Murray Co. v. Palmer

1916 OK 17, 154 P. 1137, 55 Okla. 480, 1916 Okla. LEXIS 177
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJanuary 11, 1916
Docket6344
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 1916 OK 17 (Murray Co. v. Palmer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Murray Co. v. Palmer, 1916 OK 17, 154 P. 1137, 55 Okla. 480, 1916 Okla. LEXIS 177 (Okla. 1916).

Opinion

Opinion by

GALBRAITH, C.

This was an action on a promissory note for $512.85, and to foreclose a chattel *481 mortgage given to secure the’ same. The defendant filed an answer and cross-petition, in which the execution of the note and mortgage were admitted, but prayed that the same be canceled on account of a breach of warranty given on the property for which the note and mortgage were executed, and judgment over against the plaintiff for damages resulting therefrom. There was a trial to the court and a jury, and a verdict returned for the defendant, canceling the note and mortgage and fixing the defendant’s damages in the sum of $500. On this verdict, judgment was rendered, and from that judgment this appeal was prosecuted.

There was a demurrer to the answer as follows:

“Plaintiff demurs to the second paragraph or cause of action set up in defendant’s answer in which the defendant alleges a promise or understanding from the plaintiff that plaintiff would make said machinery work, etc., and state that the same states no cause of action against the plaintiff, in that no consideration for’ such, alleged promise is shown, and of this plaintiff prays judgment of the court.”

This demurrer was overruled, and exception saved, and this ruling is assigned as error.

It appears from the record that the defendant below purchased from the plaintiff a gin outfit for the agreed price of $2,551.40; that under the contract of sale $500 of the purchase price was paid upon the delivery of the machinery, and the balance was evidenced by four promissory notes for $512.85; that three of these notes had been paid, as well as the $500 cash payment; and that the note in suit was the last of the notes given for the purchase price of said gin machine.

*482 The contract of sale contained the following warranty :

“Said machinery is warranted to be good material, to perform well, if properly operated by competent persons. Upon starting, if the purchasers, at any time within ten days, are unable to make same operate well, telegraph or written notice, stating wherein it fails to conform to the warranty, is at once to be given by the purchasers to the Murray Company, Dallas, Tex. (and not verbally to some of its traveling men), and reasonable time shall be given to the Murray Company to send a competent person to remedy the difficulty, the purchaser rendering, all necessary and friendly assistance to the' Murray Company, which reserves the right to replace any defective part or parts, but such defective part or parts shall not condemn the machine to which it belongs; and if such machine cannot be made to fulfill the warranty, and the fault is in the machine, it is to be returned to place where received, and then another, as soon as practicable, substituted therefor, which shall fulfill the warranty, or the amount of the purchase price credited on notes pro rata, or money paid thereon refunded pro rata, neither party in such case to have or make any claim against the other; and such failure shall in no way affeci this contract, or the notes, and trust deed in accordance therewith, for any of the articles named therein. Failure to make such trial or give such notice,, or use after ten days without such notice, shall be conclusive evidence of the fulfillment of the warranty. If the Murray Company shall, at the request of the purchasers, render assistance of any kind in operating said machinery, or any part thereof, or in remedying any defects either before or after said ten days, said assistance' shall in no case be deemed a waiver of, or excuse for, any failure of the purchaser to fully keep and perform the conditions of this warranty. When at the request of the purchasers, a man is sent to operate the machinery, which is found to have *483 been carelessly or improperly handled, the Murray Company putting the machinery in working order again, the expense incurred by the Murray Company shall be paid by said purchasers, if demanded.”

It was the breach of this warranty on the part of the plaintiff that gives rise to the defendant’s claim for damages set out in his cross-petition.

The second paragraph of the answer and cross-petition, to which the demurrer was directed, reads as follows:

“Second. He says that at the time said machinery was delivered to this defendant, he paid to the p7aintiff the sum of $500, and executed four notes of the same size of the one sued upon herein, to wit, $512.85 each. That when the first, second and third of said notes fell due, he paid same with the distinct understanding and promise from the plaintiff that he would make said machinery work as they had agreed it would work, and perform the functions that the contract guaranteed it should perform, and perform the work for which it was purchased. He said -that relying upon these promises, and in good faith, believing that the plaintiff would make said machinery good, he paid said notes when they fell due. He says that he • now sees that the plaintiff does not intend to try to make said machinery work or to replace it with machinery that wifi work. He says that, by reason of these promises made by the plaintiff, he was induced to and did pay the plaintiff by reason of said false representations at least $1,000 more than said machinery was worth and that by reason thereof he is entitled to and should recover of the plaintiff the said $1,000 that he has paid thereon more than said machinery was worth.”

It is evident from a reading of the allegations of this part of the cross-petition that it alleges the essential elements constituting a claim for damages for breach *484 of warranty, and therefore the demurrer to the same was properly overruled by the trial court.

Again, error is assigned to the ruling of the trial court denying the motion presented at the close of the evidence to exclude and withdraw from the consideration of the jury all the testimony introduced in the ease relative to a subsequent promise or promises made by the plaintiff to remedy or repair the machinery. The uncontradicted testimony in the record is to the effect that, immediately after the machinery was installed, it did not work to the satisfaction of' the defendant, and that he notified the plaintiff of that fact and made complaint to it, and it sent a man to the village of Orr, where the gin was located, to remedy the defects; that later on further complaint was made, and another representative of the plaintiff was sent to repair the gin, and still later another man was sent there; that the second year after the. purchase the defendant went to Dallas, the headquarters of plaintiff, and took up the matter of the defects of the machinery with the plaintiff there, and the defendant was then assured that the defects .in the machinery would be perfected and the gin would be made to operate as well or better than any other gin the defendant had ever controlled; that there was continuous complaint of the working of the gin by the defendant from the time of its purchase until the trial of this action; and that the gin turned out an' inferior sample, that it was “nappy,” and had an excess of dirt mixed with the cotton, and cotton from this gin sold for 1 and lVs

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1916 OK 17, 154 P. 1137, 55 Okla. 480, 1916 Okla. LEXIS 177, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/murray-co-v-palmer-okla-1916.