Walker, Evans Cogswell v. Ayer

61 S.E. 557, 80 S.C. 292, 1908 S.C. LEXIS 174
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedMay 12, 1908
Docket6910
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 61 S.E. 557 (Walker, Evans Cogswell v. Ayer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Walker, Evans Cogswell v. Ayer, 61 S.E. 557, 80 S.C. 292, 1908 S.C. LEXIS 174 (S.C. 1908).

Opinions

The opinion of the 'Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Woods.

On 23d September, 1903, Walker, Evans & Cogswell Company made a written contract with *294 Hartwell M. Ayer to lease to him two Empire typesetting machines, with the provision that the machines should becoime the property of Ayer upon performance of his promise to pay for them the sum of eight hundred dollars. Two hundred dollars of the purchase money was paid in cash and the remainder was to be paid in quarterly installments of seventy-five dollars, with interest at eight per cent, per annum. On 31st January, 190'5, this action was 'brought for three hundred and seventy-five dollars and interest alleged to be due on the credit portion of 'the purchase money. The answer thus states 'the defense relied on: “That at said time the defendant was running and operating a newspaper and printing office in the city of Florence, and the said delivery and contract was entered into by the said parties with reference to said business, and the said property was delivered and the said contract entered into by the said parties to secure the use of said property in setting and distributing type and facilitating and promoting the business of the said office.

“That at all of said time the plaintiff represented thait the said property was machinery, and paraphernalia appertaining thereto, in good and sound condition and suitable for the purpose of setting and distributing type and facilitating the same and the work and labor of the said office, and the defendant was induced to receive the said property and sign said contract upon the same.

“The defendant was induced to' receive the said property and sign the said contract not only on the aforesaid representations', but upon the special representations made to him by 'the said plaintiff to the effect: (1) That said machines would set clear proofs with little practice by the operators. (2) That there was no trouble in correcting the galleys. (3) That any person of ordinary intelligence could operate the same. (4) 'That each machine would do the work of five printers, working 'by hand. (5) That the distributors were simple and an ordinary boy could attend to them. ( 6) That they had been in successful operation for years. (7) *295 That they would not break type. (8) That they would pay for -themselves in a short ti-mle. (9 ) That they were particularly suitable and adapted to a small newspaper and printing office like that of defendant, and the defendant, confiding in the truth of said representations, was induced to receive said property and enter into said -contract.

“The defendant alleges that all of said representations, both general and special, were and are wholly false and so known to the plaintiff at the time, and the same were made to mislead and overreach the defendant, and the said property was and is wholly unsu-it-ed for the purpose for which it was delivered to the defendant -and wholly worthless.

“That the defendant, relying-on the said representations and wholly induced by the same, paid to the plaintiff the first payment of two hundred dollars (|2-0-0') mentioned in the s-aid 'agreement, and ¡attempted- to use said property in- his office for the -s-aid 'purposes-, and the defendant, in good faith, attempted to use said property and make the s-amie come up to the said representations- made by the plaintiff and perform the work it -was represented to do from said date until -abo-ut the first day of May, 19 0T, to defendant’s great loss and expense, when defendant abandoned his effort in that regard and tendered the property to the plaintiff, and refused to make any further payments thereon, but the plaintiff refused to receive the sarnie.

“That the said property has not since been used, or attempted to be used, by the defendant, but th-e same was and is subject to the demand of the plaintiff.”

The defendant further set up a counterclaim on the same statements as are made in the answer, with th-e additional allegation: “That the defendant was induced by plaintiff’s said false and fraudulent misrepresentations not only to pay to' -the plaintiff said two hundred dollars, the first payment thereon, but was induced thereby to- pay to- plaintiff fifty dollars on account of alleged charges for packing said property and to further expend the sum of thirty-five dollars freight charges on said property from the city of Charleston, *296 from which point the said property was shipped by the plaintiff to the defendant, and to further expend the sum of one hundred dollars for work, labor and material in putting up and putting together the said machines, the same having been by the plaintiff separated into parts to facilitate shipment of the same. That during the said period, when the defendant was making, in good faith, efforts to use and operate said machiniery in, setting type and performing the work in his office, for which it was sold and falsely represented to do and perform, defendant was put to the further necessary expense of hiring and paying extra hands and help, over and above the cost of performing the same work by hand to the amount of nine hundred and sixty dollars; all of which said sums were induced and caused to be paid by the defendant by the said false and fraudulent representations and acts of the plaintiff, to the damage of the defendant thirteen hundred and forty-five dollars.”

The plaintiff replied to the counterclaim denying its material allegations The plaintiff also demurred to all the defenses except the general denial, “on the ground that they fail to state facts sufficient to constitute a defense, in that the alleged false and fraudulent representations, if true as alleged, amounted to nothing more that mere matters of opinion and commendatory expressions as to value, prospects and the like, and fraud cannot be predicated thereupon.”

1 The first exception assigns error in 'the order of the Circuit Court in overruling the demurrer. Some of the representations alleged in the answer, taken separately,- may well be regarded as the mere puffing of his property by a seller, which the purchaser is not justified in relying on; still, after allowing for all this, there remains the allegation that the plaintiff represented as distinct facts that the machines would not break the type, that they were suitable and valuable for setting up type, that the defendant rdlied on these representations and was induced by them to enter into the contract, and that these representations were *297 false and fraudulent and the machinery turned out to be wholly worthless. There is no allegation of an express general warranty of the machines, but only óf the particular representations above set forth.

The rule in this State is, that the seller, without any express warranty or representation of value, is held to warrant the -article sold to be of value for the purpose to which it is ordinarily applied. The allegation here being that there was a complete failure of consideration of the contract by reason of the machines being absolutely worthless, the defendant, under the rule stated, on proof of his allegation, would be entitled to rescission of -the contract. Martin v. Ry. Co., 70 S. C., 8.

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Bluebook (online)
61 S.E. 557, 80 S.C. 292, 1908 S.C. LEXIS 174, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walker-evans-cogswell-v-ayer-sc-1908.