McCormick v. Basal
This text of 50 Iowa 523 (McCormick v. Basal) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
The plaintiffs requested the court to instruct the jury as follows:
[525]*525
The court refused this instruction and gave the following:
“The fact that the machine worked well as a mower would not, of itself, be a compliance with the warranty. It must also be made to work well as a reaper, or the defendant would be under no obligation to keep it, unless, as before stated, the failure to make it work was his (defendant’s) fault.”
It is urged that this action of the court was erroneous. We think the construction given to the warranty by the court’s instruction was correct, and that the refusal to give that asked was not erroneous. It is true the defendant did mow grass with the machine for more than one day before he commenced to use it to reap grain. But his contract was not for a mower only — it was for a combined machine that would both mow and reap. It appears from the evidence that the machine, when used as a mower, has a four-foot bar, and when used as a reaper a five-foot bar, and the platform and rake-head are put on. A small pinion is used in mowing, and a larger one in reaping, because slower motion is required for reaping than for mowing. It would be an unreasonable and unfair construction of the contract to hold that the purchaser is without remedy upon the warranty because, before his grain was sufficiently ripe to reap, he mowed hay for more than one day. He was entitled to one day’s trial of the machine with the reaping apparatus attached. There could have been no complete trial without a trial of all the parts and combinations in form to do the work for which the machine was warranted.
H. The court instructed the jury that in order to justify the defendant in repudiating the contract it must appear [526]*526from the evidence that he used reasonable skill and diligence in operating the machine. It is insisted that the verdict is contrary to the evidence and this instruction, because the undisputed evidence is that the design of the machine was that the driver of the team should ride upon the machine; that defendant was so informed and refused to ride, and if the machine failed to work well it was by reason of such refusal.
It is true the agents of plaintiffs testify that the machine will not work well unless some one rides in the driver’s seat, and that defendant refused to ride. But other evidence shows that one Johnson, plaintiffs’ agent, was present the greater part of the first day, and that his business there was to make the machine work well; that he said the machine did not .work well, and that he would send some one up next day to fix it; that Johnson got on the reaper himself, and was more than an hour trying to get around a certain piece of grain; that another agent appeared next day and the machine worked no better. Considering this and other evidence in the case, we think the jury were fairly warranted in finding that •the failure of the machine to work was not attributable to any act or want of diligence on the part of the defendant.
Affirmed.
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50 Iowa 523, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccormick-v-basal-iowa-1879.