Opinion
Decided January 24, 1928.
Appeal from Madison Circuit Court.
E. SHELBY WIGGINS for appellant.
G. MURRAY SMITH for appellee.
Reversing.
On the order of appellee, Ben F. Reeves, appellant, J. B. Colt Company, shipped to him a carbide generator and certain appliances and fixtures at the price of $239.70. Appellee failed to pay for them at the time fixed in the order, and appellant instituted this action to recover the purchase price. Appellee defended and by counterclaim sought to recover $63 from appellant. The trial below resulted in a verdict against appellant on its petition and for appellee for the amount sought by counterclaim; and judgment was entered accordingly. Appellant has moved for an appeal.
Instruction No. 1, given to the jury, was erroneous, in that it submitted to the jury the question whether or not appellant and appellee had entered into a contract by which appellant sold and appellee purchased the generator, appliances, and fixtures. These facts were not denied by the answer of appellee. The only allegations of the petition which appellee's answer put in issue were those to the effect that the generator and appliances were as they were expressly warranted to be. In view of that fact, and in view of the written order for the generator and material, which appellee, while testifying, admitted he signed, the other proof for appellee was not sufficient to take the case to the jury on the defense pleaded in the second paragraph to the effect that his signature to the order in question was procured by fraud. Hence it was erroneous to leave it to the jury whether the parties entered into a contract by which appellant sold and appellee purchased the material in question.
Appellee's written order for this generator and fixtures became a contract between the parties when it was accepted and approved by appellant. It contained the following warranty:
"It is agreed that in accepting this order the company warrants the apparatus furnished to be a thoroughly durable galvanized steel acetylene generator, automatic in action, and of good material and workmanship and that it is on the permitted list of the National Board of Fire Underwriters."
Appellant by its petition pleaded that the generator and materials sold and delivered to appellee were as guaranteed to be by this warranty. The testimony for appellant supported this pleading. We find no, evidence in the record tending in the least to establish that the generator was not made of thoroughly durable galvanized steel, and none that this generator is not on the permitted list of the National Board of Fire Underwriters; consequently, those two questions should not have been submitted to the jury.
The testimony of appellee is exceedingly unsatisfactory as evidence that the generator was not what it was warranted to be in all particulars. However, the repeated statement of appellee as a witness that the, generator, which was installed by a mechanic, recommended by appellant, would not work, was sufficient evidence to make it a question for the jury whether as it was warranted to be it was automatic in action; and under the issue made on that question by the answer and appellee's testimony that question was properly submitted to the jury.
Appellee pleaded as a defense that the generator and fixtures purchased by him would not reasonably perform the service for which they were purchased within the implied warranty rule. This question was fully dealt with by this court in its recent opinion in John S. Noel Co. v. Theobold, 217 Ky. 28, 288 S.W. 1031. The testimony for appellee was sufficient to take the case to the jury on this question. This court is constrained to the view that instruction No. 2, submitting that issue to the jury, was erroneous. The error in the instruction was that any failure of performance upon the part of the generator could have been understood by the jury to be sufficient to authorize a finding against appellant. Any failure of performance was sufficient to authorize the jury to find for appellee. The implied warranty is that the article purchased shall be reasonably satisfactory for the purposes for which it is purchased. Upon another trial the instruction submitting this issue will be corrected in the manner indicated.
Without objection or exception the respective merits or demerits of a great number of other carbide generating plants sold by appellant to various persons residing in Madison county, Ky., were detailed to the jury by the witnesses herein. It would be well for the attorneys to confine themselves to the questions presented by the issues relative to the particular lighting plant involved in this controversy. No objection to this testimony having been offered of course, this reason would not authorize the court to reverse this judgment, and the incompetency of this evidence plays no part in the reversal of the judgment herein.
For these reasons the appeal is granted, the judgment reversed, and cause remanded for a new trial, and for other proceedings consistent herewith.