Opinion of the Court by
Judge Settle —Reversing.
Appellee is engaged in the business of manufacturing and selling threshing machines; its manufacturing plant and principal place of business being in the State of Michigan. The appellant, Pennebaker Bros., and Strader Bros., each a firm engaged in the business of farming in Mercer county, this State, together made an effort to purchase a threshing machine of appellee through George Bohon, of’Harrodsburg, its then local agent. For some reason unexplained, Bohon did not make the sale, but turned the matter over to one C. L. Dowes, appellee’s State agent, who went to see appellants, and, after some negotiation, sold them a machine, and took their order for it upon a blank form furnished by appellee and attested by Dawes as agent, which contained the usual warranty as* to the quality of the machine and the character of work it was claimed by the seller it would perform. The agreed price to be paid by appellants for the threshing machine was $625, for which they were to give two notes, bearing date of June 27, 1906, for $312.50 each, one payable October 1, 1906, and the. other October 1, 1907. Appellants were unwilling to execute these notes until the machine should be delivered by appellee and an opportunity afforded them of ascertaining whether it would do its work as warranted; but, upon the representation of Dawes that he was anxious to close the transaction and get away and that he would leave the notes with Bohon, the local agent, until the threshing machine should prove satisfactory, appellants consented to and did execute *596and deliver to Dawes the notes in form and amount each as stated. Instead of depositing the notes with Bohon according to the agreement under which he received them, Dawes, in his capacity of agent, sold, assigned, and delivered them to Bohon at a discount of 10 per cent, accepting for them Bohon’s note payable to appellee, which he forwarded to the latter by mail. Upon receiving the threshing machine from appellee’s manufactory, appellants paid the freight upon it, amounting to $25. Appellee’s agent Dawes at that time set up the machine on the Pennebaker farm, and attempted to operate it, but without success. Subsequently an expert machinist by appellee’s direction attempted to adjust and make it work, but he, too, failed, and declared that it could not be made to run at all. Thereupon appellants offered to return the machine to appellee, and made a tender of it to appellee through its local agent, Bohon, at the same time demanding the return or cancellation of the notes they had executed for it. * The notes were not returned, but the thresher by direction of Bohon as agent was stored under a shed on the Pennebaker farm, where it has since remained without use by appellants. Shortly thereafter this action in equity was brought in the court below by appellants against appellee and its agents Dawes and Bohon to obtain a cancellation of the notes in question, upon the ground that they were without consideration; it being alleged that the machine for which they were executed was worthless. Later an amended petition was filed setting up the warranty of the machine in the contract, of sale, alleging its breach, and asking a judgment* against appellee for damages. Appellee, before answering, entered a motion to quash, the summons and return, which was overruled. It thereupon answered, denying the juris*597diction of the Mercer circuit court, specifically traversing the averments of the petition as amended, and averring that it sold the threshing machine to Bohon, who sold it to appellants. The plea to jurisdiction was overruled by the court, and, following the taking of proof by the parties, judgment was rendered dismissing the action, of which judgment appellants complain; hence this appeal.
The motion to quash the summons and plea to the jurisdiction of the court were both properly overruled. The summons was served upon Dawes, in Mercer county, and the return of the sheriff thereon shows that he was the sole agent of appellee in that county. Appellee had no officer in Kentucky, and Bohon, its former agent in Mercer county, was not its agent at the time of the institution of the action, nor had it, as required by section 571 of the Kentucky Statutes of 1903, filed in the office of the Secretary of State a statement signed by its president or secretary, giving the location of its office in this State or the name of its agent thereat upon whom process could be served. Dawes was at that time its managing or chief agent in the State, and its only agent in Mercer county, and, according to his testimony, his duties were to make sales of the threshing machine manufactured by the appellee, to assist local agents in making such sales, settle with local agents as to their commissions on sales, collect for machines sold, and act as expert in setting up and repairing machines. It is true that from and after September 16, 1906, Dawes worked for appellee upon commission, instead of a regular salary as theretofore; but that fact did not make him any less an agent of appellee. He was therefore an agent, as he acted for and stood in the place of appellee 'in the business in which he *598and it were engaged, and whatever contract he made in the apparent scope of his agency appellee was bound by. He was in Mercer county when the suit was instituted and upon the trial admitted that he sold the threshing machine, to appellants, that he warranted it as charged, and that such warranty was expressed in the written contract of sale. Section 51, subsec 3, Civ. Code Prac., provides: “In an action against a private corporation, the summons may be served, in any county, upon the defendant’s chief officer or agent who may be found in this State, or it may be served in the county wherein the action is brought, upon the defendant’s- chief officer or agent who may be found therein.” The contract between appellant and appellee was made in Mercer county, and was to be performed in that county. The service of the summons upon Dawes as agent was also proper under section 72, Civ. Code Prac., which provides with reference to the venue of an action against a corporation such as appellee that, “if it be upon a contract, * * # it may be brought in the county in which the contract is made or to be performed.” Newport News, etc., Ry. Company v. Thomas, 96 Ky. 613, 29 S. W. 437, 19 Ky. Law Rep. 706; New South Brewing Company, etc., v. Price, 50 S. W. 963, 21 Ky. Law Rep. 11. In enacting section 571 of the Statutes of 1903, it was not the intention of the Legislature to repeal the sections of the Code, supra, providing for the service of process in the case of nonresident corporations, but to provide an additional person upon whom process might also be served. Paducah Cooperage Co. v. Commonwealth, 122 Ky, 755, 93 S. W. 12, 29 Ky. Law Rep, 304.
The claim of appellee that it had discharged Dawes as agent the day before summons in this case was *599served upon Mm was not in our opirnon made in good faith. It has too much the appearance of a subterfuge, and was not sustained by the testimony of Dawes himself. Indeed, it was contradicted by him.
We are also averse to placing any reliance upon the further contention of appellee that the purchase by appellants of the threshing machine in controversy was made of Bohon and the machine sold Bohon by it. This, too, appears to us in the light of the facts presented by the record to be a mere subterfuge. Bohon, like Dawes, was a mere agent of appellee; the only difference being that the former was a local agent, whose agency was confined to the county of Mercer, while the latter was the agent or general supervisor of appellee’s business for the entire State. As a matter of fact, Bohon, the local agent, was applied to by appellants as agent of appellee for the macMne. The latter, for some reason, referred the sale to Dawes, and it was made and consummated by Dawes, acting for and on behalf of appelleej the manufacturer. The order for the machine and the contract with reference to its purchase, including the warranty given by the appellee, were all made and contained in a form of contract furnished by appellee; and the transaction as a whole shows conclusively that it was a sale made by appellee in the usual course of business. This being-true,, and there having been a breach of the warranty of sale, appellee will not be permitted to dodge responsibility by shielding itself behind such a subterfuge as attempted. To permit it to do so would be repugnant to our sense of justice, and to the law as well. The proof overwhelmingly shows the breach of warranty complained of by appellants. This is not a case in which the machine purchased merely failed to operate. *600satisfactorily, and was nevertheless kept and used by the purchaser. It proved at once to be utterly worthless, because it did not perform at all. Therefore appellants should have been allowed upon the facts of the case to recover damages as claimed by them.
The-court, below could not grant a cancellation of the notes as they had passed into the hands of an innocent purchaser, who recovered judgment against appellants for the amount of them. Nor does it matter that Bohon was the party who purchased these notes, as the sale of the machine was not made by him to appellants but by appellee’s agent Davis, and it does not appear that Bohon was in any way connected with the wrong done appellants in the sale of the machine. In any event, appellee is responsible to appellants upon the warranty contained in the contract of sale. Therefore the court allowed' the amended petition to be filed by which appellants claimed damages by reason of the breach of the warranty, and no additional process was required thereon.
It is claimed by appellants, and not denied by appellee, that the judgment of the lower court was based on the theory that the threshing machine was purchased by appellants of Bohon, and not of appellee. As already indicated, we think this conclusion unwarranted by the testimony,-the weight of which shows the contrary. Indeed, we may say that the whole of it, when properly analyzed, supports appellants’ version of the contract of sale. Appellee was paid the amount of appellants’ notes by Bohon, and it cannot complain at being compelled to indemnify and reimburse appellants for the loss they sustained arising from the breach of warranty. It can yet *601repossess itself of the threshing machine as it is where it was left by order of its agent when appellants offered to return it.
We see no force in appellee’s contention that there should have been a motion for a new trial in the case. It is true that the filing of the amended petition entitled either party to have the case transferred to the ordinary docket, and tried by a jury as a common-law action; but neither party made such, a motion. By acquiescence, or common consent, it was allowed to remain upon the equity docket, the proof was all taken by depositions, and the case allowed to proceed in all respects as a cause in equity. This being true, it is too late for appellee to raise in this court, and for the first time, the question of whether the lower court erred in not transferring it to the law docket; and likewise too late to complain that appellants did not enter a motion in the court below for a new trial, following the rendition of the judgment appealed from.
For the reasons indicated, the judgment is reversed and cause remanded with directions to the lower court to enter a judgment in appellant’s behalf for the damages claimed, not to exceed the amount of the notes they executed to appellee and freight paid by them upon receiving the machine.
Petition for rehearing by appellee overruled.