Pauls Valley Milling Co. v. Gabbert

1938 OK 244, 78 P.2d 685, 182 Okla. 500, 117 A.L.R. 466, 1938 Okla. LEXIS 609
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedApril 5, 1938
DocketNo. 27915.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 1938 OK 244 (Pauls Valley Milling Co. v. Gabbert) 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
Pauls Valley Milling Co. v. Gabbert, 1938 OK 244, 78 P.2d 685, 182 Okla. 500, 117 A.L.R. 466, 1938 Okla. LEXIS 609 (Okla. 1938).

Opinion

PI-IELPR. J.

The trial judge, without *501 a jury, gave plaintiff judgment for damages sustained on account of producing a smaller crop of oats from seed bought from defendant than he would have produced if defendant had delivered him the character or kind of seed oats which he ordered, and the defendant appeals. There was a serious dispute of facts involving several of the essentials to plaintiff’s recovery, hut we state the facts as favorably to plaintiff as the record will permit.

The plaintiff operated a farm near Pauls Valley, in which city the defendant operated a seed store. Two or three weeks . before sowing time the plaintiff visited the defendant’s store in Pauls Valley, and there in a small box on the desk of defendant’s representative he saw some oats which he, the plaintiff, testified were “Texas red rust proof seed oats.” There is no evidence of any express oral or written representation having been made to plaintiff, but, according to his testimony, he ordered 20 bushels of seed oats by that sample, at 80 cents a bushel, to be delivered in two weeks. He paid for them several days before delivery.

In due time defendant’s truck driver delivered the oats to plaintiff at a country store near plaintiff’s farm, and plaintiff was present at the point of delivery. At that time and place he opened the sacks containing the oats and inspected them. According to his own testimony he knew-immediately that they were not the kind of oats he had ordered; nevertheless, he said nothing to the defendant about it, and went ahead and planted them. The following is his testimony on that question:

“They were just little old black slick oats, very common stock. * * * and so when I seen them — opened them, I noticed they were not what I had bought at all, hut I went ahead and sowed them.”

•The plaintiff was an experienced farmer and well knew the difference in oats; he testified that there was “no comparison between the kind of oats” ordered and received. As stated, he made no effort to communicate with the nearby defendant, and there is no evidence indicating that this was anything other than an innocent mistake, assuming in the first place, as we must, under the principles of review, that the plaintiff ordered the red rust proof oats. Neither is there any evidence that the red rust proof seed oats were not readily available on the market.

In considering the defendant’s contention that the judgment is contrary to the evidence and law, it should he borne in mind that this is not an action to recover the purchase price of the oats, or to recover the difference between that and the value of the oats delivered, but the judgment rendered was for consequential damages later sustained. As nearly as we are able to ascertain, the amount of the judgment was arrived at by subtracting the approximate number of bushels actually harvested from the number of bushels which the evidence showed would have been harvested if red rust proof oats had been planted, and multiplying that difference by the market price per bushel.

Plaintiff seeks to sustain the judgment on the theory of breach of implied warranty. A warranty is an express or implied statement of something undertaken as a part of a contract of sale, but collateral to its express object (Brown v. Davidson, 42 Okla. 598, 142 P. 387), an undertaking that a certain fact regarding the subject of the contract is what it has been represented to be (Commonwealth Cotton Oil Co. v. Lester, 156 Okla. 93, 9 P.2d 738). We need not here discuss the various undertakings usually included in implied warranties, for there is no contention that the seed were defective. The only complaint of plaintiff, and the theory upon which the case was tried, is that the seed were not the kind ordered, by him, that is, that he ordered' the red rust-proof and he received just ordinary oats. As stated by plaintiff in his brief, “They could not sell a horse and deliver a mule.”

On a sale by sample, such as this was, a warranty exists that the goods shall be according to sample. Collins Cotton Co. v. Wooten-Burton Sales Co., 81 Okla. 67, 196 P. 681. And a warranty in the sale of seeds may exist as to the kind of seeds to be delivered, as distinguished from quality, etc., such as delivering cane seed when broom corn seed was ordered. Manglesdorf Seed Co. v. Busby, 118 Okla. 255, 247 P. 410. Or in warranting delivery of standard evergreen- broom corn seed and delivering the variety known as dwarf broom corn seed. Manglesdorf Seed Co. v. Pauls Valley Grain & Seed Co., 134 Okla. 210, 273 P. 252, as retried and affirmed in Manglesdorf Seed Co. v. Pauls Valley Grain & Seed Co., 155 Okla. 270, 8 P.2d 1100. And in the Busby Case, supra, we held that such an action as this is ex contractu, and that in the absence of proof that the seeds delivered were “faulty or defective.” there is nothing in our Pure Seed Law (chapter 138, S L. 1919. as amended by S. L. 1920, chapter 230, and, *502 as it now reads, 2 Okla. St. Ann., sections 771 to 781) which creates any new rule of civil liability for breach of express or implied warranty. In the concluding syllabus in the Busby Case we held that:

“Por an innocent mistake in the sale of cane seed for broom corn seed, the rule of liability and the method of proof is the same as for the breach of implied warranty of fitness in the sale of any other personalty.”

It therefore appears, so far, that the case may correctly be treated as coming within the principles applicable to sales warranties, and that the evidence was sufficient to sustain the presumed finding that the warranty was made and broken. It remains to be determined whether it follows that defendant, under the admitted facts of the case, is liable to plaintiff in the full amount of the judgment entered.

The question whether inspection, acceptance, and retention of goods waives a warranty, or, as sometimes put, whether the warranty survives acceptance, is one over which there has been much argument, and, at least in states not having the Uniform Sales Act (see section 49 thereof), a question on which there appears to be a great difference of opinion. In some jurisdictions it is held that while retention or acceptance of the goods does not waive an express warranty, it does waive an implied warranty, or waives it in executory contracts or actually discovered defects. The authorities in many states are so greatly at odds that the law approaches that state of flexibility whereunder it is sometimes said that each case depends on its own facts and circumstances. Underneath, however, it may be discovered that the conflict is apparent rather than real, and is caused in many eases by attempting to fit ordinary abstract principles to extraordinary fact situations.

In this state we have announced several times that where there is an implied warranty, acceptance of the goods with knowledge of the defects will not bar an action for damages. Wallace v. L. D. Clark & Son, 74 Okla. 208, 174 P. 557, 21 A. L. R. 361; Lawton Refining Co. v. Hollister, 86 Okla. 13, 205 P. 506; Wood & Co. v. Val Blatz Brewing Co., 112 Okla. 119, 240 P. 115; Northern Implement & Produce Co. v. Turner-Clinton Co., 117 Okla. 136, 245 P. 646; Kirk et al. v. Leeman, 163 Okla. 236, 22 P.2d 382. An examination of all such cases reveals that either:

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Bluebook (online)
1938 OK 244, 78 P.2d 685, 182 Okla. 500, 117 A.L.R. 466, 1938 Okla. LEXIS 609, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pauls-valley-milling-co-v-gabbert-okla-1938.