Court Opinion

ID: 3614028
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 23:57:35.138395+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:23:15.907070
License: Public Domain

This action was brought to recover the purchase price of goods sold by plaintiff to the defendant. The defense is that such goods were sold under a warranty, that they did not comply with the warranty and were promptly rejected. The action has been tried three times. On the first trial the plaintiff recovered a judgment which was reversed by the Appellate Division practically because the verdict was against the weight of evidence. On the second trial there was a disagreement of the jury and on the third trial, involved in this appeal, plaintiff again recovered a judgment.
The defendant has at all times insisted that there was a warranty and that the goods did not comply therewith and he further insists that the plaintiff's position upon this point has changed between the first and the last trial; that whereas on the last trial he denied that any warranty was given and admitted that the goods did not comply with such a warranty if given, on the *Page 15 
first trial he admitted that such a warranty was given and claimed that the goods complied therewith.
Since upon the last trial the sole issue litigated was the one whether a warranty had been given, the defendant was entitled to the benefit of any evidence which tended to show that his adversary had changed position and in some form had admitted a warranty which he was then denying. I think that he offered some evidence of this character which was erroneously excluded. He attempted to show that on the first trial the plaintiff in reply to the question, "Did you sell that merchandise (the merchandise involved in this action) as absolutely perfect?" answered, "Yes, sir," but the evidence was excluded upon the objection that it was incompetent.
As I understand it we are all agreed that the evidence was competent and that it was error to exclude it, the only difference of opinion being whether the error was so immaterial that it can be disregarded. I do not think that it was of such a character. As has already been pointed out this litigation has been strenuously contested and in its last stages took the form that the only dispute between the parties was over the single question whether a warranty had been given by plaintiff upon the sale of the goods. The evidence upon this issue was not very unevenly divided and if the jury had been convinced that the plaintiff had changed his position and had at one time admitted a warranty which he was then denying, their verdict would quite probably have been affected by such evidence. I think that the testimony which defendant sought to introduce may bear the interpretation which he places upon it and that this being so it was a substantial error to exclude it.
I, therefore, recommend that the judgment be reversed and a new trial granted, costs to abide event.
HOGAN, POUND and McLAUGHLIN, JJ., concur; CARDOZO, CRANE and ANDREWS, JJ., dissent.
Judgment reversed, etc. *Page 16