Court Opinion

ID: 7895587
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-08 21:52:17.961523+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:32:04.360766
License: Public Domain

The opinion of the court was delivered by
Cunningham, J.:
This was an action to recover from Claudel for certain thrashing machinery sold to him by the Ferguson Implement Company. The Ferguson Implement Company was the agent of the Huber Manufacturing Company.
It seems that one G. J. Ferguson, the president of the Ferguson Implement Company, made an oral contract with Claudel for the sale to him of a second*442hand Avery separator which both parties had in mind and which was to have a thirty-two-inch cylinder. After the contract was made Ferguson came to Claudel and presented to him an order for the machinery and requested him to sign the same, “in order that the machinery might be shipped forthwith.” Thereupon the order was signed, it being in words and figures as follow:
“Claudell, Kan., August 29.
“Ferguson Implement Company, Kansas City, Mo.:
“You will please ship at once one second-hand Avery separator, with wind-stacker, self-feeder, and weigher; one Ideal water tank; one. Myers low-down pump and hose; one main drive belt, eight inch, four ply, to go with the sixteen-horse-power engine you traded for from Henry Schlousky.
“I agree to pay one-half the freight on separator from Kansas City and give you my note due September 15, 1908, for ten hundred and twenty dollars.
Yours respectfully, F. M. Claudel.”
The machinery was duly shipped and received by Claudel, but he was unable to make it work, after thirteen days of trial, with the assistance of a man sent out by the plaintiff, for the reason, as was then discovered, that the separator had a thirty-six-inch cylinder instead of a thirty-two-inch, and therefore exceeded the power of the engine which the defendant had to operate it.. Upon the discovery of this fact the defendant tendered back the machinery and refused to pay for it. The defendant’s answer set out these mat-ters in defense, and in a cross-petition claimed damages resultant to him from the failure of an oral warranty which he claimed was made to him as to the character and quality of the machine. He further claimed that the written order which the plaintiff counted upon by mutual mistake omitted to state that the separator was to have a thirty-two-inch cylinder.
A demurrer to so much of the cross-petition as claimed damages on account of the failure of the oral warranty was sustained, and that phase of defend*443.ant’s cross-petition was eliminated from the case. The action, proceeded to a trial upon the mixed theory that the order counted upon was not a contract made between the parties, but the oral agreement was the true contract, the order having been made simply for the purpose of expediting the delivery. This was alleged in the answer and admitted in a reply; and the further claim that if the written order was the contract the size of the cylinder which the separator was to have was omitted by mutual mistake. However, the judge in his instructions-seemed to have confined the attention of the jury to the question of mutual mistake.
It is claimed that error was committed in the admission of evidence to show that there was a mutual mistake made in the written .contract or order by its failure to specify the length of the cylinder. This claim is made upon the theory that it was incompetent to-•change the written contract by parol evidence, and the case of Ehrsam v. Brown, 64 Kan. 466, 67 Pac. 867, is cited in support of this claim. This contention is untenable. In that case there was no claim of mutual mistake. It was there claimed by the defendant that the writing which appeared to be complete on its face did not contain all of the agreement beween the parties, but no claim was made that there had been any omission by reason of mutual mistake.
It has been long recognized that a court may supply ■matters omitted from a written contract either by mutual mistake or fraud, and having supplied such matters may enforce the contract as thus reformed. Nor is it essential that formal reformation shall be directed before enforcement of the contract as the court finds it should have been made will be ordered.
In the progress of the trial the defendant offered in evidence certain typewritten and typesigned letters purporting to have come from the Ferguson Implement Company-. Two of them were addressed to Clau*444del and one to J. P. Wheatley, who seemed to have been acting in some agency capacity for the implement company at Claudell station. As to two of these letters their admissibility is clearly made out by the fact that it was shown that they were received in answer to letters written, properly posted, and sent to the Ferguson Implement Company. To identify the other Mr. Wheatley was put upon the stand, and after having been shown several letters purporting to have come from the Ferguson Implement Company, signed in the same way that the letters offered in evidence were signed, was asked the following questions:
“Ques. The letters you have identified are letters you have received in answer to letters that you wrote to and directed to the Ferguson Implement Company,, are they? Ans. Yes, sir.
“Q. What did you do with the letters that you wrote to this company? A. I mailed them. Sent them through the mail.
“Q. With the proper stamps on, and directed to-the Ferguson Implement Company? A. Yes, sir.
“Q. And these letters you have identified are letters that you received in reply? A. In answer to my letters; yes, sir.
“Q. I will ask you to state whether or not the letter — if the signature to the letter marked ‘Exhibit Ar [the letter then sought to be introduced in evidence] is the signature of the Ferguson Implement Company; what is your answer? A. It was.”
This constituted a sufficient identification of the questioned letter. For all that is shown there might have been, and could easily have been, some peculiarity in the manner of writing or the character of the letters of the typewriter that would serve to identify the letter by comparison with those he had received from the company. There might have been an individuality in the body or signature that would make it recognizable. The witness testified positively that it was the signature of the Ferguson Implement Company ; he was not asked to state upon what particulars *445his belief was based. We cannot say that abundant basis for identification did not exist.
It is claimed that one of the answers to a special question submitted to the jury is not sustained by the evidence. We are hardly called upon to discuss this question for three good reasons: (1) It is not raised by the assignment of error; (2) it was not called to the attention of the court below in a motion for a new trial; (3) the plaintiff in error made no exceptions to the special findings for any reason, but adopted them by moving for judgment in his favor upon them.
Some criticism is made upon the court’s instructions to the jury, but we do not find them faulty in any respect suggested.
The'judgment of the court below is affirmed.
All the Justices concurring.