This action is brought to recover the balance claimed to be due upon the purchase price of an automatic bottle-washing machine, with incidental equipment for its operation. The whole purchase price was $1,500, in partial payment of which the plaintiff had accepted from the defendant a water pump at an agreed value of $150. The defendant pleaded by way of special defense and counterclaim certain representations made to him by the plaintiff, so drawing his pleadings as to base upon those representations both a claim of fraud and one for breach of express warranty. The trial court submitted both aspects of the case to the jury and they returned a verdict in which they found the issues for the plaintiff upon the complaint and for the defendant upon the counterclaim and found that the plaintiff recover $1,512 damages. The trial court later ordered a remittitur of $12, as the complaint claimed only $1,500 damages, and this was filed. *Page 97
The instructions to the jury as to the method by which they should determine the amount of damages in the event that they found the issues raised by the counterclaim for the defendant, were neither clear nor accurate. No good purpose would be served by analyzing them. No adequate guidance upon this part of the case was afforded to the jury, and that they did not in fact apply correct principles of law is strongly suggested by the verdict, which, while finding the issues upon the counterclaim for the defendant, yet awarded the plaintiff the full amount of the balance due upon the purchase price, with interest to the date of trial. A new trial must be ordered.
The difficulty the trial court found in the situation grew out of an assumed necessity of explaining to the jury how damages were to be assessed according as they found the defendant to be entitled to recover upon his counterclaim more or less than the balance due to the plaintiff upon the purchase price. In fact in the counterclaim only $1,000 damages were claimed. Upon the record it is clear that if the plaintiff was entitled to recover the balance of the purchase price at all, it was entitled to the agreed price of the machine less the agreed value of the pump given in partial payment, that is, $1,350, and consequently there was no possibility of the damages recoverable upon the counterclaim being greater than the balance due upon the purchase price. Upon this phase of the case all that was necessary was an instruction to the jury to the effect that, if they found the defendant entitled to recover damages upon the counterclaim, they should determine the amount of those damages by finding the difference between the value of the machine as delivered and the value it would have had, had it been as represented; Ford v. Dubiskie Co., Inc., 105 Conn. 572, *Page 98 578, 136 A. 560; and that in order to ascertain the amount which the plaintiff was entitled to recover they should then deduct this sum, or, if it exceeded the amount claimed to be due in the counterclaim, $1,000, then the latter sum, from the balance due upon the purchase price of the machine.
One other claim of error demands attention. The claims of the parties as to the facts proven show them to be in substantial agreement that, after several attempts had been made to adjust the machine to avoid objections raised by the defendant as to its manner of operation, he finally notified the plaintiff that he did not want it, but that he did thereafter keep and use it for a time, claimed by the plaintiff to be ten days. The trial court charged the jury quite at length upon the issue whether the defendant had accepted the machine so that he was not in a position to claim a rescission of the contract and would be relegated to the recovery of such damages as he could prove under the counterclaim, and it called special attention in that connection to the use of the machine during the period of attempted adjustment to meet the defendant's objections, and the further use for the period after the defendant notified the plaintiff that he did not want it. No complaint is made of this portion of the charge, but the defendant claims error in the failure of the trial court to further charge that the defendant had the right to use the machine, if necessary, to reduce the damage he would otherwise suffer, pending the arrival of another machine he had ordered. Even under our liberal system of permitting counsel to take exceptions to the charge of the court in the absence of any request, reversible error could hardly have been predicated upon a failure to include so incidental a matter, in the absence of any showing that it was called to the attention *Page 99 of the trial court. Pratt, Read Co. v. NewYork, N. H. H.R. Co., 102 Conn. 735, 741,130 A. 102. If, however, the evidence did disclose a situation where reasonable prudence upon the part of the defendant, having in mind any harm that might be done to the machine by its use, dictated that, in order to minimize the damages he would suffer, he use the machine during the period that must elapse before he could secure another, and it appeared that he did so use it for that purpose, these circumstances would be relevant upon the issue of his acceptance of the machine, and the trial court, upon having its attention called to them, ought properly to include them in its charge.
There is error, the judgment is set aside and a new trial is ordered.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.