Walter A. Wood Reaping & Mowing Machine Co. v. Smith

15 N.W. 906, 50 Mich. 565, 1883 Mich. LEXIS 861
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJune 6, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by74 cases

This text of 15 N.W. 906 (Walter A. Wood Reaping & Mowing Machine Co. v. Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Walter A. Wood Reaping & Mowing Machine Co. v. Smith, 15 N.W. 906, 50 Mich. 565, 1883 Mich. LEXIS 861 (Mich. 1883).

Opinion

Graves, C. J.

This action was brought origiually before a justice of the peace. The pleadings were put in orally. The declaration was stated as being on all the common counts in assumpsit and on a written contract by which defendant agreed to buy and receive from plaintiff a certain agricultural machine for the sum of three hundred dollars; claim, $300 or under damages.” The defendant stated that he pleaded the general issue and gave notice of proof that the machine did not answer the requirements of the contract.” ,

The mention of a written contract referred to three simultaneous writings. First, a paper in the form of an order by the defendant on the plaintiff, which was obtained from the defendant by Mr. Price, the plaintiff’s soliciting agent, after considerable effort. Second, a paper called a [567]*567warranty delivered by tbe agent at tbe same time to tbe defendant; and thvr,d, a special written stipulation, exacted by the defendant, and given on the same occasion. These papers, except the last, were printed blanks. There was originally between the word “ allowed ” and the word “ days” in the second paper the figure one, but at the time the papers were exchanged and the terms arranged .• this was stricken out and it subsequently became a question whether anything was inserted in its place. This subject will be again noticed further on. These several writings appear below.

The justice rendered judgment for the plaintiff for damages $104.36 besides costs, and the defendant appealed. In the circuit court the cause was tried before a jury on the same pleadings and a verdict entered for the plaintiff in the sum of $300. This was on the 21st of June, 1881. The defendant objects to several rulings of the circuit judge,

It appears from the case that about the first of July, 1880, the plaintiff by its agents produced a machine at the defendant’s farm and that Laverty and Jenkins then set it up. The time for cutting had not yet arrived. It appears, also, that these men were skilled machinists and experts in putting together, fixing and running these implements and were in the plaintiff’s general employment to start new sold machines, make them work as required by the terms of sale, instruct buyers how to use them, and generally to look after the operation of the machines during any permitted time of trial.

Price, the soliciting or selling agent, kept his agency at Jackson, and the place of the defendant was in the township of Columbia in Jackson county and his post office was at Brooklyn in the same township. These places were several miles distant from Jackson.

In the afternoon of the 5th of July, being Monday, Laverty took the machine to/tle field and went round three times with it and continued on file forenoon of the next day, the 6th, until about ■ 11 o’clock, and then went away. On the succeeding afternoon, namely, the 7th, Jenkins came and took Laverty’s place, and according to defendant’s testi[568]*568mony, which is not opposed, continued off and on, three or four days ” in handling and fixing the machine, and trying to make it work properly. And, according to Price’s testimony, Jenkins reported to him that he found the machine out of order and not doing good work and that lie put it in order, but thought it would not stay so because it was in the hands of unskillful people.

The defendant gave evidence that Jenkins acknowledged his inability to make the machine operate as it ought to. He further gave evidence that he sent word by Jenkins to Price of the misconduct of the machine; and that he asked Jenkins where Price was and was answered that Price would be there the next day; that Price did not come, however, and on Saturday, the 17th, he, the defendant, wrote him that the twine binder made poor work and that he could not keep it. This note was postmarked at the Brooklyn office on Monday the 19th, and on the next day, but before the letter was received, Price went to defendant and a controversy immediately occurred between them. The defendant stated that it was the bargain that the machine was to be satisfactory to him, and that he was to have the whole of harvest to test it. He produced the warranty on Price’s request, and the latter then claimed that it fixed the time of trial at two days — that the figure “ 2 ” was inserted over the crossed figure “ 1 ” in the printed blank, and that the defendant having held on beyond the time given, he was bound to keep the machine and pay for it according to the written terms. The defendant disputed this position and insisted that he was not to be liable unless the machine was satisfactory to him, and that it was orally understood that he should have the whole period of harvest to satisfy himself, and, moreover, that the figure “ 2 ” was not inserted as stated by Price.

The notes mentioned in the order were tendered by Price for execution, but Smith refused to sign them and refused to have the machine.

It is admitted by Pripe that his motive in putting in the figure “2” over the erased figure “1” was not entirely [569]*569ingenuous. He says he became afraid that his express stipulation that the contract should be of no effect unless the machine worked to Smith’s satisfaction (and without which stipulation it was impossible to get the order), would wholly displace and supercede the printed conditional warranty unless he wrote something in it, at the very time, which would change the presumption; and so he made the figure “ 2 ” over the figure 1 ” and then read the whole to the defendant. He also denied having received any notice of defendant’s dissatisfaction prior to his call on the 20th of July. There was evidence, as we have seen, tending to show that the machine performed badly, and other evidence that it worked remarkably well, and that the defendant acknowledged to third persons that he was satisfied with it, or to that effect.

The questions chiefly material are, first, the character of the defendant’s right, under the special stipulation, as to rejecting the machine, and second, the meaning of the provision requiring immediate notice after the term of trial.

The circuit judge was not able to say on inspection whether the place mentioned in the printed warranty, actually contained the figure 2,” as claimed by Price, or not, and he therefore left it as a question of fact to the jury. He ruled, however, that in case they found that the figure was not there, the provision would then necessarily imply that the period should be a reasonable time, and he added such hypothetical instructions as he was of opinion the circumstances called for. In regard to the defendant’s right to reject the machine he charged substantially that unless there were real faults in its operation for which the defendant might fairly entertain dissatisfaction with it, he was not at liberty to regard himself as not satisfied and refuse to accept, and on the other hand even in case real grounds existed for dissatisfaction, but he kept the machine beyond the time within which he was to give notice that it did not work satisfactorily to him, he was still bound.

The cases where the parties provide that the promisor is to be satisfied, or to that effect, are of two classes; and whether the particular case at any time falls within the one [570]*570or the other must depend on the special circumstances and the question must be one of construction.

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Bluebook (online)
15 N.W. 906, 50 Mich. 565, 1883 Mich. LEXIS 861, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walter-a-wood-reaping-mowing-machine-co-v-smith-mich-1883.