J. I. Case Threshing MacHinery Co. v. Dyches

January 7, 1918. The opinion of the Court was delivered by This is an action on three notes for the purchase money of a tractor engine, sold by the plaintiff to the defendant. The defendant executed a mortgage on the engine to secure the payment of said notes. The engine was sold under the mortgage, and from the proceeds the defendant received a credit of $495. The answer admitted the plaintiff's case, and alleged certain defenses and a counterclaim. (The record contains a statement as to these defenses and counterclaim, which will be reported.)

At the conclusion of the defendant's testimony, the plaintiff's attorneys made a motion for the direction of a verdict on the ground that there was no testimony tending to sustain the allegations of the answer as to fraud; also on the further ground thus stated:

"As to the question of failure of consideration, under the terms of the contract, if the question of fraud is out of the case, the contract sets forth certain warranties, and excludes all other warranties. The contract further states that those warranties are made under certain conditions, to wit, that after ten days' trial if there is any defect in the engine he must give written notice to plaintiff at Racine, Wis., and also to the local dealer, Mr. Wyman, at Aiken. The contract between the parties further provided that a failure to make the test or give the written notice, or to comply with the other conditions in the contract, shall be conclusive that the machine fulfilled the warranties, and the defendant is barred from claiming a breach of warranty or failure of consideration."

The jury under the direction of the Court rendered a verdict in favor of the plaintiff for $1,112.61, and the defendant appealed.

The first question that will be considered is whether there was any testimony tending to show fraud on the part of the *Page 416 plaintiff. The contract for the purchase of the engine bears date the 19th of August, 1915, and contains the following provisions:

"Said machinery is purchased upon and subject to the following mutual and interdependent conditions, and none other, namely: It is warranted to be made of good material, and durable with good care, and to be capable of doing more and better work, than any other machine made of equal size and proportions, working under the same conditions of the same job, if properly operated by competent persons, with suitable power, and the printed rules and directions of the manufacturers intelligently followed. The condition of the foregoing warranty is that if after a trial of ten days by the purchasers, operating in the manner specified, the machinery shall fail to fulfill the warranty, written notice thereof shall at once be given to the J.I. Case Company at Racine, Wis., and also to the dealer from whom received, stating in what parts and wherein it fails to fulfill the warranty. * * * Failure to give such notices in any respect shall be conclusive evidence of such fulfillment of warranty on the part of the said company, and that the machinery is satisfactory to the purchasers, and the company shall be released from all liability under the warranty."

The defendant admitted that he signed the receipt dated the 26th of August, 1915, acknowledging the delivery of the engine, which receipt, among other things, contained the following recitals:

"Received of the J.I. Case Threshing Machine Company one Case 12-25 horse power tractor engine gas, shop No. 3532, upon and subject to the terms and conditions of a printed and written order therefor signed by H.P. Dyches, bearing date the 19th day of August, 1915. A full, true and correct copy of which order has been received by affiant. That said order contains all the terms, conditions, promises, representations, warranties, guarantees and agreements on the part of said J.I. Case Threshing Machine Company, *Page 417 Incorporated, affecting the purchase of said machinery, and that no representations were made by any agents of said J. I. Case Threshing Machine Company, Incorporated, during the negotiations of sale or by any person conducting the negotiations on behalf of said company that were not set forth in said printed and written order before the same was signed by this affiant. That the settlement given by the affiant to said company for said machinery and the security therefor were examined and read before they were executed, and that the same are delivered pursuant to said order."

It was the duty of the defendant to read the contract and the receipt before signing either of them, especially as he was fully able to do so. Montgomery v. Scott,9 S.C. 43, 30 Am. Rep. 1; Baldwin v. Cable Co.,78 S.C. 419, 59 S.E. 67.

The so-called receipt was not only an acknowledgment that the engine had been delivered, but it was also a part of the contract, under which the plaintiff purchased the engine. The plaintiff did not contend that he did not read the receipt. If the statements therein contained are true, then he waived the right to insist that he did not read the contract, or that any representations were made by the defendant's agent. If the defendant had refused to sign the receipt with the statements therein set forth, but had been given notice that he had not read the contract, and that he was relying upon previous representations made by the agent, it is but reasonable to suppose that the plaintiff would have refused to deliver the engine. He cannot, therefore, take advantage of his own wrong.

The engine in question was supposed to be of the same horse power and in all respects similar to another engine manufactured by the plaintiffs, which the defendant had borrowed for the purpose of ascertaining whether such an engine would suit the work in which he was then engaged The plaintiff's agent who negotiated the sale in question was present when the experiments were being made with the borrowed *Page 418 engine. The defendant testified that when the borrowed engine was hitched to a four-horse plow it worked all right on the surface road, but when hitched to a six-horse plow it did not work satisfactorily; that the machine which he bought would not do more than 50 per cent. as well as the borrowed machine, working under like circumstances on the same class of work. The testimony does not show that the engines differed in any other material respect. The defendant, therefore, had full knowledge of the fact that even the borrowed engine which induced him to enter into the contract to purchase the engine in question did not have the power to do the intended work.

There is no testimony tending to show that the agent who sold the engine had ever seen it, or that he had any knowledge of the fact that it was not as capable of doing the work as the borrowed engine. It cannot, therefore, be successfully contended that he made any representations, knowing them to be untrue, for the purpose of deceiving the defendant. It is true there was testimony tending to show a breach of the contract, but that does not sustain the allegation of fraud. The exceptions raising this question are overruled.

While, as we have said, there is testimony tending to prove damages arising from a breach of the contract, it cannot be considered, for the reason that the plaintiff failed to serve notice that the engine was defective within ten days, as required by the contract.

Judgment affirmed. *Page 419