinion of McLENNAN, P.J., handed down on the first appeal. (88 App. Div. 309.)

The plaintiff is a farmer, residing in East Penfield, Monroe county, in this state; the defendant is a foreign corporation organized under the laws of the state of Ohio, and engaged in the manufacture and sale of farming implements, its manufactory being located at Mansfield, in that state.

A few weeks prior to April, 1902, the defendant sold to the firm of Weaver, Palmer Richmond, who were engaged in the business of selling agricultural implements in the city of Rochester, a certain road roller, with a tongue to which was attached a team of horses when in use. A few days after this sale the purchasers sold the roller to the firm of Fuller Barnhart, dealers in agricultural implements at Fairport, Monroe county, in this state. In April, 1902, the plaintiff purchased the road roller of the firm of Fuller Barnhart, used it a short time in the spring on his farm, stored it in a covered shed until about the first day of the following September, when he had occasion to use it again in the conduct of his ordinary farm work, and while so engaged with two horses attached thereto, the tongue broke, precipitating him from a seat which was attached to the rear end of the tongue immediately over the roller, causing the horses to run away. Plaintiff clung to the reins for a short distance, was compelled to release his hold and the roller, weighing some seven hundred pounds, passed over him, inflicting severe injuries.

This action was brought by the plaintiff against the defendant as the manufacturer of this roller, and is based upon the *Page 82 allegation that in constructing it the defendant "intentionally, wilfully, maliciously, negligently and fraudulently" put into it a tongue made of cross-grained black or red oak which was unfit for that purpose; that the tongue had a knot in it, and in addition a large knothole just in front of the point at which the evener and whiffletrees were attached; that the defendant concealed this knothole with a plug of soft wood nailed in, and then the knot, the plug, the hole, the cross-grain of the wood and the kind of wood used were covered up and concealed by the defendant with putty and paint so that the defects could not be seen by inspection; that the tongue was placed in the roller so that the knot and plug were on the underside; that the roller by reason of these defects was dangerous to the life and limbs of any person who should use it, and that the defects aforesaid made the tongue so weak that it broke as before stated at the time of plaintiff's injury and was the cause thereof.

A rather unusual state of affairs is presented in the history of this litigation. This action is based upon the allegation that the defendant "intentionally, wilfully, maliciously, negligently and fraudulently" placed in this roller a tongue containing certain defects and concealing the same, as stated. It appears, however, that at the first trial the case was tried upon the theory of negligence and the jury passed upon no other question. The jury rendered a verdict for the plaintiff in the sum of $3,040.00. The Appellate Division on reviewing the judgment entered upon this verdict stated in its opinion written by McLENNAN, P.J., as follows: "The case was submitted to the jury purely and simply as an action for negligence. While in the complaint it was alleged that the defendant `wilfully, maliciously, negligently and fraudulently' put the defective tongue into the roller in question, intending that such implement should be sold in the open market, and concealed such defect, knowing that when used it would break and probably occasion injury to the person using it, that question was not left to the jury for determination. The learned trial court charged the jury in substance that no contractual *Page 83 relation or privity existed between the plaintiff and the defendant; that `the basis of the action is negligence,' and that in order to recover the plaintiff was only required to establish, by a fair preponderance of evidence, that the accident was caused through the negligence of the defendant and without negligence on the part of the plaintiff. The court also charged that in order to establish defendant's negligence and entitle the plaintiff to recover it was necessary for the jury to be satisfied upon the evidence that the land roller in question, with the defective tongue, was a machine or implement imminently dangerous to human life, but charged, as matter of law, that a land roller was not intrinsically thus dangerous, but was an implement in ordinary and everyday use and of simple construction. The jury determined each of the questions submitted in favor of the plaintiff."

The learned judge in his able opinion dealt only with the issue of negligence submitted to the jury. On the present appeal the counsel for the appellant presents what we deem the controlling question, the willful and fraudulent act of the defendant as alleged in the complaint. We will assume for the purposes of this case that this roller was not a machine imminently dangerous and likely to injure any person using it.

We express no opinion as to the liability of the manufacturer or seller of a machine or vehicle to third parties in case of negligence, in the absence of fraud or deceit, whether the machine or vehicle be in its original state imminently dangerous to human life or made so by the subsequent act of the manufacturer or seller. The case at bar, in the view we take of it, does not involve the law of negligence, but is controlled by considerations resting upon the law applicable to willful and fraudulent deceit and concealment.

In England the Court of King's Bench in 1789 in the case ofPasley v. Freeman (3 Durnford East, 51) held that a false affirmation made by the defendant with intent to defraud the plaintiff, whereby the plaintiff receives damage, is the ground of an action upon the case in the nature of deceit. In such an action it is not necessary that the defendant should *Page 84 be benefited by the deceit or that he should collude with the person who is.

In Upton v. Vail (6 Johns. 181) Chief Justice KENT, in commenting upon the case cited, said: "I have carefully examined the reasoning of the judges in that case and in the subsequent cases which go to question or support the soundness of that decision, and I profess my approbation of the doctrine on which it was decided. The case went not upon any new ground, but upon the application of a principle of natural justice, long recognized in the law, that fraud or deceit, accompanied with damage, is a good cause of action. This is as just and permanent a principle as any in our whole jurisprudence." We have here the recognition of the general principle upon which this and similar actions must rest, to wit, that fraud or deceit with damage is a good cause of action.

In many of the cases presented to the courts under this principle of law the litigation is confined to the original parties concerned in the transaction. In the case before us we have a third party seeking damages by reason of the willful and fraudulent act of the defendant.

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Bluebook (online)
75 N.E. 1098, 183 N.Y. 78, 21 Bedell 78, 1905 N.Y. LEXIS 600, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kuelling-v-roderick-lean-manufacturing-co-ny-1905.