— Action for damages for breach of warranty in a contract for the sale of personal property. The trial resulted in a verdict and judgment for plaintiff in the sum of $350, and the cause is here on the appeal of defendant. The property sold was a lot of belting for a concentrating mill owned and operated by defendant at Galena, Kansas. The contract of sale was made orally. The belting was of a brand sold by defendant under the trade name of “King Jack” and the price paid for the lot purchased by plaintiff was $936.90. It is alleged in the first count of the petition that to make the sale defendant “then and there warranted and represented that said rubber belting was made out of good, first-class material and was as good as any belting sold in this district, and would last as long as any belting sold in this district; and that by the term ‘this district’ was meant and understood by plaintiff and defendant to mean the lead and zinc mining district of Southwest Missouri and Southeastern Kansas, embracing Jasper and other counties in Missouri and Cherokee and other counties in Kansas.”
Further, it is alleged that plaintiff relied on said warranty and representations; that the belting was made out of inferior material; that it would not last as long as other belting sold in that mining district, and that when sold was not worth to exceed $296.30. The prayer is for damages in the sum of $700, the difference between the contract price and the market value of the goods. Since the verdict was for defendant on the second count of the petition, it is not necessary to state the cause of action pleaded therein. The answer is a general denial.
Defendant’s principal place of business was in St. Louis, but it maintained a branch house at Joplin. It handled two grades of belting in the Joplin district *682(to which Galena belonged), one, the most expensive and best was known as the “Shield High Grade” and the other, inferior in price and quality was called “King Jack.” Plaintiff lived at Carthage and had been interested in mines “more or less for twenty years.” Early in the spring -of 1906, he began the erection at Galena of a mill “for the purpose of concentrating ore from the mines, rough tailings and sludge, a combination mill.” When the time came to buy the rubber belting for this mill, a salesman for defendant called on plaintiff at Carthage and solicited the order. The representations made by this salesman, whose name is Tedford, constitute the warranty plaintiff now seeks to enforce. Plaintiff testified:
“He came two or three times to Carthage to see me about the belt for the mill. I was not familiar with the Day Rubber Company belt, and he told me they were selling as good a belt as was sold in the district, and I talked and asked him if it was as good as the Double Diamond— . . . He stated that the house was responsible and their belt was as good as any sold in the district, he did not mention ány kind of belt. I did not know they had two brands at the time. . . . He mentioned the name of no belt, simply spoke of their belt being first-class and that the house was in Joplin and would stand back of their representations.
“Q. He stated it was first-class in every respect? A. A first-class and as good as any sold in the district.”
Plaintiff did not give the order to Tedford, but visited defendant’s place of business at Joplin where a stock of belting was- kept and succeeded in obtaining a better cash discount than Tedford was authorized to offer. The price quoted him was for “King Jack” and that was the belt delivered to him. He paid the bill promptly, taking advantage of the cash discount offered, and installed the belting in the mill. It did not turn out to be the best belting for the very obvious *683reason that it was not the best. It is not claimed by plaintiff that any representations respecting the quality of “King Jack” grade were made to him at the Joplin office, nor does he claim that Tedford said anything to him about the quality or character of that grade. He states that nothing was said to him about the quality of “King Jack” but Tedford did represent defendant’s belting to be as good as the best. It might be true that the name of the grade of goods bought, by plaintiff was not mentioned, but we think his own admissions show beyond controversy that he knew he was not buying the best grade sold by defendant and, therefore, not the best grade sold in that district. He admits he told the manager of the Joplin office when he went there to negotiate for the purchase of the goods that “I am building the mill to sell, going to sell and don’t care to put in an extra high priced belt. The ordinary grade is all I want.” He was asked if he did not see a price list of the Day Rubber Company and replied, “I don’t know whether I did or not, all the price lists are the same of different houses.” Further he was asked “Were you not looking for the cheapest belt you could find,” and answered, “I was not, I was looking for the best belt for the cheapest price.” “Q. You took the belt offered at the cheapest price? A. Supposing I was getting a first-class belt. What I meant was I did not want to put in anything better than a standard belt.”
With admissions such as these before us, we find no room for any other reasonable conclusion than that plaintiff knew defendant sold different grades and deliberately and knowingly bought a cheaper grade than the best. He is now endeavoring to secure damages from defendant because he found that a second class article would not give first-class service. He received what he bought and what he intended to buy, and his effort to distort the general statement of the agent that that the goods sold by his principal were as good as any *684sold in that market into a representation that the grade of goods listed and sold as second grade was equal to the best grade is too palpably without merit to receive serious consideration. He has no case for two reasons: First, the representations of defendant’s agent as detailed by the plaintiff do not purport to refer to the grade of belting bought by plaintiff and, consequently, there were no misrepresentations concerning that grade and, second, even if this were not so, since defendant’s own admissions demonstrate that he knew the goods he bought were not of the first grade, he has failed to prove one of the essential elements of his cause of action, namely, that he relied and acted on the false representations he claims were made.
The judgment is reversed.
All concur.