Crankshaw v. Schweizer Manufacturing Co.

Russell, J.

1, 2. The plaintiff in error assigns the refusal of a new trial, upon his motion and amendments thereto, to be the error which should be corrected. The first three grounds of the motion are in the stereotyped form commonly called the general grounds, and sometimes known as a skeleton motion; but they call for a complete review and weighing of the evidence as it appears in the record, which in this case is by no means brief. We have taken the pains to travel deliberately more than once through the very voluminous record in this case and to examine its contents most critically. We have been enlightened on some of the principles of natural philosophy as applied to., cabinet-making, and have become conversant with some phases of the jewelry business. This court, however, being restricted to the correction of errors of law and in equity, the only legitimate purpose of our journey through, the evidence embodied in the record is the discovery of errors of law; and especially to determine, so far as the three original grounds of the motion are concerned, whether the refusal of avnew trial is an error of law because the verdict is without evidence to support it. In considering the three general grounds alone, it may be stated, as a general rule, that if the evidence is sufficient to support the verdict, it should not be interfered with, unless (a) some ruling of the court improperly withheld from the consideration of the jury evidence which they should have had, and which might have contributed to a different result; or (6) unless the judge illegally permitted matters to be considered by the jury which were foreign to the true issues, and which he should not have allowed them to use in making their verdict; or (c) unless the court’s instructions to the jury in the charge were erroneous, inapplicable, or misleading. We use the word “matters” in subhead (6), for the reason that it may include, in some eases, not only testimony of witnesses — matters of proof, but also various matters of fact, such ds improper conduct of the court, counsel, parties, officers of court, spectators, or the jury themselves. This statement is not exhaustive, and of. course has reference peculiarly to motions based on ordinary general *367grounds. It has no application to motions dependent on refusals to grant continuances, on newly discovered testimony, or other extraordinary grounds, nor to a ground based on the denial of a right —such as is insisted on in this case — of opening and concluding. Considering the general grounds first, taken by themselves, it is our opinion that there was no error in refusing a new trial upon either contention of the skeleton motion, or upon all three of them taken as a whole. We therefore proceed to consider the several grounds presented in the amendment. These are thirteen in number.

3, 4. In the first the movant insists that he was wrongly deprived of the right to open and conclude the case in the argument before the jury. He-was the defendant, and the justness of his claim to the opening and conclusion is to be. determined by the extent of his admissions. Did he admit a prima facie case? It can not be doubted that this question is to be answered by a comparison in this case of the allegations in the petition with the answer thereto. We think the placing of petition and plea in parallel columns 'demonstrates that a prima facie case was not admitted.

Petition.

The plaintiff entered into a contract with the defendant to furnish him four wall eases for the sum of $3800. The cases were delivered and installed in the store of the defendant on April 31, 1903. The plaintiff has fully complied with its contract; 'the defendant has paid $3079.59, leaving due $730.41, besides interest, payment of which has been refused on demand.

Pleas.

The cases referred to were delivered and installed in the defendant’s store; but the petition does not set up the contract between the parties; the real contract is set up in paragraph five of the answer. The cases were not duly set up. The plaintiff did not fully comply with its contract and the defendant is not indebted in any sum. Demand for payment was made, and rightly refused.

And the remainder of the plea mentions many other items in respect to which a contract was not complied with; We do not think that to say a contract has been made, but has failed in any material or essential particular can be construed as an admission that the contract was fully complied with. It is possible for cases *368to arise, and for the petition to be so skillfully framed, that to admit the plaintiff’s ease would bring, as an inevitable result, a verdict for the plaintiff, and it is perhaps true in this case. Nevertheless the law requires such an admission of a prima facie case as would entitle plaintiff to recovery without proof of any material fact, before the defendant can gain the conclusion. Abel v. Jarratt, 100 Ga. 732; Reid v. Sewell, 111 Ga. 880; Phœnix Ins. Co. v. Gray, 113 Ga. 433. The original petition in this case seeking to recover upon a contract between the parties, before there could be a recovery for the full sum sued for, it must have been either admitted or proved (1) that the contract sued upon was in fact made; (3) and that the plaintiff had fully complied with that contract. The plea denies both these defenses; it disputes the contract sued on being the one made, and affirms that it was not complied with. The very essential allegations of the petition are negatived. It denies that the contract was ever complied with, and denies that there is any sum due. The admission that a contract was made does not meet the requirements when it is insisted that it was only partly complied with. The main body of the contract can not be admitted for the purpose of making a prima facie case, and at the same time the plaintiff’s case be destroyed by showing a breach of warranties inevitably forming a part of the contract. Bverjr stipulation and warranty is as much a part of the contract as the consideration is, and just as inseparable as the names of the parties. “Often they are the heart and soul of the whole contract, without which neither party could have been induced to contract.” We think it clear that defendant was not entitled to the o]3ening and the conclusion. The opening and conclusion in a case on trial before a jury is a very important and substantial right, and its improper refusal is ground for new trial. And in this case, to have taken this right away from plaintiff and to have awarded this advantage to the defendant would, we think, have afforded the plaintiff just ground of complaint.

5. In the second ground of the amended motion the plaintiff in error insists that the court erred in admitting in evidence, over the objection of the defendant, and in refusing to exclude on motion of the defendant’s counsel, the following testimony: “These bent plate-glass doors will never work as smoothly as a straight door,” and the further testimony, “The friction is more in a bent door *369than in a straight 'door. There is no way under heaven to have it otherwise;” and the further testimony, “In case it [the sash] is stuck [in moving it up and down]' a little, you simply adjust the door to a level, and down it comes. That is the way those doors work, and work beautifully. They could not be made to work better.” At the time of the introduction and admission in evidence of said testimony, the defendant moved to exclude it, on the ground that it consisted in the mere conclusion of the witness and was in effect an abrogation of the functions 'of the jury. The court overruled said objection.

The only objection offered at the time to the introduction of this testimony was that the statements were mere conclusions of the witness. This objection was made to the testimony as a whole; the court did,,not err in declining to rule all of it out. Part of suoh testimony is clearly a statement of facts. But even if it were all a conclusion of the witness, we do not think the court erred in overruling the objection, because the witness giving the testimony was, as appears from the evidence, an expert of skill and long experience in the construction of such jewelry cases, and therefore entitled to give his opinion for whatever the jury might think it worth. Civil Code, §2587. And further, it appears that the witness, Johnson, had supervised the construction of these eases and before expressing these opinions had already given all the necessary facts upon which he based his opinion, .and upon the statement of facts, even if he was not an expert, he was entitled to express an opinion, the weight of which was to be' determined by the jury upon consideration of the facts previously stated. Civil Code, §5285. Even if the statement, “They could not be made to work better,” be objectionable as being an opinion even beyond the limits of expert knowledge, a casual examination of the very voluminous evidence in this case*leads us to the conclusion that the introduction of this evidence could not have influenced the verdict. We think, however, there can be no doubt that the court admitted the evidence on the proof of the witness’s expert knowledge, and it is our opinion that there was no error in so holding.

6. The third and fourth grounds of the amended motion for a new trial complained that the court below erred in refusing to permit defendant’s eounsel to ask the witness Johnson questions with respect to the resemblance or lack of resémblance between eer*370tain jewelry cases in Marshall Field & Company’s store and those placed in the defendant’s store in Atlanta. The court had' admitted in evidence, as part of the contract, a letter of the defendant, in which it is specifically stated that the cases to be installed in defendant’s store were “to look exactly like those we saw in Marshall Field’s, with columns and all.” It was therefore competent to prove that the cases were to look like Field’s, with columns and all. The questions to which answers were sought were as follows: (1) “Are there any appearances of friction or biting of the sides or ends when the sash comes down in those cases?” (3) “When the doors were pushed open in those cases, did the doors stop while being pushed up and down?” It is perfectly clear that the second question would have elicited an answer, not as to the appearance of the cases, but as to their operation, or how they worked, and, for reasons hereafter to’ be stated, we think the action of the cases in use is immaterial if they were made and set up according to the specifications of the contract, of good material, and constructed in a workmanlike manner. And while the word “appearances” is used in the first question above, it is manifest, by the words that follow- — -“friction or biting of the sides or ends when the sash comes down,” that the word “appearance” only relates to such effects as were caused by the working or operation, and does not refer to their looks or resemblance as originally constructed. Furthermore it does, not appear in the evidence that the desire expressed by the defendant that his cases should look like Marshall Field’s was agreed-to by the plaintiff, and unless this had been expressly done, the purpose of defendant that they should look like Field’s cases must yield to the plans and specifications signed and agreed upon by both parties, even though under the plans and specifications agreed upon there should result a dissimilarity of appearance. Even granting that by the plaintiff”s0silence it acquiesced in- the stipulation that the cases look like Field’s, and that this similarity became an additional obligation of the contract and that defendant was entitled to similarity in appearance, the two cases might look exactly alike and yet the doors in one might work smoothly-and the doors in the other might not do so. In other words, to show by their appearance or otherwise that the doors did not work smoothly and accurately would not result in showing dissimilarity in appearance.

*3717. In the fifth and sixth grounds of his amended motion the defendant insists that the court erred iff refusing to allow him to ask the plaintiff’s agent the following question: “Did Mr. Swanson tell you that he had any difficulty in installing said cases?” and further: “Did Mr. Swanson make any statement in your presence that if he knew it was a job like that, he would not have come here [to Atlanta] ?” These questions were asked with the purpose, no doubt, of eliciting information with respect to the unworkmanlike construction of the cases, and evidence upon that subject was material and proper; and the statements of an agent while actually engaged in the business of his principal within the scope of his agency are generally admissible, but it must first appear from the evidence that the agent is speaking within the scope of his authority, and authorized to bind the principal by his sayings, before the principal can be held bound thereby; and, so far as the evidence discloses, the eases were in a state of complete manufacture before they were sent to Atlanta. The witness- Swanson occupied no official position with the plaintiff company and his sole duty was to set the cases up in the defendant’s store; and the, evidence further shows, that the witness Johnson (the agent of the company) was not in Atlanta but in Chicago during the whole of the installation. But even if that were not true, Swanson was not an officer of the corporation, but simply its laborer, and his conversation with an officer of the defendant company after the termination of the contract would not be heard as against the plaintiff’s interest. And if the statements of Swanson are a part of the res gestae, the statements in connection with his work, even when a part of the res gestae, can not be heard against his employer, in the absence of any evidence showing that he was so authorized to speak, and acting in such capacity as to bind the employer by his utterances. Nor was there error in excluding from the evidence the letters which defendant sought to introduce. A critical examination of each and all of them demonstrates that the letters which the judge refused to admit in evidence were mere negotiations and counter-propositions. All of the prior negotiations were merged in the proposals and specifications of the plaintiff when accepted by the defendant; and we presume that the trial judge admitted the letter from plaintiff and one from defendant, which went to the jury, mainly for the purpose of showing the transmission and *372the acceptance of the contract or proposal which was submitted in' writing. The letter of the plaintiff says: “We enclose specifications, and will send measurements of the inside of the drawers, etc., as soon as possible. Specification is in duplicate; and if yon will sign the original and return to us, this will constitute a contract.” In reply defendant wrote “I received this morning specifications and contract, and return herewith signed copy.” With the specifications signed the contract would have been complete without more; but plaintiff in his letter asked whether the shape of the glass shelves was to follow the curve of the case or be straight on front edge, and also asked which color to follow (it appearing that a mahogany sample sent by defendant had a different color on each side). The defendant in replying said nothing about the mahogany, but selected “the shelves curved to go with swelled sash.” It is evident, therefore, that there was but one point outside of the specifications which was thereafter agreed to by the parties, to wit, the curved shelves, although the defendant aslcs the plaintiff to “make these eases to look exactly like those we saw in Marshall -Field’s,” etc. The plaintiff gave the defendant an option in the selection of>r,the shape of the shelves, and was bound to act upon defendant’s expressed choice in that respect as.to them; but the evidence nowhere discloses that plaintiff ever agreed to make the cases look exactly like those he saw in Marshall Field’s, unless consent may be construed from silence. If silence gives consent, the plaintiff added to the original contract the additional stipulations contained in defendant’s letter enclosing the signed contract. In any event it is perfectly clear that all of the letters -excluded by the trial court merely presented proposals, none of which were agreed to by both parties; that there was no meeting of the minds — -nothing binding upon either party — no definite understanding — no contract.

8. We fail to see the.relevancy of the following question which the court permitted to be asked of the defendant: “Did not you know there were certain physical laws involved by which one glass could not be made to work as easily as two ?” We are aware that great latitude is allowable in cross-examination, but it seems to us that the true question is not what the defendant knew of physical laws, nor what was the purpose to which he intended to apply that knowledge, nor what was the purpose to which he intended to put *373the cases which, he proposed to purchase; but the real question was, did he get what he orclered and what plaintiff contracted to supply ? Jbr this reason we think the objection of defendant’s counsel was erroneously overruled. But in our view of the case the error is too harmless to work a new trial.

9, 10. The defendant complains in the ninth ground that the •court erred in excluding the following question and answer: “Did Mr. Miller make any statement in your presence, or in Mr. Johnson’s presence, in regard to said cases?” Answer: “Yes, he would not undertake to fix those cases for less than five hundred dollars.” Counsel for defendant insists that as the statement of Miller was made in the presence of plaintiff’s agent, D. G. Johnson, showing certain defects in the case, and in regard to the expense necessary to remedy its defects, the statement constituted an admission on. the part of the agent as to the truth of the same, in that plaintiff’s agent stood by and did not deny the statement, though it called for an admission or denial; and that he therefore had thereby acquiesced in the same. And further, that Miller, who made the .statement in examining and overlooking said cases, was acting for .and in behalf of the plaintiff, and as such his statements were such ■admissions as were entitled to go to the jury. There are many •circumstances under which the silence of an individual will count against him, but only where the statement made fairly and reasonably called for an answer. It is questionable whether Johnson’s silence would have counted against him if he had been the plaintiff instead of plaintiff’s agent, and Miller had said to him that he would not fix the cases for $500. The headnotes sufficiently •cover the further exceptions taken to the exclusion and admission of evidence. These assignments are -without substantial merit, if the trial judge entertained a correct view of the law applicable to “the really controlling questions in the case.

11, 12. We come, therefore, to determine what is, to our minds, the most difficult question in the case: whether the doctrine of implied warranty is involved and should have been given in charge to the jury. The twelfth ground of the amended motion is as follows : “Because the court erred in failing, as movant contends, entirely to charge and put before the jury the main defense relied upon by the defendant, and to sustain which abundant evidence had been introduced, to wit: that the plaintiff company, in undertaking *374to make for, deliver, and install in the defendant’s store the said four cases, impliedly warranted that the same would be reasonably suited for the purposes intended, that is to say, that the same would be jewelrjr cases, and as such would be reasonably adapted for the display of jewelry, bric-a-brac, silverware, and other articles of like nature, such as are displayed in jewelry stores; it not appearing, as movant contends, from the evidence or the pleadings that the said implied warranty had been from the nature of the transaction or expressly excepted. The evidence, as movant contends, showed that the said cases had been purchased as jewelry cases, and as such were intended for the display of jewelry, bric-a-brac, silverware, and other like articles in the defendant’s jewelry store; and further, that the plaintiff compan3r, through its agent and authorized representative, the said TJ. S. Johnson, was fully apprised of the purpose and use for which jewelry cases were to be adapted before the alleged contract for their construction and installation in the defendant’s store had been completed and concluded. It was one of the main contentions of the defendant, as disclosed by his pleadings and the evidence introduced thereunder, that the said cases were not reasonably adapted and suited for the purposes intended, to wit, the display of jewelry in the defendant’s jewelry store, and more especially in that the said cases did not work smoothly and free'from friction; that great injury and disfigurement were done to defendant’s cases in the installation of said cases; that the sashes of some of the cases warped from side to side and stuck; that the sides and top rails of said sashes were rubbed in many places; that the doors were not arranged to slide up and hang with bicycle chains, weights and pulleys, weights to slide in pockets in back of the cases, but on the contrary were hung with ordinal trunk-rollers and in such manner as with difficulty to be moved up and down; that the shelves were so heavy and brackets so light as to be incapable of supporting articles of any weight or breakable articles of any character with safety; that the sashes were warped and ill fitted to the cases; and that various and other defects existed in said cases and in the installment thereof. The court failed, as aforesaid, to charge said jury upon the law of implied warranty, covering one of the main issues upon which the defendant’s case was predicated, and, as movant contends, the court erred in failing to so charge upon the grounds and for the *375reasons as aforesaid. Nor was the failure of the court to charge the jury upon the law of implied warranty, governing this substantial issue, cured or remedied, as movant contends, by the general charge of the court to the effect that the cases must be constructed and installed in the defendant’s store in a workmanlike and reasonably skillful manner, and that the defendant would be entitled to recover any damages for the failure to so construct and install them. Such a charge had the effect of confining the consideration of the jury to the determination of the sole issue whether the cases were constructed and installed in a reasonably skillful and workmanlike manner, and absolutely eliminated and removed from the scope of the jury’s consideration the entire contention of the defendant, and the evidence produced to prove the same, that the cases must not only be constructed and installed in a reasonably skillful and workmanlike manner, but that they must be reasonably adapted to the purposes for which they were installed.” And the thirteenth ground, relating to latent defects undisclosed, will be considered with the twelfth, for the reason that the warranty that the seller knows of no latent defects undisclosed is one of those which may be implied, if the case be such that any warranty can be implied. The plaintiff in error insists that the sashes in the cases frequently stuck and could not be moved without very great effort; that his evidence further shows that plaintiff’s agent was aware of a means for working the sashes properly or of causing the same to work, and yet he failed to make known the same to the defendant or to take any steps whatever to remedy said defects. And ^plaintiff in error insists, in this ground of the motion, that “the failure of the court to charge or put before the jury this implied warranty of the plaintiff, that he knew of no latent defects undisclosed, removed from the consideration of the jury the contention and evidence of the defendant to the prejudice of his defense.”

Not infrequently a mere shade of difference determines whether the issue calls for the application of the doctrine of implied warranty or excludes it. In many cases in our experience the line of ' demarcation was very dim, and we think there can be cases in which as to different portions of even the same transaction the law of express warranty will control, so far as there has been express warranty, without excluding the application of an implied warranty to other portions of the contract. We are aware that this *376statement seems contradictory and is not in accord with, the general view; for in Johnson v. Latimer, 71 Ga. 470, it was held that “it is only in the absence of an express warranty that resort can be had to implied warranty; and where there was an express warranty the court could refuse to charge on the subject of implied warranty.” In that case the court not only refused to charge, “that, if the machine sold defendant by plaintiffs was not reasonably suited for the use intended, the plaintiffs could not recover unless there was a special contract as to size,” but on the contrary charged, as to the wheat separater in question, “that the warranty which the law required the plaintiffs to make was that the article sold was a separater, that is to say, that it would separate the grain from the chaff, but he did not warrant that it was suitable for transportation over the roads in the country or that it was such a machine as could be pulled by defendant’s team.” This is an express holding that there can be no implied warranty if there is an .express warranty. We yield to it as binding authority, and no doubt it influenced the trial judge in his charge to the jury. The Civil Code, §3555, raises an implied warranty for the protection of those purchasers who have not preferred to try to protect themselves by an express covenant of warranty, or where, from the nature of the transaction, there can be no warranty in the absence of an expressed warranty. Section 3555 is a provision for the protection of purchasers, but not extended to all purchasers. “If there is no express covenant of warranty, the purchaser must exercise caution in detecting defects; the seller, however, in all cases (unless expressly or from the nature of the transaction excepted) warrants — (1) That he has a valid title and right to sell. (2) That the article sold is merchantable, and reasonably suited to the use intended. (3) That he knows of no latent defects undisclosed.” It excepts the purchaser who prefers to safeguard himself by an express covenant of warranty, him who fails to use that degree of caution which would easily detect patent defects, and him whose transaction is such that by its very nature no warranty can be expected to arise or be implied. If the plaintiff in error properly belongs' in either' of these classes, he can derive no benefit from the law of implied warranty — it affords him no protection; and the refusal of the court to charge as, set out in the 12th and 13th grounds of the motion fwas proper. An inspection of the charge of the court, as *377transmitted in the record, shows, however, that the complaint can only be a qualified one. For while the judge did not expressly refer to §3555, he explicitly stated all of the defects insisted upon by the defendant in his plea,- and thereafter three times instructed the jury, in substance, as follows: “If on the contrary, according to the defendant’s plea, the contract was not complied with and the ’work was not done according to contract, then you give the defendant such damages as you think he is entitled to recover hy reason of the failure of plaintiff to comply with its contract.”

The only complaint that plaintiff in error can make'is, that the court did not charge the jury that the company impliedly warranted that the manufactured cases would be suitable to the purposes for which he intended them. The judge did not so charge. In our opinion he was right in not charging as the plaintiff in error'insists that he should, for the reason that by the very nature of the transaction there could be no implied warranty. From the nature of the contract there could be no implied warranty of suitableness of purpose. Crankshaw did not go to the manufacturing company and purchase jewelry cases relying on its judgment. If he had done so, an implied warranty would have arisen. On the contrary, he employed the manufacturing company to make eases according to plans and specifications of his own; and when these jewelry cases were made according to Crankshaw’s plans and specifications, with good workmanship and proper materials, the company had complied with its contract, whether the cases did or did not meet the purposes of Crankshaw. If the company, by reason of its experience, had known that the specifications furnished by Crankshaw would not make a good jewelry case, it. could not have altered his plans and made a different jewelry case. This would have been a violation of its contract, and Crankshaw could well have replied, to the suggestion of superior knowledge and consequent action in pursuance therewith, that this was none of its concern. If the cases were made according to contract and his own plans, Crankshaw got what he bargained for, and whether the cases thereafter did not suit his purposes was wholly immaterial. To hold a manufacturer responsible for defects which he may know will arise from peculiarities of proportion or construction, because he knows the use for which the manufactured article is intended, and yet is powerless to prevent the defects, because he can not alter the plan, would be *378indeed a harsh rule. The distinction is aptly drawn by Professor Parsons (1 Pars. Con. 586-7): “If a thing be ordered of the manufacturer for a special purpose, and it be supplied and sold for that purpose, there is an implied warranty that it is fit for that purpose. This principle has been carried very far. It must, however, be limited to cases where a special thing is ordered, although this be intended for a special purpose.” In Leake on Contracts, 404, the rule is thus aptly stated: “If an order be given for the' manufacture or supply of an article to satisfy a required purpose, and not any specific article, being the essential matter of the contract, the seller is then bound, as a condition of the contract, to supply an article reasonably fit for the purpose, and is considered as warranting that it is so. But if an order be given for a specific article of a recognized kind or description . . and the article is supplied, there is no warranty that it will answer the purpose described or supposed, although intended and expected to do so.” If Crankshaw had applied to the manufacturer for manufactured jewelry cases and had depended upon the judgment of the manufacturing company to furnish him cases such as he needed, then the warranty of suitableness of purpose would have at once arisen. Inasmuch, however, as he did not rely upon the judgment of the manufacturing company to furnish him the jewelry cases, but ordered certain cases to be made by certain plans and specifications, then no such warranty arises, and Crankshaw would be bound to pay for the cases, whether they in fact suited his purpose or not. The questions whether such cases met the contract, and were properly made out of good material, were the only issues that could have arisen between Crankshaw and the manufacturing company. This case is somewhat similar to that of Goulds ¶. Brophy, 43 N. W. 834, where the defendant ordered a fifteen-inch auger to make a twenty-inch hole, and the plaintiff sent him the machine.' In that case, the Supreme Court of Minnesota held, that “If an order be given to a manufacturing company or dealer for a specific article of a known and recognized kind and description, and if the defined and described thing be actually supplied, there is no implied warranty that it will answer the purpose for which it is intended to be used. The only implied warranty or condition of the contract is that it will conform to the description and be of good workmanship and material.” The same rule was announced and applied *379in Cosgrove v. Bennett, 32 Minn. 371. There the defendant ordered a specific article of a known description, which was manufactured by the plaintiff.' “There was an implied warranty, or, more correctly speaking, condition of the contract, that it should conform to the description and be of good material and workmanship according to that description, but none that it would answer the purpose described or supposed.” The manufacturer only warrants the workmanship and material. One of the issues in this case was, whether the workmanship and material were the best quality, and the charge of the court shows that that issue was clearly and fairly submitted to the jury. As authority for the principle herein.' ruled, see Seitz v. Brewer’s Ref. Co., 141 U. S. 518; 2 Benj. Sales, §§987, 988; Addison on Contracts, *977; Milwaukee Boiler Co. v. Duncan, 58 N. W. 234, and cit.; Ollivant v. Bayley, 5 Q. B. 288;. Dist. of Columbia v. Clephane, 110 U. S. 212; Kellogg Bridge Co. v. Hamilton, 110 U. S. 108; How v. Sanborn, 21 N. Y. 552; Deming v. Foster, 42 N. H. 165. If these .jewelry cases were made according to' Crankshaw’s design, of good workmanship and good, material (and this does not seem to be questioned in the evidence), it would not matter whether there were defects latent or patent; for “according to the principle of decided cases and upon clear grounds of justice, the fundamental inquiry must be always whether under the circumstances foi the particular case, the buyer had the right to rely and did rely upon the judgment of the seller and not upon his own.” No matter how he -reached his conclusion, the design of these jewelry cases was Mr. Crankshaw’s. He furnished his own plans and specifications; and if, as the jury found, under the charge of the court, the workmanship was good and the material good, no one is responsible for defects in their operation or unsuitableness to his purpose except the defendant himself. We agree with the proposition that in the absence of an express warranty the implied warranty that the article is reasonably suited to-'the use intended will apply, unless clearly excepted; but we have no hesitation in holding that the trial judge was right in his view that the nature of this transaction excepted this contract of sale. The decision in Elgin Jewelry Co. v. Estes, 122 Ga. 807, cited by plaintiff in error, is not in point. The holding there was merely that there was no express warranty in that case, and that the so-called “warranties” or agreements to replace articles that were-*380unsatisfactory, and those not selling readily, with new articles of like kind, was no express warranty as to the character, quality, or title of the goods. And for like reasons it was held in National Computing Scale Co. v. Eaves, 116 Ga. 511, that there was “no express warranty in the contract.” The case of Malsby v. Young, 104 Ga. 212, is also cited. This • case is certainly not in point. The judgment of the lower court was reversed because the law of implied warranty was incorrectly charged, and the Supreme Court in the decision reaffirmed the opinion in Johnson v. Latimer, 71 Ga. 470. The case, of McNeal v. Smith, 106 Ga. 215, was one where the parties to the contract expressly excepted implied warranties as to the health, life, and soundness of certain mules. And in the case of Floyd v. Wood, 110 Ga. 850, the judgment against the defendant was sustained because he bought, as we think the defendant in- this case did, “entirely upon his own judgment.” The guano cases, cited by the very able counsel in his exhaustive brief for the plaintiff in error, in our judgment afford no authority and are' not applicable in this case; for the guano is necessarily manufactured according to the formula and process of the seller, while the jewelry cases were to be made, and it appears from the record that they were made, according to the specifications of the buyer. If the workmanship and material were good (as the jury found they were), the designer of the jewelry cases would be responsible for their probable operation, just as the maker of the guano for its probable results. The jury having settled the disputed issues of fact, and there being in our judgment no reversible error in either the rulings or the charge of the court, the judgment must be Affirmed.