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Smith v. Lazier Gas Engine Company

Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, Fourth Department
Mar 1, 1904
93 App. Div. 603 (N.Y. App. Div. 1904)

Opinion

March, 1904.


Judgment and order affirmed, with costs, upon opinion of Nash, J., delivered at Special Term. All concurred.

The following is the opinion of Nash, J., delivered at Trial Term:


The defendant moves for a new trial principally upon the ground that the action being upon an express warranty the plaintiff is not entitled to recover, for the reason that no action will lie on a warranty unless the title to the property alleged to have been warranted has fully passed to the buyer. ( English v. Hanford, 75 Hun, 428.) This point was not made at the trial. The plaintiff's counsel upon the trial referred to his cause of action as one for a breach of warranty. The defendant's counsel moved to dismiss the complaint upon the ground that there had been no evidence of any breach of the warranty set up in the complaint. The complaint does not allege a cause of action upon the warranty. The gravamen of the complaint is non-performance of the contract by the defendant. A copy of the contract is set out in the complaint, by the terms of which the defendant agreed to furnish a gas engine which the defendant warranted would develop twenty-five horse power, for which the plaintiff agreed to pay $570 and a second-hand steam engine and boiler, which it is alleged was agreed to be taken by the defendant at $100; that relying upon the warranties containee in the agreement the plaintiff set up said engine in his mill; that relying on said warranties the plaintiff attempted to run and use the said engine, and was unable to use it, and the complaint then proceeds to allege the facts, showing not a breach of the warranty, but a breach of the contract to furnish the engine agreed upon, the removal of the engine from the plaintiff's premises, the expense the plaintiff was put to in setting up the engine, the loss of the use of the plaintiff's mill, and the failure of the defendant to return or pay for the second-hand steam engine and boiler which the plaintiff had delivered to the defendant and claims damages in the sum of $800. The last subdivision of the complaint is as follows: " Ninth. That the fair rental value of the plaintiff's said grist mill is one hundred dollars ($100.00) per month, and that by reason of the premises, and of the said breach of warranty contained in said agreement so made as aforesaid, and by reason of the moneys so necessarily expended in and about said gas engine and of the loss of trade and custom and of the loss and depreciation of and in the rental value of plaintiff's said grist mill, said plaintiff has been damaged in the sum of eight hundred dollars ($800 00)." The plaintiff upon the trial gave evidence tending to establish the allegations of the complaint. No evidence of damages as for a breach of the warranty was given or offered by the plaintiff. The case was not submitted to the jury as an action to recover damages for a breach of the warranty. In the charge to the jury it was stated that in the contract to sell the company warranted the engine to run smoothly and to develop twenty-five horse power. There was no other reference to the warranty in the charge. The case of the plaintiff for a breach of the contract, its non-performance, was stated, and the jury were instructed that if they found that the defendant had failed to establish the defense of a settlement the verdict would be for the plaintiff for such damages as he had sustained, and that would be for the price of the steam engine and boiler, freight, cartage and setting up the gas engine and the value of the use of the mill during the time the plaintiff was not able to use it. There was no exception to the charge either as to the manner of stating the case to the jury or to the instruction as to the damages the plaintiff was entitled to recover. The case having been tried upon what seems to me is the correct theory of the case, I am of the opinion that the verdict should stand. Motion for a new trial denied, with ten dollars costs.


Summaries of

Smith v. Lazier Gas Engine Company

Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, Fourth Department
Mar 1, 1904
93 App. Div. 603 (N.Y. App. Div. 1904)
Case details for

Smith v. Lazier Gas Engine Company

Case Details

Full title:Henry Smith, Respondent, v. Lazier Gas Engine Company, Appellant

Court:Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, Fourth Department

Date published: Mar 1, 1904

Citations

93 App. Div. 603 (N.Y. App. Div. 1904)