Court Opinion

ID: 8262685
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-10-16 15:56:17.790235+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:43:14.041524
License: Public Domain

BLAND, P. J.
To the admission of defendant’s evidence, the plaintiff objected on the ground that plaintiff was an innocent holder of the note for value before maturity, and that the consideration could not be inquired into. The court overruled the obj ection, holding the note to be non-negotiable. This ruling is assigned as error.
It will be discovered from an inspection of the note that it provides that if its collection is enforced by law, the maker agreed to pay ten per cent of the amount due (principal and *458interest), as an attorney’s fee. In McCoy v. Green, 83 Mo. loc. cit. 633, it was said of a note containing a similar contract: “This, under the well-settled law of this State, is not a negotiable promissory note, and the plaintiff holds the same subject to an inquiry into the valdity of the consideration.” Bank v. Jacobs, 73 Mo. 35; Bank v. Gay, 71 Mo. 627; Bank v. Marlow, 71 Mo. 618; Bank v. Gray, 63 Mo. 33; and Clark v. Barnes, 58 Mo. App. 667, support McCoy v. Green, supra. The element of uncertainty, as to the amount that might become due on the paper, destroys its negotiable character. 1 Parsons on Bills and Notes, 37; Tiedeman on Commercial Paper, 286.
II. Plaintiff assigns as error the giving of the following instruction for defendant: “Even though the jury may believe that the defendant, in July, did give an order to the McCormick Machine Company for a corn harvester without a bundle carrier, yet if you further believe that on or about the thirteenth day of August, 1897, when said harvester arrived at Centralia, he refused to receive the same and so informed the agents of the said company, and that thereupon the said company through its agent, Burks or Sprowl, informed the defendant that if he would take said machine out he would be supplied with a bundle carrier, and on said statement the defendant received and removed said machine, then there was a sale to him of a harvester with a bundle carrier; and if you believe said bundle carrier was not delivered to Gray within a reasonable time after said sale, he is not bound on said note if he offered back to McCormick’s agents the machinery he received from them.” The contention is that there is no evidence that the bundle carrier was warranted to do any particular kind of work. The instruction was drawn on the hypothesis that the binder and carrier were both contracted for and agreed to be furnished at the same time and that the reception of the binder *459was with the 'understanding that the carrier would be furnished also. The plaintiff’s testimony is that the binder was expressly warranted to do satisfactory work — the two when combined were designed to harvest, bind and bunch the corn ready to be set up in shocks; it was on the representations of the McCormick company,, through its agents, that this would be done by combining the two machines, that the defendant, according to his evidence, was induced to make the purchase of both machines. The one was expressly warranted, the other, if not expressly warranted, was sold to do a particular work, to-wit, to bunch the bound bundles of corn, that it would reasonably accomplish the purpose for which it was constructed and sold, the law implies a warranty. Comings v. Leedy, 114 Mo. loc. cit. 478; Armstrong v. Johnson, 41 Mo. App. 254; Lee v. Sickles Saddlery Co., 38 Mo. App. 201; Benjamin on Sales, secs. 987-988.
III. Plaintiff assigns as error the giving of the fourth instruction for defendant: “The jury is instructed that if they believe from the evidence that the McCormick Machine Company, through either or both of its agents, Burks and Sprowl, agreed to sell and deliver to the defendant a corn harvester with a bundle carrier attachment, and that the,said machine company failed to deliver to defendant the bundle carrier within a reasonable time after the sale of the same, then the defendant was not bound to take the said machinery and had a right to rescind said sale, and if the jury believe he did rescind said sale and offered to return said machinery to said company and demanded the return of his note, then your verdict will be for the defendants.” The defense was, not that the carrier was not delivered within a reasonable time, but that after delivery and after trial, it was found to be worthless, and this instruction is, therefore, not in accord with the evidence, nor with any theory of the defense and should not have been given, but we *460think the error a harmless one as the jury could not have been misled by it.
IV. Exceptions to the sixth instruction for defendant were saved at the trial and were urged here for a reversal of the judgment. The instruction is as follows: “The court instructs the jury that a 'contract of sale between the vendor and vendee becomes executed, not upon delivery of the chattel to the vendee, but upon its acceptance by him, and in this case, if you believe from the evidence that the defendant Gray never agreed, to accept and retain as his own, any part of the machinery delivered to him, then there was no sale, notwithstanding the whole or any part of said machinery was delivered to him and retained in his possession from August 13, 1897, to this date, and in this connection the jury are further instructed that so long as the contract of sale is executory, the vendee is not bound to accept a chattel which is different from the one sold, whether the difference be one of kind, quality or quantity; and, therefore, if you find the defendant never accepted as his own the harvesting machine, and the ,McCormick company never tendered him such machine and carrier as it contracted to furnish him, and he never accepted what they tendered, then there was no sale and the note is without consideration and the verdict must be for defendant.” The evidence of defendant was that he bought both machines for one hundred and twenty dollars, and gave the note in suit for the purchase price, that the binder was delivered at one time and the carrier at a later date. According to this evidence, the contract remained open and executory until both machines were received and accepted by the defendant. And, after their delivery, he had a reasonable time to test them before being compelled to accept them, for the reason they were sold on a warranty to do the work for which they were constructed, which could only be ascertained by trial. 1 Benjamin on Sales, sec. 703; Lamar W. E. & L. Co. v. City *461of Lamar, 140 Mo. 145. And lie had the right to test both machines before accepting either, if they were bought together to be operated in combination, before rescinding or offering to rescind the contract.
The evidence of defendant is that when he made a test of the carrier, he found it to be a total failure and worthless for the purpose for which it was designed, and that when he ascertained this fact he at once notified the agent of the McCormick company of the worthlessness of the carrier and that he would not accept either machine. Hnder this state of the evidence there was no acceptance of the machinery by the defendant and no sale of either the binder or carrier. The instruction was drawn to express this view of the law and is substantially correct.
V. The objection to the seventh instruction is answered by a restatement of the law that the adaptation of machinery to the use for which it is made is always warranted. Comings v. Leedy, Lee v. Sickles Saddlery Co., supra.
VI. There was no conflict between the seventh instruction for defendant and those given for plaintiff. Plaintiff’s are predicated on his contention that the carrier was not sold with the binder, the defendant’s on his contention that the sale was of both machines.
VII. The ninth instruction in effect told the jury that if in 1898 the agent of the McCormick company went to defendant’s and undertook to work the binder and carrier together and could not make them work, and advised the defendant to have nothing more to do with the machine, and that defendant thereafter did not use or attempt to use the machine, that the contract of sale was rescinded and defendant released of any liability on his note.. If the agent of the McCormick company had authority to rescind the contract — and his authority to do so is not challenged by the plaintiff — there is evidence in the re*462cord to support the instruction, and while it is somewhat vague and not as complete and definite as it should have been drawn, we do not think that it furnishes any substantial ground for reversal, and affirm the judgment.
All concur.