Sycamore Marsh Harvester Co. v. Grundrad

16 Neb. 529
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 15, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 16 Neb. 529 (Sycamore Marsh Harvester Co. v. Grundrad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sycamore Marsh Harvester Co. v. Grundrad, 16 Neb. 529 (Neb. 1884).

Opinion

Reese, J.

This action was brought to recover the purchase price of a Marsh harvester which the plaintiff alleges it sold to the defendant in error on the 16th day of July, .1880, for the agreed price of $260, and for which the defendant in error agreed to'execute and deliver to the plaintiff his promissory notes, in amounts and payable as follows: $86.67 on the first day of January, 1881; $86.67 on the first day of January, 1882, and $86 66 on the first day of January, 1883. That said harvester was delivered to the [530]*530defendant, who received it, but refused to execute the notes according to his contract.

The defendant in his answer pleads several defenses, which for convenience may be condensed into the allegations that he ■ purchased the harvester referred to of the plaintiff, but that the purchase was a conditional one; that the plaintiff warranted the harvester to be a good harvester, and do good work, and that it was mutually agreed between them that the defendant should pay $15 freight on the harvester and take it to his farm and use it in his harvesting that year, and if the harvester worked well and proved to be a good machine, he would keep it and execute his notes for the purchase price. But if the harvester failed to do good work it was to be returned to the plaintiff and the contract should be at an end. That under this agreement he took possession of the harvester and gave it a thorough trial, and it could not be made to work. That he notified the agent of the plaintiff of that fact, and he went to the farm of the defendant and tried to make it do good work as it was agreed it should do, but that the plaintiff’s agent failed to succeed. That the harvester was ,not a good machine and could not be made to do good work, and that the defendant offered to return it to the plaintiff, who refused to accept it, but that defendant has at all times been willing and ready to return the same but plaintiff has refused to permit the same to be done. These allegations being denied by the plaintiff, the cause was tried to a jury upon the issues thus formed, who returned a verdict for the defendant. Plaintiff brings the cause into this court by petition in error.

A large number of alleged errors are assigned in the petition in error, upon which it is claimed the decision of the district court in refusing a new trial should be reviewed. But as nearly all of them are based upon the rulings of the court in admitting and rejecting evidence, none of which seem to be relied on in the plaintiff’s brief, we will dismiss [531]*531that class of objections by saying that we have examined each one and carefully read all the evidence and have found none which could be in the least prejudicial to the plaintiff, and in fact we have failed to find any which seem to have been erroneous.

The only points relied upon by the brief of the plaintiff are-rlst. “That the warranty given by plaintiff was such and such only as was printed upon the circular given by Bohman (the agent) to defendant, and that Bohman had no right to, nor did he make any other warranty; ” 2d. “ That there was no compliance on the part of Grundrad with the requirements of the law to enable him to avoid paying for the machine; ” and 3d. “ That the errors alleged in the motion for a new trial are well taken.”

Upon the first point we find a direct and sharp conflict in the testimony. It is claimed on the part of plaintiff that the harvester was sold upon a printed warranty which was delivered to the defendant, while on the part of the defense it is as strenuously claimed that ho printed warranty was made or given to the defendant, but that the contract was entirely verbal. The printed warranty which Bohman, the plaintiff’s agent, testifies he gave the defendant, and which he says he signed, was not introduced in evidence, nor does it appear that any effort .was made to procure it. However, another one was introduced and received in evidence, which Bohman testified was similar to the one given. A part of the examination in chief of Bohman is as follows:

Q,. Now you may go on and tell the court and jury all you know about that trade and the conversation and talk you and he had together that day, all about it from the first to the last.

A. I have forgot a good deal of the conversation, but on the day I first talked to him he called on me after I had come home from the country. He had been looking at a machine in my yard, and wanted to know my price. I [532]*532asked him $265 and freight, in all $275. He wanted to get it to use during harvest and not to settle for it till after harvest. I told him he could not buy on any terms except on the company’s warranty. I had blank orders and warranties attached. I took one of the blank orders and tore off the warranty part and gave it to him and told him to go and get somebody to read it for him..

Q. You say you tore the warranty off?

A. Yes, the warranty was torn off from a blank order, of which I had a large number in my possession.

Q,. Now you may go on with your story about your conversation with the defendant when you sold him this machine in question.

A. I signed the warranty that was given to the defendant that was similar to this one. I had a conversation with the defendant about it and explained to him the warranty.

Q. "Who was present, if anybody, at the time you was having this conversation with him about the warranty?

A. John Kovar was present at the time, and perhaps ■others. Frank Adofske was present with him when I and he first talked it over. The first note was made payable the first of January following. He first came to my place about four o’clock in the afternoon, then I tore off the warranty, as I have said, and he went away with it and stayed away probably over half an hour, and then came back and wanted to buy a machine on his own terms; that is, to use it during the seasón and then if he liked it to pay for it then. I told him that I had not much interest in it, and that I could not sell on am^ terms but on the warranty of the Sycamore Marsh Harvester Co. He took the warranty and went away again, and when he came back he had some one with him; I am not certain who it was, whether it was his wife or boy, and he said it was then getting late and he would not take the machine then, but that he would [533]*533come back the next morning and get the machine. He came back the next morning and got the machine.

Upon cross-examination this witness testified that he first gave the deferidant the warranty and order on one piece of paper, and defendant refused to sign the order for the machine, when he tore off the warranty part and gave it to the defendant that he might get some one to explain it to him, ■ but that the sale was not made until in the evening when defendant drove along with his wagon starting for home. The witness Kovar, referred to by Bohman, testified that he was not present when Bohman and defendant were talking about the price and terms of the harvester, but that he saw Bohman hand him a piece of paper which was the printed warranty referred to. Upon this point the testimony of the defendant, his wife, and John Pollok was given by the defense. The testimony of defendant was as follows:

Q,. What time of the day did you first see Bohman about it?

A. About two o’clock in the afternoon.

Q,. Where did you see Bohman about it ?

A. About his office.

Q.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
16 Neb. 529, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sycamore-marsh-harvester-co-v-grundrad-neb-1884.