Nat. Cash Reg. Co. v. Van Duser Supply Co.

232 S.W. 1091, 207 Mo. App. 454, 1921 Mo. App. LEXIS 192
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 18, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 232 S.W. 1091 (Nat. Cash Reg. Co. v. Van Duser Supply Co.) 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.

Bluebook
Nat. Cash Reg. Co. v. Van Duser Supply Co., 232 S.W. 1091, 207 Mo. App. 454, 1921 Mo. App. LEXIS 192 (Mo. Ct. App. 1921).

Opinion

COX, P. J.

Action on a note. Judgment for defendants and plaintiff appealed.

The petition is in the usual form of an action on a promissory note. The answer admits the execution of the note and then alleges that the note was given as and for- the purchase price of a cash register. That the machine was purchased for use in a store and that it would not work but was worthless. That complaint was made to plaintiff and plaintiff sent a man to fix same but without avail and plaintiff authorized and requested defendants to ship the machine back if it failed to work and after defendants had thoroughly tested and tried it, they sent it back because it was useless to them and because tiñere was a breach of warranty and the machine would not work and that said register was received and accepted by plaintiff and is still retained by it.

The reply then sets out in full the order for the cash register signed by defendants and addressed to plaintiff. The material parts of this order as far as the issues in this case are concerned are as follows: “Should the register get out of order from ordinary use within one *459 year from shipment, you will without charge repair it provided undersigned pays the transportation charges on it to and from the factory or nearest agency to make repairs or traveling expenses for repairman. . . . This contract covers all agreements between the parties and shall not be countermanded. ’ ’ Plaintiff then alleges that it has complied with all the terms of the contract; denies that the register failed to function; alleges that there was no warranty on the part of plaintiff and that the written contract controlled and provided the only remedy open to defendants. Denies any rights of'rescission and alleges further that if such right ever existed,' it was lost by the delay of defendants in attempting to exercise it.

Plaintiff introduced the note and rested. Defendants then offered testimony to show that the machine was received sometime in June, 1919. When received, it would not work and they wrote plaintiff that it was locked and asked that a man be sent to unlock it. In about a month thereafter (plaintiff says on August 5th) a man came and he could not operate it but opened some part of it and after working on it, got it so it would work. Defendants then used it three or four days when it locked again and would not work. ■ On August 22nd, they shipped the machine back to plaintiff and wrote the following letter: “We are sending back that cash register as we cannot use it.” No reason was given why they could not use the machine. Some correspondence followed and on September 2;2nd, plaintiff wrote defendants intimating that suit might be brought if payment under the contract was not made and demanded that a payment then due be made. This letter was returned to plaintiff with an unsigned pencil note at the bottom as follows': “That register was guaranteed to give satisfaction and it don’t so I sent it back and I can prove that man said if it don’t suit for not to keep it.” On October 7, 1919, plaintiff wrote defendants from which we quote the following: “ You recently advised that the register which we shipped you was not satisfactory. This is the first information *460 we have had of any complaint from you regarding the operation,of the register.” On October 16th, plaintiff wrote defendants that the machine was being held subject to their order and stating that the matter was being referred to its attorney for suit. On October 18th, the attorney wrote defendants that suit would be filed as soon as the papers could be prepared. On November 4th, defendants wrote plaintiff that they had bought the register under contract, that it was to give complete satisfaction and to be in perfect working order and it had failed to fulfill either obligation. Some other correspondence followed between defendants and counsel for plaintiff and on March 22,1920, defendants wrote plaintiff’s counsel that they refused to accept the cash register under any circumstances. This ended the correspondence. On February 20, 1920, plaintiff had the machine examined by its expert who found a few small parts missing and some minor adjustments necessary. He furnished plaintiff with a list and statement of what was necessary to place the machine in proper condition. He examined it again about March 29, 1920, and found it then in perfect working order. This suit was filed April 27, 1920, and at the trial, the machine was produced and shown by plaintiff to be then in perfect working condition and physical tender thereof was made to defendants.

The plaintiff asked instructions to the effect that there was no implied warranty of the fitness of the machine to do ordinary work of a cash register but that the rights of the parties were to be determined solely by the terms of the contract as expressed therein and defendant could have no defense to this action except to show that they had complied with the terms of the contract by returning the machine for repair and that plaintiff had failed to comply with the terms of the contract on its part. Also that if defendants did not rescind promptly on discovery of the defects in the machine, they lost the right to rescind. These instructions were refused and the court of its own motion instructed the jury in substance in Instruction No. 1 that under the contract the *461 plaintiff was required to deliver a machine reasonably fit to perform the work of a cash register and if it got out of order from ordinary use within a year, plaintiff was required to repair it and defendant was required to pay the transportation charges on it to the factory but if the machine was defectively constructed,, then it became the duty of plaintiff after due notice of its defects to put it in repair and pay the transportation charges and to do this within a reasonable time and if plaintiff did repair the machine in a reasonable time, it should recover but if it did not, then defendants had the right to rescind and the verdict should be for them. Also that the burden of evidence was on defendants to show that the machine did not get out of order from ordinary use and was defectively constructed.

For the defendants, the jury were instructed that if the machine was sold to them to use as a cash register, then there was an implied warranty on the part of plaintiff that it was reasonably fit to do the work of a cash register and if the jury should find that it was not reasonably fit to perform the work of a cash register and would not operate and defendants shipped it back to plaintiff who received and retained it and did not put it in proper condition in a reasonable time as instructed in Instruction No. 1, then plaintiff could not recover.

Plaintiff’s first contention is that the provision in the contract that “should the register get out of order from ordinary use within one year from shipment, you will, without charge, repair it” etc. superceded and took the place of all implied warranties and furnished the only gauge by which to determine plaintiff’s liability in case of defects in the-machine. We do not think this position sound. It is true that an implied warranty of the fitness of an article sold for the purpose for which it is to be used is superceded by an express warranty covering the same matter. [International Co. v. Smith, 17 Mo. App. 264, 269; Fairbanks Co. v. Baskett, 98 Mo. App. 53, 71 S. W. 1113, 1118.]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
232 S.W. 1091, 207 Mo. App. 454, 1921 Mo. App. LEXIS 192, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nat-cash-reg-co-v-van-duser-supply-co-moctapp-1921.