This action was brought'to recover the balance of the agreed price of a tank which the plaintiffs contracted to build for the defendant. The defense was that the tank was defective. It appears from the evidence that it was manufactured and delivered in the month of March, 1898, and that upon its immediate use the defendant • discovered that it leaked. TJpon notice the plaintiffs promptly offered to repair the defect. The defendant, however, refused, as he admits, to allow the plaintiffs to interfere with the tank or remedy the fault, for the reason that it would involve an interruption of his business, entailing a loss far in excess of any that might result through the leakage. The tank was in constant use from the time of delivery to the day of trial in November, 1898. At no time during that period of eight months did the defendant renew his complaint, or permit repair.
Under these circumstances we must hold that the defendant accepted the tank and he cannot at this late date interpose as a defense the existence of a defect discovered when he began its use. Brown v. Foster, 108 N. Y. 387; Chambers v. Lancaster, 3 App. Div. 215; Ellison v. Creed, 34 id. 15; Cassidy v. Le Fevre, 45 N. Y. 562; Logan v. Berkshire Apartment House, 3 Misc. Rep. 296.
In Brown v. Foster, the court, speaking of certain defective machinery supplied for a saw-mill, say: “He used the machinery in the prosecution of his business, and although complaining did not intermit its use. Knowing its defects he continued to run it. * * * The continued use of the machine in the promotion of his own business interests, with knowledge of its imperfections, was an unequivocal act of acceptance which no words of his own could qualify.”
In Chambers v. Lancaster, supra, it is said: “ after the machines had repeatedly broken down in vital parts, and the inadequacy of the machines to perform the specified work had become apparent, the defendant company still continued to use them. This operated as an acceptance.”
So in the case at bar the continued use of the tank with knowledge of its defect, coupled with the refusal to permit the plaintiffs to remedy it, constituted an acceptance and rendered the defendant liable for the purchase price.
The judgment must, therefore, be reversed.
Freedman, P. J., and MacLean, J,, concur.
Judgment reversed and new trial ordered, with costs to appellant to abide event.