Triplett v. Montgomery
This text of 81 Mo. App. 141 (Triplett v. Montgomery) 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.
Opinion
This action is for damages for breach of warranty. The warranty was a feature of a certain sale of personal property. The plaintiff charged in his petition that in June, 1895, defendant sold to him for $650 a portable engine and a threshing machine, which defendant warranted. The sale and warranty were actually made by Gilbert and Hazelwood, agents acting for defendant. The warranties were that the engine was of ten horse power and that the machine was in good condition, would do good work and had been in use only two years and seven days. Plaintiff stated that the warranties were false and that he was damaged thereby in the sum of $600, for which he prayed judgment.
The answer denied the breach of warranty and set up a counterclaim on five notes for $100 each, part of the purchase price of the property mentioned in the petition.
The reply denied the new matter of the answer, and asserted that defendant had sold and transferred the notes.
[144]*144The cause was tried with the aid of a jury. There was evidence tending to support the plaintiff’s allegations as to breach of warranty. Mr. Gilbert, one of the agents for defendant in the sale of the property, testified at the instance of plaintiff touching the original transaction. It appeared from plaintiff’s evidence that the property was sold for account of defendant to the plaintiff at the price of $650, for which plaintiff gave his notes; no cash was then paid. The first note was for $150. The record does not show the time when it was payable except that it was due. in November. It was paid, or at least adjusted and discharged shortly afterwards between plaintiff and Mr. Gilbert, to whom it had been assigned by defendant, as compensation for services in making the sale. The other five notes ($100 each) were payable at'intervals of a year. They have not been paid. They are the notes mentioned in the counterclaim of the answer.
According to plaintiff’s evidence the property would have been worth the agreed price had it been as warranted, but its actual value did not exceed $125, and some of the evidence placed the value of it as low as $75. There was no substantial conflict of evidence regarding the breach of warranty, but there was considerable conflict touching the value of the property and the alleged damages occasioned by the breach.
• The only payment on account of purchase price by plaintiff was the note for $150, as described; the other notes have never been paid.
The plaintiff testified that defendant told him that he, defendant, had transferred the notes to Gilbert, but the evidence does not warrant an inference of any consideration whatever for such transfer; and filbert (who testified for plaintiff) made no mention of any claim by him to the notes, or of any claim of ownership thereto; while on his part defendant declared that he had given the notes to Gilbert to be returned to plaintiff and that he had so told plaintiff and told him that he (defendant) had given up all claim on account of them.
[145]*145
It will not be necessary to consider all the topics treated in the interesting briefs filed by the learned counsel herein.
The result of the trial ivas a verdict for plaintiff in the sum of $565, for which judgment was entered accordingly.
After the usual motion and exceptions the defendant prosecuted the present appeal.
"Whatever view might be entertained of other features of this appeal, it seems to us clear that the last part of the instruction (beginning with the words “in the event”) already-quoted involves an error prejudicial to the appellant. The defendant was entitled, if the jury found the facts recited in that part of the instruction, to have the said notes allowed as an offset, without regard to their findings as to the breach of warranty. ' The statement of the instruction on that point was calculated to give an entirely wrong impression to the jury of the connection between those subjects.
Moreover, there is no evidence of any such transfer of said notes by defendant as would confer title on Gilbert and take the ownership of said notes out of the defendant.
It is impossible to reconcile the result reached with the principles of substantial justice. The finding and judgment in favor of plaintiff on all the issues, as they stand, are a bar to defendant’s claim against plaintiff on said notes, if he is still the owner of them. They have not been paid. Defendant claims to have surrendered his demand upon them, yet plaintiff has a judgment for $565; only sustainable on the theory that the purchase price had been paid, or that plaintiff was yet liable on the notes. There was no evidence of a change of title of the notes from defendant on which to base an instruction for a finding on that point, and to permit a judgment to stand, founded on that assumption, would be an injustice .which should not be sustained. The judgment is therefore reversed and the cause remanded.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
81 Mo. App. 141, 1899 Mo. App. LEXIS 373, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/triplett-v-montgomery-moctapp-1899.