Judges: Walker
Filed Date: 5/1/1913
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/2/2024
The appellant assigns as error the action of the court in overruling its demurrer to the amended third plea. The plea, after averring that the plaintiff, at the time it sold to the defendant the automobile for the price of which the notes sued on were given, represented and warranted that it would climb a 30 per cent, grade and that it would climb' with its load any of the hills along the public roads of Walker county, Ala., for the defendant’s personal use along which he bought the machine, averred that said automobile would not climb a 30 per cent, grade, and would not climb many of the hills along the public roads of said Walker county, and that by reason of its failure to do so the plaintiff was prevented from using it on said public roads, in consequence whereof said automobile was of little or no value to him. The plea further averred that the defendant had paid to the plaintiff $700 on the $1,400 purchase price of said machine, and for the breach of warranty alleged claimed damages in the sum of $1,400, which it offered to set off or recoup against the demand of the plaintiff. Mention will be made of the grounds of demurrer which are sought to be supported by the argument of the counsel for the appellant : (1) The failure of the plea to aver a return or an offer by the defendant to return the automobile within a reasonable time after his discovery of the breach of the warranty did not constitute a demurrable defect in it. It is well settled that, when there is a breach of a warranty made in the sale of goods, the buyer may either rescind the sale and refuse or return the goods or accept and retain the goods and bring an action for breach of warranty, or, in an action by the vendor for
Questions calculated to elicit and Avhich in fact elicited only testimony as to the failure of the automobile under appropriate tests to come up to the requirements of the Avarranty pleaded were not subject to the objections made to them, and the court was not in error in overruling such objections.
After the defendant as -a Avitness in his oaaui behalf had testified on direct examination, on cross-examination, on redirect examination, and on a recross-examination at some length, and after he had ansAvered questions propounded by the plaintiff’s counsel as to the
The appellant cannot complain of the overruling of bis objection to the question referred to in the fifth assignment of error, as the answer made to the question could not possibly be regarded as unfavorable to him.
It is for the jury, not for a 'witness, to say what conclusions are to be drawn from the evidence in the case. The questions referred to in the sixth and seventh assignments of error were subject to the objections made to them, as they called, not for statements of fact proper to be deposed to, but for deductions or conclusions of
Whether or not any complaint had been made of another car sold by the plaintiff to a stranger to this suit was an inquiry having no possible relevancy or pertinency to any issue in this case, and evidence in reference to that matter was properly excluded.
There was evidence tending to support the plea setting up a breach of warranty, and to justify a conclusion that the damages sustained by the defendant as a result of the breach amounted to as much as the unpaid balance on the notes sued on. We find no merit in the complaints made against the refusal of the court to give the general affirmative charge requested by the plaintiff, and to grant its motion for a new trial.
Affirmed.