Miles v. Withers
This text of 76 Mo. App. 87 (Miles v. Withers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Plaintiffs are the assignees of the Columbus Buggy Company and brought this action to recover balance alleged to be due from defendants on the sale of a surrey and harness to him by said company made before the assignment. The judgment in the trial court was for defendant.
Since the verdict was for defendant we must accept the facts asbeing what the evidence in his behalf tended to show them to be. It appears that after receiving the surrey at Lexington, Missouri, and on first attempting to put it to practical use, substantial defects were discovered. The buggy company was notified of this and instead of insisting that the vehicle be returned to them, they directed that defendant take it to a certain carriage maker in Lexington for alteration or repairs. This defendant did, but the defects were not cured. [90]*90The company’s agent went to Lexington to see about the trouble and while there he examined into defendant’s objections and complaints. He then explained to defendant the financial distress of the company and asked him to pay $100 on the purchase and. that the company would make the vehicle satisfactory to him. Defendant then paid the sum requested but the trouble with the vehicle was not remedied or made satisfactory to defendant. In this way the matter seems to have drifted along until this suit was instituted; these assignees having in the meantime been appointed for the buggy company.
The property was purchased at Lexington and was to be delivered there. The measure of damages in such case is the difference between the contract price and the actual market value of the article in the condition it was when delivered. Or, to express the same thing in different words, the purchaser may diminish the contract price by the difference between that price and the actual market value of the imperfect article. Brown v. Weldon, supra; Hayner v. Churchill, 29 Mo. App. 676; Brockhaus v. Schilling, 52 Mo. App. 73.
There were many instructions in the cause and plaintiffs have urged objections to the action of the court on them. We have examined these objections and while we will not set out here in detail what they were or our conclusions on each with the reasons therefor, we will say that the instructions as a whole presented the case in keeping with what we consider [92]*92the law governing the case and in such way as to give the jury a fair understanding of the issues involved.
The question of waiver referred to by plaintiffs we find was sufficiently pleaded.
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76 Mo. App. 87, 1898 Mo. App. LEXIS 157, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miles-v-withers-moctapp-1898.