Long v. Flanigan Warehouse Company

382 P.2d 399, 79 Nev. 241, 1963 Nev. LEXIS 113
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedMay 22, 1963
Docket4583
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 382 P.2d 399 (Long v. Flanigan Warehouse Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Long v. Flanigan Warehouse Company, 382 P.2d 399, 79 Nev. 241, 1963 Nev. LEXIS 113 (Neb. 1963).

Opinion

*243 OPINION

By the Court,

Thompson, J.:

The plaintiff (Long) brought suit for damages against the retailer (Flanigan Warehouse Company) and the manufacturer (Inland Ladder Co.) of a wooden ladder. The retailer ordered the ladder from the manufacturer on January 22, 1960. It was delivered to the retailer’s warehouse on January 26, 1960. On February 1, 1960 the retailer sold the ladder to a painting contractor (Solvas). It was used occasionally thereafter. The plaintiff, a painter employed by Solvas, claims that on August 12, 1960, a leg of the ladder split and collapsed because of defective construction; that he was standing on the fourth step of the ladder when its left rear leg collapsed; and that he fell to the floor and was injured.

The plaintiff’s claim for relief against each defendant is two-fold: breach of the implied warranties of quality, fitness for a particular purpose (NRS 96.240(1)) and merchantability (NRS 96.240(2)), and negligence. The *244 case was presented to a jury. At the close of the plaintiff’s case in chief, each defendant moved for involuntary dismissal. NRCP 41 (b). The motion of the retailer was granted. As to it, the district court ruled that the lack of privity barred liability on the implied warranty theory. Regarding the negligence claim, that court concluded that the law does not impose a duty upon the retailer to inspect or test the ladder for latent defects. Accordingly, its failure to do so did not result in a breach of duty giving rise to a cause of action in the plaintiff based on negligence.

The manufacturer’s motion to dismiss was also granted as to the implied warranty count, and for the same reason, lack of privity. However, its motion was denied as to the negligence claim, and the case proceeded against the manufacturer on that theory alone. The jury returned its verdict for the manufacturer. From the judgments entered the plaintiff appeals.

The assigned errors require our determination of the following questions: 1. Does the user of a chattel have a claim for relief against a retailer or the manufacturer, or both, based upon a breach of the implied warranties of quality, absent a contractual relationship (privity) ? 2. Should the concept of strict liability (liability without fault), which issue was not presented to the trial court, apply to the claim of a user of a chattel against either the retailer or the manufacturer? 1 3. Does the retailer of a chattel have the duty to inspect or test it for latent defects? 4. Were certain questions (to later be specified) asked by plaintiff’s counsel of an adverse witness during the plaintiff’s case in chief, to which objections were sustained, relevant or material to the issues raised in the case against the manufacturer ?

*245 The questions relating to the implied warranties of quality as a predicate for the retailer’s and manufacturer’s liability to one not in privity, are of first impression in Nevada. The lack of privity as a defense has been asserted by counsel and rejected by this court in two cases, Underhill v. Anciaux, 68 Nev. 69, 226 P.2d 794 (foreign substance in Coca Cola bottle), and Cosgriff Neon Sign Co. v. Mattheus, 78 Nev. 281, 371 P.2d 819 (collapsing brick pylon). However, in each instance, liability was based on negligence. Implied warranty as a predicate for liability was not involved in Cosgriff, while in Underhill though it was pleaded the point was not decided. 2 Clearly the absence of contractual privity is not a defense for one whose liability rests in tort. For this reason the asserted defense was rejected in Cosgriff and Underhill. We must now decide whether such want of privity is a defense to a claim for relief based upon a breach of the implied warranties of quality.

1. In Nevada the implied warranties of quality on the sale of goods are governed by the Uniform Sales Act. They are two-: (a) a warranty that the goods are reasonably fit for the particular purpose of the buyer, when he makes that purpose known to the seller and it appears that he relies on the seller’s skill or judgment, NRS 96.240(1) (see Kirk v. Stineway Drug Store Co., 38 Ill.App.2d 415, 187 N.E.2d 307, for an excellent discussion as to the proof of the seller’s representation and the buyer’s reliance) ; (b) a warranty of merchantable quality, when goods are bought by description from one who deals in goods of that description, NRS 96.240(2). No warranty is to- be implied unless the case falls within one of the two- mentioned categories. The present case *246 does not involve the warranty of merchantable quality. A sale by description does not occur when the goods are present and there is an opportunity to inspect. Adams v. Peter Tramontin Motor Sales, Inc., 42 N.J. Super. 313, 126 A.2d 358; Grass v. Steinberg, 331 Ill. App. 378, 73 N.E.2d 331.

Though the implied warranty of fitness for a particular purpose might be a predicate for recovery against the retailer, had the plaintiff himself purchased the ladder, Kirk v. Stineway Drug Store Co., supra, it is not here an available remedy, because the ladder was purchased by plaintiff’s employer. The terms “seller” and “buyer,” are defined by the act, NRS 96.020. Those definitions appear to have been drawn with the immediate parties to the sale (or their legal successors in interest) in mind. The buyer’s employee is not embraced by the statutory definition. Where the parties to the lawsuit are not the immediate buyer and seller the weight of authority is that such lack of contractual privity will bar recovery on an implied warranty theory. 75 A.L.R. 2d 39; Prosser, Torts (2d ed.), p. 510. The Uniform Sales Act places many additional obstacles in the path of liability in the case before us. The most eminent scholar in this field of law, William L. Prosser, discusses them, 69 Yale L.J. 1009, at 1124 et seq., and concludes: “What all this adds up to is that ‘warranty,’ as a device for the justification of strict liability to the consumer, carries far too much luggage in the way of undesirable complications, and is leading us down a very thorny path.

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Bluebook (online)
382 P.2d 399, 79 Nev. 241, 1963 Nev. LEXIS 113, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/long-v-flanigan-warehouse-company-nev-1963.