Opinion
Under our present practice, recoupment for breach of warranty by the seller of goods, in diminution or extinction of the purchase price, is to be pleaded as a counterclaim and requires a prayer for affirmative relief. In the present action for the purchase price of coal sold the defendants, which did not properly burn, it was held that the right to recover for the coal which was used could only be defeated by properly pleading and proving a breach of warranty, but the facts were sufficient to defeat any right to recover the purchase price of the unused coal. It was further held that there was no basis in the pleadings for a judgment for the reasonable value of all the coal delivered the defendants.
Argued January 7th, 1932
Decided February 23d 1932.
ACTION to recover the purchase price of coal delivered to the defendants, brought to the City Court of Hartford and tried to the court, Ross, J.; judgment for the plaintiff for $150 and appeal by it. Error and new trial directed.
Louis M. Schatz, with whom was George M. Hyman, for the appellant (plaintiff).
David A. Wilson, with whom was Leon J. Greenberg, for the appellees (defendants).
This action was brought to recover the balance due upon a sale of coal by the plaintiff to the defendants. The complaint was in the form of the common counts with a bill of particulars, which itemized three deliveries, two, in the aggregate of about eighty-five tons, at $7.50 a ton, and one, of one ton, at $8.50 a ton, and which also stated payments made by the defendants to the amount of $150. While this pleading does not state whether the price named was one agreed upon or was based upon the reasonable value of the coal, the finding discloses that an agent of the plaintiff offered coal to the defendants at $7.50 per ton and they thereupon ordered delivery, first of one load and, after trying that, the balance, except the last ton. The sale, except of the last ton, must therefore be regarded as one for an agreed price. The defendants in their answer admitted the delivery of the coal and then alleged that the plaintiff made certain representations as to its quality, that it was not as represented, that the plaintiff, being notified of this, first sent a man to the building in an attempt to make it usable and, when he failed, agreed to have the flue in the building cleaned and if the coal did not then burn properly to remove it, that cleaning the flue was without result, that the defendants then employed a fireman suggested by the plaintiff, that the coal still would not heat the building and the defendants notified the plaintiff to remove it, and that ever since it had remained in the defendants' building subject to the plaintiff's order.
The trial court found the facts much as alleged in the answer except that the agreement, made after the defendants had tried the coal and adopted various expedients suggested by the plaintiff in the effort to use it, was that if the defendants would pay $100 the plaintiff would send a sample of a different coal and if it proved satisfactory it would take out all the coal previously sent and replace it with coal like the sample, that the $100 was paid and the sample proved satisfactory, and the defendants so notified the plaintiff, that the plaintiff did not replace the coal first sent with other coal like the sample but solicited the defendants to make further trial, that this was done without success and the defendants abandoned further attempts to use it. The court also found that the exact amount of the coal that had been used by the defendants could not be determined but it was more than half that sent, and that the value of all the coal delivered was $300. The court gave judgment for the plaintiff to recover the difference between this sum and the $150 which the defendants had paid.
The answer did not claim to recoup damages due to a breach of warranty in diminution or extinction of the purchase price, nor set up a counter claim for such damages, remedies permitted under the Sales Act for breach of warranty. General Statutes, § 4689. Under our present practice, recoupment is to be pleaded as a counterclaim and requires a prayer for affirmative relief. General Statutes, § 5511; Practice Book, p. 493, Form 412, p. 496, Form 421; New Haven Mfg. Co. v. New Haven Pulp Board Co., 76 Conn. 126, 130, 55 A. 604. Sufficient facts are not alleged to establish a rescission of the contract for a breach of warranty, another remedy provided in the statute; nor was the answer based upon a representation of the plaintiff found to have been made at the time of the purchase, that if the coal was not good the plaintiff would change it. The answer can only be construed as relying upon the breach of a promise of the plaintiff, made when soliciting the defendants to continue their efforts to use the coal, that if it did not burn properly after the expedient suggested had been tried, the plaintiff would remove it. Whether the promise found to have been made, to replace the coal originally sent with other coal, if the sample of the latter proved satisfactory, would come within the allegations of the answer, we have no occasion now to inquire. Assuming that it would, as the agreement is stated in the finding, it could only apply as regards unused coal. As to that coal, the facts are sufficient to defeat any right to recover the price agreed upon. But the agreement and its breach would not, as now found, in themselves prevent a recovery of the price of the coal which had been used. As far as that coal is concerned, the right to recover the price agreed upon could only be defeated by properly pleading and proving a breach of warranty. There is no basis in the pleadings for a recovery by the plaintiff of the reasonable value of the coal delivered to the defendants.