Stambaugh v. Cantwell Hardware Co.

23 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 297
CourtHardin County Court of Common Pleas
DecidedApril 15, 1917
StatusPublished

This text of 23 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 297 (Stambaugh v. Cantwell Hardware Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hardin County Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stambaugh v. Cantwell Hardware Co., 23 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 297 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1917).

Opinion

Duncan, J.

This action is for damages for breach of warranty of quality • in the sale of a gang plow.

The plaintiffs are farmers and owners.or' a large larm in this county, a great portion of which is muck land. The defendant runs a hardware store in the city of Ken ton., and, in connection therewith, sells agricultural implements.

On or about April 10, 1914, the defendant sold the plaintiffs one J. I. Oase engine gang plow on trial for the sum of $700, with the express understanding that “it would work on muck-land or it would not have to he paid for;” that “it would work satisfactory;” that “it would have to do the work or the plaint iffs would not have to keep.it.” The plow was delivered about ten days later and the plaintiffs began to operate it in the muck [298]*298but with poor success. The plaintiffs thereupon gave the defendant notice of the failure of the plow to work successfully and two men with expert knowledge on the subject came on from the factory to adjust the plow to the conditions and to assist in its operation for a test. At their suggestion some mew attacnments were made and installed on the plow, and while this improved its operation somewhat, it still would not work well.

About the middle of May, while this situation existed, the defendant made demand for payment of the $700, but was informed by the plaintiffs that the plow was not giving satisfaction, whereupon the defendant assured them that if they paid for the plow then they would have the same protection as before; that if the plow did not do satisfactory work their money would be-refunded, and the plaintiffs paid the $700 with this express understanding'.

The representations as to its operation in the muck were made to induce the purchase and were reiied upon by the plaintiffs in the transaction.- It never did give satisfaction or work well in the muck, though a good plow for general purposes

From one hundred and fifty to one hundred and seventy-five acres were plowed on this trial when the plaintiffs decided it would not do the work and could not be made satisfactory, and purchased another plow. They were delayed somewhat in putting out their crop, but no special damage resulted. Had the' plow measured up to these representations, it would have had a value of $700; its real value was $500.

This is a statement of the facts upon which the plaintiff’s action for damages is founded. Ordinarily, where -one sells personal property to another and there has been a breach of the warranty as to quality, the purchaser has the option of one of two remedies, viz, he may rescind by a return of the property or keep the property and sue for damages. Sec 8449, G. C., Crooks Co. v. Eldridge-Higgins Co., 64 O. S., 195. But this' .option does not arise in case of conditional sales or a sale depending on a condition precedent. This was not an executed sale. It was not to be a sale unless the plow would -work .in the muck, and prove satisfactory to the plaintiffs as the result of a trial; [299]*299and unless it did, the plaintiffs would not be required to keep it. They made no tender of rescission, and the right to damages' is excluded by the contract.

This for three reasons. First, there was no warranty but a condition precedent upon which the sale was to be complete. Second, to treat the plow as purchased under the contract, its acceptance is conclusive that it would work in the mud and toas satisfactory. Third, "satisfaction’-’ with reference to the operation of a machine is not capable of measurement in money.

1. Rule 3 (2) as laid down in Section 8399 of the General Code provides that

"When goods are delivered to the buyer on approval or on trial or on satisfactory or other similar terms, the property therein passes to the buyer when he signifies his approval or acceptance to the seller or does any other act accepting the transaction. ’ ’

Benjamin on Sales (5th Ed.), 319, lays down the rule in this way:

"Where the buyer is by the terms bound to do anything as a condition, either precedent or concurrent, upon which the passing of the property depends, the property will not pass until the condition be fulfilled, -even though the goods may have been actually delivered into the possession of the buyer.”

And the Supreme Court in Hayner v. State. 83 O. S., 178, at page 193, after quoting the above from Benjamin on Sales makes this observation:

"Nor would it be delivery until the buyer had determined to accept, the rule being that an acceptance by the purchaser is as necessary an incident to delivery as a tender by the seller.”

To illustrate the point the court refers to the case of Bonham v. Hamilton, 66 O. S., 82. In this ease a promissory note with "approved security” was to have been given by the buyer for the property purchased. The seller din not approve the security. The first paragraph of the syllabus reads as follows-

"It is a general rule that, in case of the sale of goods, if nothing remains to be done on the part of the seller, as between him [300]*300aiid the buyer, before the thing purchased is to be delivered, the property in the goods immediately passes to the buyer, and that is the price to the seller; but if any act remains to be done on the part of the seller, then the property does not pass until that act has been done.”

Í think the distinction is made clear between a condition precedent and an executed sale in Hunt v. Wyman, 100 Mass., 198. That was an action for the purchase price of a horse. The defendant was told by the owner that- the horse was six years old, sound, kind, and afraid of nothing but goats, whereupon he proposed to the owner that “if he would let him take the horse and try it, if he did not like it he would return it in as good condition as he got it,” to which the owner assented and turned the horse over to the defendant’s servant. But'before it.reached the defendant’s place, it escaped from the servant, ran away, and was injured so seriously that it could not be used or removed prudently, and there was no opportunity for the defendant to try it. The court held:

“Upon the facts stated in this case, there was a bailment and not- a sale of the horse. The only contract, aside from the obligation implied by law, must be derived from the statement of the defandant, that, if the plaintiff 'would let him take tn-e horse and try it, if he did not like it he would return it in as good condition as he got it.' * ® * An option to purchase if he liked is essentially different from an option to return a purchase if he should not like. Tn one case the title will not pass until the option is determined; in the other the property passes at once, subject to the right to rescind and return.”

The one is an option to buy, if the property proved satisfactory, and the other an option to return if unsatisfactory. 35 Cyc.' 289.

Williston on Sales makes the distinction in this way:

Section 270. Rule 3, Sale or return, or sale on approval. It is evidently possible for the parties to agree that the buyer shall temporarily take the goods into his possession to see whether they are satisfactory to him, and that if they are not he may refuse to become oivner.

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Bluebook (online)
23 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 297, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stambaugh-v-cantwell-hardware-co-ohctcomplhardin-1917.