McCormick Harvesting Machine Co. v. Haug

88 Ill. App. 674, 1899 Ill. App. LEXIS 614
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMarch 16, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 88 Ill. App. 674 (McCormick Harvesting Machine Co. v. Haug) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McCormick Harvesting Machine Co. v. Haug, 88 Ill. App. 674, 1899 Ill. App. LEXIS 614 (Ill. Ct. App. 1900).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Bigelow

delivered the opinion of the court.

As appellant’s counsel say in opening their argument that they will not attempt to discuss in detail each error assigned, we shall content ourselves by following their example.

The correctness of each and all of appellees’ instructions given to the jury is challenged.

The first instruction is as follows :

“ The court instructs the jury that if the contract introduced in evidence in this case shows that in case the said McCormick Harvesting Machine Company, or their authorized general agent, find that any note taken and passed upon is doubtful and worthless at the time of the sale, then the said agents, Haug & Son, shall take the said note and replace it with cash, or note secured by good and responsible parties, that shall be acceptable by said company or their general agent, then it was the duty of the plaintiif in this case to return the notes of Hargus and McCoy or offer to return them before they brought suit against these defendants.”

The principal ground of objection to it is, that it did not tell the jury to whom the notes should have been returned. The attention of the jury is first called to the contract between appellant and appellees, which was in evidence before them, and it does not seem possible that the jury could have understood that if appellees were to pay appellant for the notes of Hargus and McCoy, that the notes were to be delivered to any person other than those who were to pay for them.

The delivery of the notes of Hargus and McCoy by appellant to appellees, and the payment for them in one of the ways provided in the contract, were dependant acts, to be simultaneously performed by each party.

The giving of the instruction was not error.

The second instruction, which is claimed to be more misleading than any other, is as follows:

“ The court instructs the jury that if you believe from the evidence that the defendants, as agents of the plaintiff, sold to Hargus and McCoy, a binder, and that the said binder was guaranteed by the plaintiff to do the work for which it was manufactured, and that the same was defective, and that by reason of said defect, and of failure of plaintiff to fulfill its warranty, that the said McCoy and Hargus refused to pay for the same, and within a reasonable time after discovering said defect, they returned the said binder to the plaintiff’s agents, then and in that case you should find for the defendants.”

The objection to this instruction is, that there is nothing in the contract between appellant and appellees, and in the facts and circumstances in evidence, to justify the giving of it, and especially that there was no evidence before the jury that the warranty had been broken.

If this latter assumption were true in fact, there would be little need for a discussion of the instruction; but, aside from the paper that McCoy and Hargus signed, at the request of the agent, Freeark, the evidence is nearly all to the effect that the machine was not at all what it was warranted to be; that appellant’s agent, who was sent to put it in condition to run" properly, substantially admitted the machine to be defective, and did nothing to cure the defect.

It is impossible to read the evidence, in connection with the paper the agent Freeark secured, without coming to the conclusion that McCoy and Hargus were tricked into signing it, and their subsequent act in returning the machine, is strong evidence that they were deceived, but honest men.

The instruction was properly given.

The third instruction, to which objection is made, is as follows:

“ The court instructs the jury that in construing the contract introduced in evidence in this case, the jury must take into consideration the entire contract, including the instructions on the back of the said contract, relating to any of the issues involved in this case.”

It will readily be seen that (if the instruction has been correctly copied) the person who drew it used the word construing,” where the word “ considering ” was intended. We think the error, if it be one, is, in view of the other instructions given in the case, unimportant, and did appellant no harm.

We do not understand counsel as urging that the court erred in refusing some of appellant’s instructions, nevertheless we have looked into all of them, and find that those given are more favorable to appellant than it had any right to expect, and that the court did not err in refusing those not given.

Appellant’s counsel insist that the court erred in not sustaining appellant’s motion for a new trial. What the reasons urged before the trial court for granting the motion were, we have no certain means of knowing, as none are given in the bill of exceptions, or elsewhere in the record. But since it is confidently insisted by counsel that the verdict is against both the law and the evidence, we will consider these as among the reasons urged below.

It is not denied that McCoy and Hargus were entitled, under the warranty, to a machine that would work well, but it is insisted that the conditions on which appellant was to receive back the machine and return the notes were not complied with by McCoy and Hargus. There is ample evidence from which the jury were warranted in finding that when the machine was started it did not work well, nor did it do any better while McCoy and Hargus kept it, and in consequence they were compelled to forego doing work with it for others which they had contracted to do, and they retained it upon the agreement that appellant would send an expert agent to put it in order, and when, after long waiting, the agent came, he did absolutely nothing to the machine, although he substantially acknowledged it was defective.

The jury were warranted in inferring that the reason he did not put the machine in good running order was because he knew it could not be made to work well. McCoy and Hargus had a right to rely on this expert agent, and they returned the machine as he directed them to do. And the jury were also -warranted in inferring from the action of appellant’s agent, Freeark, that appellant had stepped in to carry out its part of the contract, and having failed, had, by directing McCoy and Hargus what to do with the machine, relieved appellees from any further liability in regard to the matter, and had taken the entire responsibility upon itself.

We are of the opinion that the verdict is against neither the law nor the evidence, and the judgment is affirmed.

After the opinion was filed in this case, counsel for appellant filed their petition for a rehearing, which was granted, and we have again carefully considered the conclusions which we before arrived at, and are satisfied that they are correct; hence the opinion' as given above, with some slight modifications, will be refiled, with such additions as we deem necessary, to meet the suggestions in the petition and argument on the rehearing.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Alexander H. Revell & Co. v. C. H. Morgan Grocery Co.
214 Ill. App. 526 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1919)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
88 Ill. App. 674, 1899 Ill. App. LEXIS 614, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccormick-harvesting-machine-co-v-haug-illappct-1900.