Court Opinion

ID: 7904818
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-08 21:59:20.655448+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:32:22.961871
License: Public Domain

The opinion of the court was delivered by
Dawson, J.:
This action grows out of an alleged breach of warranty in a horse trade.
The plaintiff Booth traded a stallion, “Cranmore King,” and gave $550 in cash to the defendant Scheer for a stallion, “Nig,” and a breeding jack.
Plaintiff alleged that defendant represented to him that the stallion “Nig” was sound and healthy and suitable for breed*644ing purposes, and that plaintiff relied thereon, but that such representation was false and fraudulent, and that defendant made such statement knowingly and for the purpose of cheating the plaintiff. He further alleged that three days after making this trade, plaintiff, still believing and relying on Scheer’s representation, traded “Nig” to one Earl Walters for an agreed value of $400, and in that trade he represented that “Nig” was in good health and sound physical condition. He alleged that “Nig” was not a sound and healthy horse; that he was a windbroken “whistler” of little or no value; and soon thereafter Walters sued the plaintiff for damages on account of the false representation made to him by the plaintiff Booth, and Booth notified defendant of that action and requested' him to appear and take charge of the defense. This Scheer failed to do, and Booth hired a lawyer and made a defense, but was defeated; and judgment was entered against him for $250 and interest. Plaintiff prayed for recoupment against Scheer.
Defendant admitted the trade, but denied the misrepresentation, and set up a cross claim for damages on account of alleged false representations of Booth touching the soundness of “Cranmore King.”
The jury returned a verdict for one dollar in defendant’s favor, and answered certain questions:
“1. Was there any change in the condition of health and soundness of the stallion traded by the defendant Scheer to the plaintiff Booth from the time the defendant traded such stallion to plaintiff until the plaintiff traded him to Earl Walters? Answer. No.
“2. Did the defendant represent to plaintiff that the stallion which defendant traded to plaintiff was sound when such trade was made? Answer. Yes.
“3. Did the plaintiff believe and rely upon such representation as being true when he traded for such stallion? Answer. Yes.
“4. What, if any sum, do you allow to the defendant by reason of any alleged unsoundness of the horse, ‘Cranmore King’? Answer. Nothing.”
“Special questions submitted by defendant:
“1. Was the wind of the stallion ‘Nig’ sound at the time defendant traded him to plaintiff? Answer. Yes.
“2. If the wind of said stallion ‘Nig’ was unsound at the time of the trade, did the defendant 'know it? Answer. No.”
Plaintiff’s motion non obstante for judgment on the special *645findings and admitted facts was sustained, and judgment was entered for plaintiff for the sum he had to pay Earl Walters in the action which Scheer had declined to defend. Defendant’s motion for judgment on the verdict was denied.
The defendant appeals. He complains of various matters, but his chief contention is that a warranty of a vendor of personalty does not run with the property, and therefore he was not bound-by the judgment which Walters recovered against plaintiff.
The question presented by appellant has not heretofore required much attention in this jurisdiction. In Thisler v. Keith, 7 Kan. App. 363, 52 Pac. 619, Thisler and Schneider sold a stallion to Coder, and warranted it to be sound. Coder sold the horse to Keith upon the same warranty. The horse proved to be unsound. Coder assigned to Thisler and Schneider certain notes given by Keith for the horse. They sued Keith on the notes, and he brought a cross action against them for breach of the warranty which they had given to Coder, and which in similar terms Coder had given to Keith. Keith prevailed three times before a jury, and the late court of appeals summarily ended the controversy, so far as the cross action was concerned, by holding, without discussion, that Thisler and Schneider were not liable to Keith on the warranty of the horse which they had given to Coder.
The general doctrine contended for by appellant seems to be settled in this country. With certain exceptions, like warranties in the sale of staple or trade-marked goods (Nixa v. Lehmann, 70 Kan. 664, 79 Pac. 141; Roberts v. Anheuser Busch Brewing Assoc., 211 Mass. 449; Conestoga Cigar Co. v. Finke, 144 Pa. St. 159, 13 L. R. A. 438; Mazetti v. Armour & Co., 75 Wash. 622, 48 L. R. A., n. s., 213, and some of these cases sound more in tort than in breach of warranty), the rule that warranties run with the property like covenants concerning real estate, or like indorsements on negotiable paper, does not apply in successive sales of ordinary chattel property. (See note in 51 L. R. A., n. s., 1111.) There is no privity of contract between the vendor in one sale and the subvendees of the same property in subsequent sales. Although the warranty may be couched in the same terms in each successive sale, the obligation of the warrantor in each sale is personal to *646his own vendee, and it is no concern of the warranting vendor that his vendee may have been subjected to liability by a reiteration of the same warranty in a later sale of the property. Each seller is liable for his own contract and to the extent thereof, but that alone will not determine his prior vendor’s obligation to him. Every succeeding vendor takes the chances on his own warranty; and he may, without having those chances foreclosed, decline to concern himself with litigation which arises between his vendee on a similar independent warranty given by the latter to a subsequent vendee. (Smith & Melton v. Moore, 7 S. C. 209, 24 Am. Rep. 479; Smith v. Williams, 117 Ga. 782.) On the general doctrine that a warranty upon the sale of personal property does, not run with the property, but that each reiteration of the warranty is a merely personal, independent obligation between each warrantor and his personal vendee, and creates no obligation on the part of the original warrantor to subsequent vendees, see: Nelson v. Armour Packing Company, 76 Ark. 352; Van Winkle & Company v. Wilkins et al., 81 Ga. 93, 105; 24 R. C. L., 159, 161.
In 35 Cyc. 370, the rule is stated:
“Ordinarily a warranty is addressed to some particular person, and the buyer alone can avail himself thereof. A warranty on the sale of personalty does not run with the property, and assignees of or purchasers from the buyer cannot avail themselves thereof as against the original seller, unless the assignee or purchaser assumes payment of the original purchase-price, or the warranty is specifically assigned to the second purchaser, or by a usage of the trade a warranty inures to the benefit of subsequent purchasers.”
In our examination of the law of this case, we have noted traces of a doctrine that a warranty of title sometimes runs with personal property (Boyd, Ex., v. Whitfield, 19 Ark. 447, and citations therein; 23 Cyc. 1272), but we have not pursued that inquiry as we have only to consider a warranty of soundness.
The soundness of a horse is so much a matter of opinion, and is so easily affected by change of care, or change of work, or of feed, water, or weather — surely this does not yet need to be elaborated, for the generation of lawyers and judges who are also experienced horsemen has not yet vanished — that it would never do to extend or apply the doctrine of warranties of title, if that doctrine be well-founded, to warranties of *647soundness to run with so changeable a form of property as a stallion.
From the foregoing it is clear that the fact that the plaintiff was subjected to a liability on his personal, independent warranty to his subvendee is not a controlling circumstance in this action against the defendant on the warranty of the latter to plaintiff. The jury’s special findings show that the stallion “Nig” was sound at the time defendant traded it to plaintiff; consequently, defendant’s personal warranty to plaintiff was not breached, and hence defendant has incurred no liability. That another jury, in another case, on facts which were presumably the same, came to a different conclusion as to the soundness of the stallion, is one of the mischances which attend the affairs of a work-a-day world where men do not always see alike.
The judgment is reversed, and the cause is remanded with instructions to enter judgment for defendant.