Court Opinion

ID: 6436863
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-06-25 12:13:16.704926+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:52:24.956192
License: Public Domain

Braley, J.
The defendant on March 28,1921, purchased of the plaintiff an amusement device known as the “ Dodgem,” consisting of fifteen cars, and on May 16, 1921, she bought three additional cars and gave in payment her promissory note. The case was tried on the second count of the declaration, which is for the balance with interest of the contract price due on the first purchase, and on the third count to recover the amount of the note with interest according to its tenor. The defendant, relying on the averments of her answer, made an offer of proof, that prior to the purchase of any of the cars the plaintiff wrote the defendant that *552“ We are putting in the very best of material and that costs money, very much more than we anticipated, but the result is worth it, the new cars will last for many years without repairs of any kind”; and that the plaintiff’s duly authorized agent, prior to the purchase of said cars, told the defendant at different times that “ said cars were constructed of first-class material, and that they would stand up and perform the service required of them and would not require any repairs for several years”; that “said cars soon after delivery showed faulty construction and were continually out of repair and that a number of said cars became useless and they were wholly unfit for the service intended for, causing the defendant great financial loss, and that the defendant has offered to return said cars and rescind the contract of sale”; that “the defendant wholly relied on the representations of the plaintiff’s agent as to the workmanship and stability of said cars and had no means of personal knowledge to the contrary, and that an inspection would not disclose their faulty construction or latent defects.”
The offer of proof was properly excluded, and the verdict for the plaintiff was ordered rightly. The sale of all the cars was under contracts in writing in which no express warranty of any kind appears. The exceptions state, that the plaintiff held letters patent issued by the United States on the device, and that the cars were sold under the name of “ ‘ Dodgem Cars’, which name had been copyrighted in the United States Patent Office.” The sale having been of a specific patented article under its trade name, there was no implied warranty of fitness for any particular purpose. G. L. c. 106, § 17, cl. 4. It was so assumed in Boston Consolidated Gas Co. v. Folsom, 237 Mass. 565, 568, and there is no sufficient reason why the statute should not be followed in the case at bar. Quemahoning Coal Co. v. Sanitary Earthenware Specialty Co. 88 N. J. Law, 174. The contracts which are complete and unambiguous have not been rescinded, and Bates v. Cashman, 230 Mass. 167, which was a bill in equity to rescind a contract, and Churchill v. Palmer, 115 Mass. 310, 333, where there was an express warranty of the goods sold, cited and relied on by the defendant, are inapplicable *553on the present record. See Boston Consolidated Gas Co. v. Folsom, 237 Mass. 565, 567.
The defendant also contends, that she is entitled to damages for loss sustained by reason of false representations of the defendant’s agent as stated in the offer of proof. But, without deciding whether an action thereon for deceit could be maintained at common law, this cross demand has not been pleaded in recoupment and it cannot be considered. Graham v. Middleby, 213 Mass. 437, 444. Borden v. Fine, 212 Mass. 425, 428. Merchants Heat & Light Co. v. J. B. Clow & Sons, 204 U. S. 286. See Virginia-Carolina Chemical Co. v. Kirven, 215 U. S. 252.

Exceptions overruled.