Minnesota Thresher Manf'g Co. v. Lincoln

61 N.W. 145, 4 N.D. 410, 1894 N.D. LEXIS 45
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 13, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 61 N.W. 145 (Minnesota Thresher Manf'g Co. v. Lincoln) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Minnesota Thresher Manf'g Co. v. Lincoln, 61 N.W. 145, 4 N.D. 410, 1894 N.D. LEXIS 45 (N.D. 1894).

Opinion

Wallin, J.

The plaintiff bases this action upon defendants’ promissory note for $470. Defendants answered the complaint, admitting the execution and delivery of the note, and that it was unpaid; and, further answering, allege that the note was given for the purchase price of a separator sold by plaintiff to defendants with a warranty, that there was a breach of such warranty, and that the separator was of no value whatever as a separator. Defendants’ answer also embodied a counterclaim, as follows: “That on or about the 1st day of September, 1891, they bought from plaintiff the certain separator hereinbefore referred to; that plaintiff represented and warranted that said separator was as good as any separator made, and would do as 'good work as any; [412]*412that, relying wholly on said representations and warranty, defendants bought said machine; that defendants immediately upon commencing to thresh the grain upon their farm in Cass County, found that said machine was not as good, and would not do as good work, as other machines; that’ it was a poor machine, and that it wasted grain in threshing; that defendants immediately notified plaintiff of the defect, and that an expert was sent by the plaintiff to remedy the defect, but that the machine was not improved thereby; that defendants again notified plaintiff of the fact that it could not be made to work satisfactorily, and again an expert was sent out, but that said machine was not improved, and a third time an expert undertook to fix said machine; that defendants were unable to get another separator at that time, and were obliged to finish the threshing which they were engaged upon with it; that during the time defendants were obliged to use said machine, as aforesaid, it wasted wheat in excess of that which any other separator would waste, and in excess of what a good machine would waste, to the value of $i,ooo.oo. Wherefore defendants demand judgment (I) that said note described in said complaint be canceled; (2) that they have judgment against said plaintiff for the sum of $1,000.00, with interest from the date hereof, and the costs and disbursements of this action.” Plaintiff served a reply denying the allegations of the answer set up as a counterclaim. There was a jury trial, and at the close of the testimony, upon the motion of counsel for plaintiff, the trial court directed a verdict for the plaintiff for the amount of the note, with interest. A motion for a new trial was made, chiefly upon the ground that the court erred in directing a verdict for the plaintiff. The trial court, by its order, vacated the verdict, and granted the application for a new trial, and the plaintiff appeals from such order.

The only error assigned in this court, which we shall deem it necessary to notice, is “that the court erred in granting defendants’ motion for a new trial.” At the trial, after introducing the note in evidence, the plaintiff rested its case, and in rebuttal put [413]*413in evidence the contract of sale embracing the warranty of the separator, the material parts of which are as follows: “It is agreed that the only warranty or representations binding upon the seller are as follows: (i) That said machinery is well built, and, with proper management, capable of doing well the work for which it was intended, and the engine of developing its rated power, conditional, however, that the buyer shall set up, start, and operate it in a proper and skillful manner, and without changing the original construction or any part of it. The buyer shall have three days after it is first started to ascertain whether said machinery is or is not as warranted and represented. If then it is not, he shall at once discontinue use of it, and state full particulars wherein it fails, by letter mailed at once to the seller at Stillwater, Minn., and wait until seller gets a man there to right itv The buyer shall.render the man sent necessary and friendly assistance, and, after he is through, shall at once give the machinery a fair trial of two days, and, whatever part of the machine is not as warranted or represented, he shall then return such part where he got it, and the seller may either furnish another part, or may require the return by the buyer of the remainder of such machine, and then furnish another in its place, or refund what he received for it. , If, however, the trouble arose from the improper handling of the machine, the buyer shall pay the costs of thus righting it. The use of all or part of said machinery after said two day’s trial shall be conclusive evidence that it is as warranted and represented and shall estop the buyer from all defenses, on any ground, to the payment therefor. No claims, counterclaims, demands, or offsets shall ever be made or maintained by the buyer on account of delays, imperfect construction, or any cause whatever, except as provided herein. The terms and conditions hex'eof shall not be waived, altered, or changed without a special written agreement signed by said thresher company or their specially authoxdzed agent therefor at Stillwater, Minn.” It further appeared fx-om plaintiff’s testimony that the machine was sold through the firm of Hughes & Williams, [414]*414which firm was plaintiff’s local agent at Fargo; also, that Williams was the general agent of plaintiff for the State of North Dakota. The undisputed testimony offered by the defendants shows the following state of facts: The separator was delivered to defendants, who were partners largely engaged in wheat raising, in August, 1891, and was never returned to the plaintiff or its agents. In the first season the separator was used in threshing all of the defendants’ crop, aggregating some 35,000 bushels of wheat and 7,000 bushels of oats and barley.

In support of defendants’ counterclaim, W. H. Lincoln, one of the defendants, testified as follows: “We had not threshed over half a day before the machine gave us trouble. We notified the company at Fargo that the machine was not giving satisfaction, and to send out a man to fix it. This was after we had used it half a day. They sent out an expert. The difficulty of the machine of which we notified the company was, it was carrying the grain over into the straw, and not cleaning it properly. I told the agent who came out to fix it what the trouble was. We were threshing at the time he arrived, and he saw the machine work. I stopped the machine, and he looked it over, and said he could not fix it, because he did not have the material to fix it. He admitted that it needed fixing, but he did nothing to it. He said that he was going to Fargo, that night, and would send a man right out. They did send a man within two or three days. He took his tools, and went into the machine, and tried to fix it, but gave it up as a bad job. He said, T cannot fix it.’ I understood the man to mean he could not stop the machine from throwing grain over into the straw. I simply understood that he himself could not fix it, and make it do good work. I didn’t know the agent’s name who came out there. He was a man sent out there, as I supposed, to repair and look after machines at work in the field. It was not any one with whom we had a contract or any other understanding or agreement for the purchase of the machine. Q. What did you say to the agent upon his notifying you that he came there to fix the machine? A, I told him that [415]*415we would not use the machine any more, and we got ready to throw off the belt. He said that we could go .ahead and use the machine, and that he would try and fix it. He said, ‘If we cannot fix it, we will furnish you another, and make it right.’ I had a talk with Mr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
61 N.W. 145, 4 N.D. 410, 1894 N.D. LEXIS 45, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/minnesota-thresher-manfg-co-v-lincoln-nd-1894.