Citation Numbers: 126 Ga. 672, 1906 Ga. LEXIS 510, 55 S.E. 1034
Judges: Cobb
Filed Date: 11/10/1906
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/7/2024
(After stating the foregoing facts.)
1. Those portions of the contract of sale of the machine in question, which are material to the present case, are as follows: “It is distinctly understood that the above-mentioned machine is purchased subject to the following warranty, and ho other, and the undersigned hereby acknowledges receipt of a copy of the same. International Harvester Co. of America warrants this machine to do good work, to be well made, of good materials, and to be durable if used with proper care. If upon one day’s trial the machine fails to work well, the purchaser shall immediately give written notice to said company, addressed to its office, corner Adams and Jefferson streets, in Chicago, Illinois, or to its authorized agent, through whom the machine was purchased, stating wherein it fails; allow reasonable time for a man to be sent to put it in good order, and render necessary-and friendly assistance to operate it. If the machine can not then be made to work well, the purchaser shall immediately return it to said agent, and the money or notes for it shall be refunded; which, when done, shall constitute a settlement in full of the transaction. Failure on the part of the purchaser to comply with any of the conditions herein named shall be considered an acceptance of the machine and a fulfilment of the warranty. The provisions of this warranty shall not be changed or waived in any respect; neither can this order be cancelled without the consent of the International Harvester Company of America.”
The contract contained an express warranty, and therefore the implied warranty of the law was excluded. Holcomb v. Cable Co., 119 Ga. 466. The warranty was, that the machine should do good work, was well made, and would be durable if used with proper care. If this had been all that the contract contained, the defendant could have defeated a recovery upon the notes by showing that the warranty had in any one particular so far failed that damages resulting therefrom would amount to more than the amount due on the notes; or he would have been entitled to a credit on the notes if the damages were for a less sum. The contract in terms provided that in
%. The burden upon the defendant being of the character above indicated, it becomes necessary to determine whether, under the evidence, the jury were authorized to return a verdict in his favor' on his plea of failure of consideration. Although there were some conflicts in the evidence, there was ample evidence to authorize the finding that the machine would not do the work for which it was purchased. There was no conflict as to the trial of the machine. The evidence amply authorized the finding that it did not work well. Such being the condition of affairs, under the contract it became obligatory upon the defendant to give written notice to the company at Chicago, or to its agent through whom the machine
3. The plaintiff was under no obligation under the contract to send a man to make the machine work, unless it received a written-notice of the character provided for in the contract. If the notice had been in conformity to the terms of the contract, then the defendant would have been let into his defense, — a breach of the warranty, — if the plaintiff failed after reasonable time to send a man-to remedy the defect in the machine. This would be true without reference to whether he returned the machine. The return of the machine as a condition precedent to a defense of breach of warranty was only required in the event the machine failed to work, after written notice as required by the contract was given, and a man was sent-to put the machine in working order, who failed to accomplish this result. In McCormick Harvesting Machine Co. v. Allison, 116 Ga. 445, it appears from the original record in the case that a man was sent to make the machine work and failed to accomplish the purpose of his mission. In that case, therefore, it was properly-held that, under the terms of the contract, the return of the machine was a condition precedent to a defense setting up a breach of warranty.
4. The evidence of the witness Williams as to the declaration of the expert who was sent out by .the company to set up the machine, that the machine would not work, should have been excluded, for the reason that this declaration was made after the agent had left the place where the machine was, and was no longer engaged in. any work of his principal. Its admission was harmless, for it appears that the statement us made really referred to the condition of the corn, rather than the machine. A new trial, must, however, be granted for other reasons, which are sufficiently shown in the foregoing discussion. We do not consider it necessary to discuss in detail the assignments of error upon the various extracts from the charge of the court. It is apparent that we do not agree with the
Judgment reversed.