Nichols & Shepard Co. v. Wiedemann

75 N.W. 208, 72 Minn. 344, 1898 Minn. LEXIS 689
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedMay 23, 1898
DocketNos. 11,070-(91)
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 75 N.W. 208 (Nichols & Shepard Co. v. Wiedemann) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nichols & Shepard Co. v. Wiedemann, 75 N.W. 208, 72 Minn. 344, 1898 Minn. LEXIS 689 (Mich. 1898).

Opinion

START, C. J.

This action was brought to foreclose a chattel mortgage given by the defendant to the plaintiff upon a grain-threshing outfit, consisting of steam engine and separator with appliances and attachments, to secure the payment of three promissory notes given for a part of the purchase price of the machinery and amounting in the aggregate to $2,100.

The answer admitted the making of the notes and mortgage, and alleged that the defendant purchased the machinery from the plaintiff for the agreed price of $2,700, and in part payment she turned over to it a second-hand threshing outfit at the agreed price of $600, its reasonable value, and gave the mortgage and notes for the balance thereof; that'the machinery was warranted; that there was a breach thereof; and that she returned the machinery to the plaintiff at the place she received it, pursuant to the conditions of the warranty. The answer also contained allegations as to her damages by reason of the warranty, and prayed judgment that the notes and mortgage be delivered to the defendant, and that she recover the sum of $600 paid on the purchase of the machinery; also special damages in the sum of $2,000.

The findings of the trial court included the findings of the jury on special issues, and, so far as here material, were to the effect that there was a breach of the warranty, a rescission of the sale upon the defendant’s part, and return of the machinery to the plaintiff; and its conclusions of law were that the plaintiff was not entitled to recover, but that the defendant was entitled to judgment against it for $758 paid on the purchase price, with interest. The plaintiff appeals from an order denying its motion for a new trial.

1. The plaintiff’s important assignments of error may be con[346]*346sidered together. They involve the question whether the evidence sustains the finding oí the trial court to the effect that the defendant complied with all the conditions of the warranty.

The contract of warranty was in writing, and contained, among others, the conditions following: If within five days after the first use of the machinery it fails to fill the warranty, written notice by registered letter shall be immediately given to the seller at Battle Creek, Michigan, and also to the local dealer, stating wherein the machinery fails to fill the warranty. In case the workman sent to fix the machinery does not leave it working satisfactorily, the purchaser shall give a second notice as before. If any part of the machinery cannot be made to fill the warranty, that part shall be returned immediately to the place where it was received, with the option of the seller to furnish other machinery or part in place of that returned, or return the money and notes received by the seller for the same, and to be released from any further liability. Failure to give any of the notices, or failure on the part of the purchaser to render friendly assistance in making the machinery work, or the keeping it after the five days allowed as provided above, shall be a waiver of the warranty, and a full release of the warrantor.

“No general or special agent or local dealer is authorized to make any change in this warranty. Workmen or experts are not agents, and have no authority to bind the company by any contract or statement. * * This order is subject to the acceptance of the said company, and when so accepted is a binding contract, which no person has authority to modify, or to waive any of its conditions.”

These conditions must be construed strictly against the seller, as they are intended to limit and minimize the force of the warranty. The plaintiff is a corporation, and can act only by agents; hence the provision that no person has authority to waive any of the conditions of the contract is not a limitation upon any particular agent or class of agents, but one upon the capacity of the corporation for future action, which it cannot impose upon itself; hence this particular provision cannot operate to prevent a waiver by the corporation of the conditions of the contract which would, [347]*347except for the prohibition, legally result from the acts of its authorized agents in reference to the machinery. Lamberton v. Connecticut F. Ins. Co., 39 Minn. 129, 39 N. W. 76.

The defendant failed to give notice to the plaintiff at Battle Creek within five days after she commenced using the machinery, but she claims that such notice was waived by the conduct of the plaintiff. The defendant’s evidence tended to show that the defendant commenced using the machinery August 23, 1895, and continued its use until September 18, or about 23 days, and that it failed to comply with the warranty in substantial particulars from the first, and was practically a failure as a threshing outfit; that the plaintiff’s expert was present when the machinery was started, and that it did not work well; that plaintiff’s local agent was notified the next day, and afterwards its general agent at Minneapolis, but no notice was sent to the plaintiff at Battle Creek until September 18; that during the time defendant was using the machinery some one agent, expert, or officer of the plaintiff was at the defendant’s farm nearly every day, trying to make the machinery work as warranted, but failed so to do; among others the plaintiff’s agent whose special line of work was looking after its machines in the field, its traveling agent, and its foremen of its separator and engine construction departments, respectively, from Battle Creek. Much of the defendant’s testimony is contradicted by that of the plaintiff, which tended to show that the machinery was as warranted, and that theN several agents, except those sent by the local agent, who were at defendant’s farm while the machinery was being used, were there casually, and not in response to any notice of defects in the machinery. Upon the whole evidence we are satisfied that it was sufficient to sustain the finding that the plaintiff waived the sending of formal written notice to it at Battle Creek within the five days. Massachusetts L. & T. Co. v. Welch, 47 Minn. 183, 49 N. W. 740.

The plaintiff further claims that the defendant did not comply with the conditions of the warranty, because she did not return the machinery at the place where she received it.

The written contract provided that the machinery should be shipped for the defendant, in care of plaintiff’s local agents at [348]*348Moorhead, and that the defendant should receive it on its arrival, subject to the conditions of the warranty. The defendant, when she found the machinery would not work, hauled it to her farm buildings, some seven miles from Moorhead, which, as she claimed, was the place at which she received it. There was evidence on the part of the defendant tending to show that it was agreed between her and the local agent that the machinery should be delivered to her at her farm, as she had no means of unloading it, and could not undertake to do it, and that the machinery was accordingly there delivered by the agent, of the plaintiff; that the defendant notified the plaintiff of the fact of the failure of the machinery to fill the warranty, and also that it was at the place of delivery for the plaintiff; and, farther, that after such notice, and about October 1, 1895, the plaintiff’s secretary was at the defendant’s farm, where the machinery then was, saw it there, and was informed by the defendant’s husband and agent that it had broken down, and that he could not run it, and thereupon the secretary went away.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
75 N.W. 208, 72 Minn. 344, 1898 Minn. LEXIS 689, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nichols-shepard-co-v-wiedemann-minn-1898.