In this case, plaintiff, in his complaint, substantially claims that he contracted with defendant to purchase some 2,000 bushels of seed corn, guaranteed or warranted by defendant to stand a germinating test of go per cent, or better, at $1 per bushel, to be delivered to plaintiff at his place of.business in Vermillion; that he paid to defendant $775 to apply on said contract; that defendant delivered a portion of said corn; that the same failed to come up to the guaranteed test of go per cent., but only would test about 60 per cent., and by reason thereof plaintiff refused to accept more of said corn; that of said corn delivered to plaintiff he kept 100 bushels, and returned 114 bushels to defendant by delivering the same at the elevator of one Thompson, at the request of defendant; that the 100 bushels of corn so kept by plaintiff was reasonably worth 50 cents per bushel. Plaintiff seeks by this action to recover $775, less the $50, the value of 100 bushels kept by plaintiff. On the other hand, defendant, by his answer, in substance claims that he sold to plaintiff 3,500 bushels of corn, at $1 per bushel, without warranty of any kind or nature; admits that plaintiff paid him $775 on said contract, and alleges that he hauled and delivered to plaintiff 214 bushels of said corn, *79and that he has at all times been ready, able, and willing to deliver the said corn so sold to plaintiff, but that plaintiff has refused and declined to receive the same; that corn was, at the time plaintiff so refused to accept the same, of the value of 5° cents per bushel. Defendant demanded Judgment against plaintiff for $1,089, damages for breach of contract. Plaintiff made reply, denying the allegations of the counterclaim. On the trial, plaintiff recovered verdict and judgment for $725, together with interest. Defendant appeals.
[1,2] Appellant first contends that the court erred in giving the following instruction, which was duly excepted to by defendant: “Now, if you find by a preponderance of the evidence that there was a sale, as thus defined, of the corn referred to in the counterclaim' by Mr. Stevenson to Mr. Totten, without any express warranty or condition, and also find that the corn was fairly and reasonably well suited or adapted for seed, the purpose for which it was bought, if bought, you should find in favor of the defendant, Stevenson, on his counterclaim.” It is contended that the portion of this instruction “and also find that the corn was fairly and reasonably well suited or adapted for seed, the purpose for which it was bought,” constitutes error, in that it is inconsistent and contradictory to other portions of the charge, and of a nature calculated to confuse the jury, and erroneously contemplates and includes an implied warranty of the fitness of said corn for seed; no such implied warranty being alleged by any of the pleadings. We are of the opinion this contention is not tenable. In other portions of the charge, the court did instruct the jury, ih substance, that plaintiff could only recover upon a finding that there was a warranty that the corn would stand a germinating test of 90 per cent.; and that if the jury found there was no warranty by defendant plaintiff should not recover. In giving this instruction, the court clearly had reference to the express warranty, claimed by plaintiff as a part of his cause of action, upon which plaintiff based his right to an affirmative recovery of the money he had paid and advanced to apply on the contract, as the contract was claimed to be by plaintiff. Defendant denied the contract as alleged by plaintiff. Plaintiff could recover an affirmative *80judgment only upon the express warranty. The prior instructions of the court clearly applied to the question of express warranty; and no confusion can reasonably result therefrom in connection- with the excepted-to instruction.
[3,4] Defendant, by his answer, set up a counterclaim, and demanded affirmative damages for breach of contract for corn sold to plaintiff without warranty - or condition. This counterclaim constituted another cause of action, alleged on behalf of defendant, for which he sought an affirmative judgment against plaintiff. While it nowhere appears in the allegations of the counterclaim, or in plaintiff’s reply thereto, the purpose for which said corn was bought, still defendant, without objection, testified that plaintiff informed him and that he knew plaintiff purchased the same for seed. Under such evidence, in the absence of an express contract to the contrary, the law implies a warranty of the fitness of the merchandise sold for the purpose for which it was bought; and the party seeking to recover damages for the breach of the contract in refusing to accept the said merchandise has the burden of showing that the merchandise téndered in fulfillment of the contract filled the requirements of the implied warranty creatéd by statute. In this case, although plaintiff might not recover affirmative judgment without establishing an express warranty, still neither would defendant be permitted to recover affirmative judgment on his counterclaim, after having testified, without objection, that he knew plaintiff purchased said com for seed, without first showing that the corn was reasonably fit for such purpose, unless it also appeared there was a contract wholly excluding the implied warranty.
[5] Evidence, of matters pertinent to and connected with the cause of action on trial, received without objection by either party, although not pleaded,- has the same force and effect, for the purposes of the trial, as if properly pleaded; and under such circumstances it was proper for the trial court to base his instructions on the pleadings as well as the evidence, although some of the evidence was without the allegations of the pleadings. Where parties raise issues of fact not alleged in the pleadings, without objection, it is not error to instruct the jury on such issues. It is *81proper to give instructions on the theory upon which the 'parties try the case, although the pleadings, technically, do not support such theory. Hughes on Instructions, § 99; Blashfield, Instructions, § 84; Qualy v. Johnson, 80 Minn. 408, 83 N. W. 393.
Thompson on Trials (section 2310), in considering this rule, says: ‘‘The sound rule is believed to be that the instructions have no connection with the pleadings, except through the evidence. The jury ‘find from the evidence,’ and not from the pleadings. The pleadings are intended to apprise the opposite party of the ground of action or defense, and to guide the court in admitting or rejecting evidence. The jury have nothing to do> with, them, and are not permitted to take them to their room when they retire ; and it is unprofessional for counsel to comment on them to the jury, nor should the court permit it to be done. Suppose, then,. that facts come out in the evidence broader than those alleged in the pleadings, or otherwise varying from them. Is the judge to instruct the jury upon the whole evidence, or is he to limit his instructions to so much of the evidence as is within the scope of the pleadings ? The proper answer is believed to be this: If neither of the parties has objected to the evidence on the ground of variance, the judge is- to instruct the jury upon the whole evidence: the rule being that a variance between the pleadings and the evidence is no ground of error, unless the evidence was objected to on this ground at the time it was offered.”
It is obvious that this doctrine cannot be extended to cases where the evidence is so widely variant from the pleadings that the facts thereby established constitute a new or different cause of action, or would not have been, a proper subject for amendment of such pleading on the trial. The evidence of defendant as to his knowledge of the purpose for which the corn in question was 'purchased by plaintiff was part and parcel of the cause of action alleged in defendant’s counterclaim. In this case, defendant might have defeated an affirmative recovery by plaintiff by showing no express warranty of the corn sold, and in which case, if there was no recovery by defendant on his counterclaim, defendant would have been entitled ho a judgment for costs only, and a dis*82missal of plaintiff’s cause of action; hence an instruction to that effect, in connection with -plaintiff’s cause of action, was proper. Plaintiff, although failing to recover on his cause of action, might, nevertheless, have defeated defendant’s claim for affirmative damages by showing that he purchased said com for the purposes of seed only which fact was then known to- defendant, in which case plaintiff would have been entitled to a finding dismissing the counterclaim. Plaintiff’s cause of action was based upon and governed by the rules relating to express warranty. Defendant’s counterclaim, taken in connection with the evidence of defendant, was governed by the rules in relation to< implied warrant)'. The plaintiff was not seeking to recover upon an implied warranty, but was seeking only to defeat defendant’s recovery of damages on his counterclaim by invoking the rule relating to implied warranty, created by statute, under the evidence that came into the case without objection. It was proper for the court to instruct upon both theories. '
[6] It -is also insisted there was error in giving the said instruction, for the reason that there cannot exist both an express and an implied warranty covering the same subject-matter. It seems to be generally held, with some exceptions, that there can be no implied warranty of fitness where there is an express warranty upon the same subject; but that rule would not necessarily render erroneous the instruction in question, as there might exist either one or the other, where the opposite of either one or the other is found not to exist, and both might be considered on the trial of a suit, without finding that both existed. At the time the instruction -in question was given, the trial court would not be presumed to know what the finding of the jury might be as to whether or not there was an express warranty. If the jury found there was an express warranty, of course there could not be an implied one, and the question of implied warranty then ceased to be an issue; but, on the other hand, if the jury found there was no express warranty, then there was evidence in the case sufficient to warrant the court in instructing the jury that, before defendant would be entitled to a verdict under his counterclaim for breach of contract in plaintiff’s refusing to accept the corn, he must show *83that the corn tendered by him to plaintiff was reasonably fit for 'the purpose for which plaintiff agreed to purchase the same; the evidence further showing that defendant grew the corn in question ; that the same was not present at the place where -said contract was made, and was not inspected by plaintiff. In this instruction, the court intended the reference to the implied warranty to be considered only in the event that the jury found there was no express warranty.
[7] It was the province of the court to instruct the jury upon all the diffrent theories presented by the evidence. In connection with the evidence of defendant that, in a conversation with plaintiff, he told plaintiff lie would not warrant said corn for any purpose, which was denied by plaintiff, the court might have further, in addition to all the other; instructions, instructed the jury that, if they believed defendant’s version of this question, no warranty, either express or implied, could be' considered as against defendant; but as no such instruction was requested, no error can be based on the absence thereof.
[8] Again, even conceding the instruction given, as to implied warranty, erroneous, still, under the finding that there was an express warranty it must be treated as error without prejudice, as the finding of the jury excludes, and rendered immaterial, the question of implied warranty.
[9] Appellant urges as error the exclusion of certain testimony. On cross-examination of plaintiff, after he had been, examined in -chief as to his cause -of action, he was asked the following questions by counsel for defendant: “Now, during the sale of seed for that year, you found difficulty, did you not, in getting good seed corn? Now, the seed corn, for — the corn that was grown in 1909 was found to be very poor on the entire market was it not? Why were you buying 1908 corn?” Each of these three questions were objected to, on the ground of not being proper cross-examination, and the objections were sustained, and to which rulings the defendant duly excepted. We are of the opinion'the trial court ruled properly. The questions do not relate to anything that plaintiff had testified to on his examina'*84tion in chief. The testimony sought to be elicited thereby was only material, if at all, in connection with defendant’s counterclaim, which, as yet, had not been opened before the jury.
We are also of the opinion there could be no prejudicial error, based on the rejection of this testimony, because it was wholly immaterial for any purpose. That corn raised during the year 1909 was generally poor and of a low grade was wholly immaterial to the issues. The subject of the sale was the particular corn of defendant; and what other corn, raised by some other person, or in some other year, was generally, as to soundness and grade, could have no possible bearing upon the quality of defendant’s corn, agreed to be sold to plaintiff. It is a matter of common knowledge that corn may generally be very poor and of low grade any year, and still some "persons may have and raise corn of the very best quality.
[10] Appellant also contends that the evidence is insufficient to justify the verdict, in that the eidence conclusively shows that plaintiff received and kept 214 bushels of said corn and used the same, in addition to the com returned by plaintiff to the Thompson elevator, thereby rendering the verdict of $725, and interest, excessive. We are of the opinion this contention is not well founded. It will .be observed that defendant, by his amended answer, contained in the statement of facts included in his brief, only claims to have hauled and delivered to plaintiff 214 bushels. That is the exact number of bushels plaintiff also claims was delivered to him.. Defendant on the witness stand, and by an amendment to his answer made on the trial, claims to have hauled to plaintiff six loads, aggregating 328 bushels, and argumentatively testified that plaintiff must have kept and used 214 bushels. Plaintiff testified he did not know the number of loads "delivered; that the corn, when delivered, was loose in the wagon box, and was placed in sacks as taken out of defendant’s wagon and placed in plaintiff’s buildings. Plaintiff also’ testified that he kept and used approximately 100 bushels and returned 114 bushels. Plaintiff’s testimony also tended to show that some of the loads hauled in by defendant he refused to permit defendant to unload, and that defendant disposed of or took the same elsewhere. The jury had the right to *85take into consideration the manner in which said corn was delivered and placed in sacks in weighing the testimony' of the several witnesses as to the number of bushels delivered. There was substantial conflict as to the number of bushels delivered to plaintiff, and the verdict of the jury is conclusive.
Finding no reversible error in the record, the judgment of the circuit court is afirmed.