Opinion
No. 36119.
May 13, 1946.
1. SALES.
Buyer was not entitled to refund of purchase price paid for second-hand outboard motor because motor proved defective, unless its fitness was expressly warranted.
2. SALES.
In action for refund of price paid for second-hand outboard motor which seller warranted to be in good condition but needing repairs, for which an allowance of $10 was made in the purchase price, and which motor buyer alleged proved to be defective, evidence failed to show breach of any express warranty.
3. SALES.
Warranty that a second-hand article is in good condition but requires repairs to restore utility means only that article can be made usable by reasonable repairs.
4. SALES.
Buyer's acceptance of second-hand outboard motor without inspection or test with full knowledge that repairs would be needed to make it operable and retention thereof for five or six months without offer to cancel transaction were inconsistent with any contention that particular defects other than those implied by acknowledged necessity for general overhauling, existed in violation of any express warranty.
APPEAL from circuit court of Adams county, HON. R.E. BENNETT, Judge.
C.F. Patterson, of Natchez, for appellant.
It is a well settled question that the court has the power to grant a peremptory instruction.
Illinois Cent. R. Co. v. Fowler, 123 Miss. 826, 86 So. 460; Mobile O.R. Co. v. Clay, 156 Miss. 463, 125 So. 819; Newton v. Homochitto Lumber Co., 162 Miss. 20, 138 So. 564; Fatherree v. Griffin, 153 Miss. 570, 121 So. 119.
There is no implied warranty in the sale of a second-hand machine.
Johnson v. Carden, 187 Ala. 142, 65 So. 813; 55 C.J. 751; 35 Cyc. 408.
Failure to return the motor within a reasonable time after discovering the alleged defects constituted an acceptance.
Lumbermen's Supply Co. v. Poplarville Sawmill Co., 117 Miss. 274, 78 So. 157; J.B. Colt Co. v. Odom, 136 Miss. 651, 101 So. 853; Kanson Hat Cap Mfg. Co. v. J.D. Blakeney Son, 142 Miss. 851, 108 So. 139.
E.H. Ratcliff, of Natchez, for appellee.
Plaintiff purchased and paid for in cash an outboard motor which plaintiff and other witnesses testified was wholly unfit for the purposes for which it was intended to be used and that the defendant expressly warranted the said motor to be in "good condition" with the exception of certain minor repairs which he and the plaintiff estimated would entail a cost of $10, said $10 being deducted from the original purchase price of the motor, to-wit: $150. The overwhelming preponderance of the evidence adduced on the trial of the case conclusively showed that said motor was in fact hopelessly defective and wholly unfit for the purposes for which it was purchased and with which purpose the defendant was fully acquainted. There was ample testimony to the effect that the defendant expressly warranted the motor to be in "Good" or "A-1" condition. Defendant claimed that there was no express warranty as to the condition of the motor and that if there had been, there had been no breach of such warranty for the reason that the motor was in good condition and capable of performing the uses to which it was expected to be put by the plaintiff. The issue thus was joined and submitted to the jury under appropriate instructions of the court and the jury found in favor of the plaintiff in the full amount sued for, to-wit: $140, said amount being the amount paid by plaintiff to defendant for the motor. The defendant asks a reversal of the judgment entered on the verdict of the jury for the failure of the court to grant a peremptory instruction for the defendant.
So it must be perfectly apparent to this court that the plaintiff made out, at least, a prima facie case sufficient to take the case to the jury. There was testimony as to the existence of the express warranty, excuse for delay in returning the motor to the seller and of the breach of the warranty. These were the elements of plaintiff's case. The jury believed there was an express warranty and that the warranty had been breached. They believed that under the circumstances Lawrence acted with due diligence in returning the motor to the seller and that he seasonably demanded his money back.
See Williams v. McClain, 180 Miss. 6, 176 So. 717; Avery v. Staples (Tex.), 183 S.W. 43; Johnson v. Lanter, 87 Kans. 32, 123 P. 719; Conroy v. Coughlon, 181 Iowa 916, 165 N.W. 200; Skeen v. Springfield Engine Co., 34 Mo. App. 485; Barber Medicine Co. v. Bradley, 48 Okla. 82, 150 P. 127; 55 C.J. 803; 46 Am. Jur. 776, 894, 895, 904.
It is too well established in this state to require the citation of authority that in determining the propriety of a peremptory instruction the evidence is to be taken most strongly against him who asks for the instruction.
American Trading Co. v. Ingram-Day Lumber Co., 110 Miss. 31, 69 So. 707.
It is likewise the rule, reported by innumerable authorities, that it is error to give a peremptory instruction on a point on which the testimony is conflicting.
Brenard Mfg. Co. v. Baird, 141 Miss. 110, 106 So. 82; Bryant v. Enochs Lumber Mfg. Co., 94 Miss. 454, 49 So. 113.
Lawrence, as plaintiff, brought suit against Voos for refund of the amount of purchase price paid by plaintiff for an outboard motor alleged to have proven defective. From a judgment for plaintiff, Voos appeals. The only assignment to be reviewed is the refusal of the trial court to grant a peremptory instruction for the defendant.
The motor was second-hand. Wherefore, unless there was an express warrant of fitness, there can be no recovery. See Williams v. McClain, 180 Miss. 6, 176 So. 717.
On this the record indicates that plaintiff came to the shop of defendant to have some tires recapped. Upon discovering the motor belonging to defendant, inquiry was made as to its condition. Defendant stated that it was `in good condition', but that it needed repairs. Inquiry elicited that defendant would be willing to sell it for $150, but in view of its need for repairs would allow the sum of $10 therefor making the net price $140, which was thereupon paid and delivery made. Plaintiff requested no inspection but, aware of its second-hand condition, and its need for some adjustments, inquired only as to the name of a suitable repair man.
According to the testimony for the plaintiff, the motor was taken to a mechanic who was unable to make it run. Defendant's witnesses testified that they not only adjusted it so that it could operate, but actually ran it satisfactorily in propelling a boat.
The transaction was made February 17, 1945. Some months later the motor was returned to defendant's place of business by plaintiff who reported his inability to make it function. Plaintiff did not demand a restoration of his purchase price, nor was the motor surrendered to Voos. The expressed purpose was to avail of Voos' offer to take it to New Orleans for accommodation of the purchaser to be adjusted. This was according to the testimony some time in August or late in July. A few days later plaintiff decided to demand return of the purchase price. Upon refusal, suit was brought September 28, 1945.
There was no designation as to the nature or extent of the repairs required to restore function, nor any warranty that the repair allowance of $10 would cover same. Plaintiff expended only $3 of the allowance. At no time between the date of purchase and the demand to rue back on the transaction was there any purpose to do otherwise than effectuate its repair. Plaintiff disavows any intention to do otherwise than to get it fixed.
We are of the opinion that there was no breach of any express warranty. Both parties understood that the motor was second-hand and needed some repairs, the exact nature of which neither could say with certainty. This situation, made part of the transaction by an allowance upon the purchase price made in view of such necessity, divests the assurance of `good condition' of whatever import of warranty it might otherwise have carried. A warranty that a second-hand article is in good condition but requires repairs to restore utility can mean no more than that the article can be made usable by reasonable repair. The record does not disclose that such is not the case. Moreover, plaintiff's acceptance of the motor without inspection or test in full knowledge that repairs would be needed to make it operable, together with his retention thereof for five or six months without offer to cancel the transaction, was inconsistent with any contention that particular defects, other than those implied by the acknowledged necessity for general overhauling, existed in violation of some express warranty. Compare J.B. Colt Company v. Odom, 136 Miss. 651, 101 So. 853; J.B. Colt Company v. Madingo, 141 Miss. 402, 106 So. 533; Kanson Hat Cap Mfg. Company v. J.D. Blakeney, 142 Miss. 851, 108 So. 139. There was in this interval no complaint of his bargain but only of the article. It is true that the motor was finally left at Voos' place, but it was returned, not for redelivery but in conformity with plaintiff's persistent purpose to effectuate the repairs, of whose need he was completely aware at the time he solicited its sale to himself.
We do not belittle the importance of the issues here raised, nor speak in derogation of their right to serious consideration by taking into account the testimony that all popular prime movers of the type here involved are subject to recurrent spells of perverse inertia. These vexing traits, although beyond the reach of judicial knowledge would seem to invite judicial suspicion when, as here, they are fortified by cognizable report. It is no digression into fantasy for us to sense that there has gathered about these devices a tradition of eccentricity which confounds their users with an unpredictable whimsy and obstinacy. There are intimations that their capricious functioning is irresponsive to cajolery, diatribe or established ritual. That they, especially if theretofore exposed to prolonged usage, can be depended upon for naught else than unreliability is reflected by the record. It is disclosed that some witnesses, either by good fortune or superior gifts, had coaxed this one into useful function.
Subjection to these harassing uncertainties may well have been spared by an express or unconditional warranty, yet defendant was not so bold or trustful, nor did plaintiff assume that fate would exempt him from his traditional risk.
In these circumstances there was no warranty that the motor was unqualifiedly in sound workable condition at the time of its sale, nor was there any such disparity between the condition as represented and as revealed as to constitute either deception or breach of warranty. The peremptory instruction requested by the defendant ought to have been given.
Reversed and judgment here for appellant.