|
(BELIZE
PRINTING COMPANY LIMITED
( |
PLAINTIFF |
BETWEEN |
(AND
( |
|
|
(BENEX PRESS |
DEFENDANT |
Supreme
Court
Action No. 94 of 1982
26th August,1983.
Moe, C.J.
Mr. Denys
Barrow for the Plaintiff.
Mr. Allan Pitts for the Defendant.
Contract
- Breach of Contract - Sale of Goods Ordinance - Sale of Goods
by description - Defective goods - Effect where goods do not
correspond with description given.
J
U D G M E N T
The Plaintiff
company claims from the Defendant company $9,700.57 being
the balance of the purchase price of goods sold and delivered
to the Defendant company. The Defendant company admits sale
and delivery of goods to it on credit but says it owes a balance
of $9,700.57 less $6,224.38 being the purchase price of one
Polychrome PC-32 Plate Processor, one of the goods sold and
delivered, but which was defective and not reasonably or at
all fit for the purpose for which it was bought. The Defendant
says that at the time of buying the processor, it made known
to the Plaintiff the particular purpose for which it required
the processor, that it relied on the Plaintiff's skill and
judgment and the processor is an item which it was in the
course of the Plaintiff's business to sell. It therefore claims
it was an implied condition of the contract that the processor
would be reasonably fit for the purpose for which it was required.
It says the Plaintiff was in breach of the contract and it
was entitled to repudiate it. It clearly invokes section 16(l)(a)
of the Sale of Goods Ordinance, Cap 207.
2. The
evidence is that the Managing Director of the Plaintiff company,
a Mr. Lindo, a printer and the Managing Director of the Defendant
company, a Mr. Bouloy, also a printer, went to a printing
exposition in Miami, U.S.A. Mr. Lindo at the time was also
a representative of Polychrome. Another representative of
Polychrome, told Mr. Lindo that if he purchased two of the
processors on exhibit he would give him 90 days credit. Mr.
Lindo then asked Mr. Bouloy if he was interested in them.
Mr. Bouloy asked if the processor could process the type of
plates and chemicals that he used which were of make Howsner
Ralghrap. The American representative said that it could.
Mr. Bouloy told Mr. Lindo if that is so, he will agree to
purchase one from him, Lindo, who, as representative in Belize
will be responsible for any trouble with the machine. Mr.
Lindo said that that was okay. Mr. Bouloy added in cross-examination
that Mr. Lindo said if the American Representative who knows
more about the processor than I do says it can work, he too
says it can work. When the processor was delivered and set
up, Mr. Bouloy operated it and several plastic wheels inside
the machine melted. The wheels inside the machine are for
guiding the plates through the machine. The Defendant got
in touch with Mr. Lindo who indicated he would replace the
plastic wheels which he did after a long period of time. He
also delivered a thermostat for replacement. The Defendant
replaced the wheels, but not the thermostat.
He asked
Mr. Lindo to do so. Mr. Lindo did not and the processor has
not worked yet. The only evidence as to why the melting of
the rollers occurred came from the Defendant who said that
he thought the chemicals must have gotten hot and melted the
wheels, but he could not explain why this would occur.
3. It
was contended for the Plaintiff firstly, that the Defendant's
claim for breach of warranty and/or representation by the
Plaintiff company has not been made out on the ground that
nothing is shown by evidence that whatever warranties or representations
were made by Mr. Lindo were made on behalf of the Plaintiff
company. I rejected this. The evidence is that Mr. Lindo is
Managing Director of the Plaintiff company. As such, he is
an agent of the Plaintiff. I found that when he made representations
to Mr. Bouloy he made them in the same capacity in which he
agreed to sell and deliver to Mr. Bouloy. When he agreed to
sell and deliver to Mr. Bouloy he was acting as agent for
the Plaintiff company who has pleaded that it sold and delivered
to the Defendant. It was contended secondly, that there is
no evidence that the Plaintiff company was in the business
of selling processors, specifically Polychrome PC-32 Plate
Processor. Thirdly, there was no evidence that the processor
was not fit for the purpose as pleaded, i.e. printing of plates
in the Defendant's business; and fourthly, this was a sale
of a specified article under trade name which the Defendant
saw being exhibited, in which case the condition to be implied
under section 16(l)(a) would not apply.
4. The
contract was clearly for the sale and purchase of a specific
article under its brand name. But I think that the Defendant
may still be entitled to the benefit of section 16(l)(a) of
the Ordinance if Mr. Bouloy made it clear that he was relying
on Mr. Lindo's skill and judgment to ensure that the processor
would be fit for the purpose concerned. See Baldry v Marshall
[1925] 1 K.B. 260.
5. I turn
first to determine whether the Defendant bought the processor
in circumstances showing that he relied on the Plaintiff's
skill and judgment. I find firstly that Mr. Bouloy expressed
to Mr. Lindo a purpose which the processor was to serve namely,
to process Howsner Ralghrap plates and chemicals. Secondly,
that Mr. Bouloy asked of Mr. Lindo about the processor's capabilities
and stipulated that he, Mr. Lindo, would be responsible for
any trouble with the machine, which I think clearly show that
Mr. Bouloy was relying on the skill and judgment of Mr. Lindo.
And he was so relying despite the fact that he was buying
a processor with a brand name.
6. I turn
now to the question whether the processor falls into the category
of goods which it was in the course of the Defendant's business
to supply. The evidence is that the Plaintiff, the seller,
is a printing company and Mr. Lindo, its agent, is a printer.
There was no direct evidence that the Defendant company is
a dealer in or a supplier of processors. Nor was there any
evidence that Mr. Lindo is a dealer or supplier of processors.
But there was evidence that the Defendant company, through
Mr. Bouloy, has, from time to time, bought printing machines
and materials from Lindo. This is evidence that the Plaintiff
company, through its agent, Mr. Lindo, deals in or supplies
printing machines and materials. In my view, a processor -
a machine - does fall within the description of printing machine.
I held ,therefore, that the processor falls within the category
of goods which it was in the course of the Plaintiff's business
to supply.
7. Consequently
the contract attracts the application of section 16(l)(a)
of the Sale of Goods Ordinance, i.e. the implied condition
as pleaded. The question now is whether the processor concerned
was reasonably fit for the purpose made known. Can it be said
that a processor whose rollers (which are to guide the plates
through it) melt when the processor is operated was reasonably
fit for the purpose of processing plates? The Defendant raised
a prima facie case that the processor was not fit for
its purpose and on that state of evidence with which I was
left, the Defendant's evidence being the only evidence before
me, I concluded that it not fit for the purpose.
8. I held
that the Plaintiff company was in breach of the condition
to be implied in the contract. The Defendant has conceded
property in the processor passed and a breach of the condition
can only be treated as a ground for damages. I faced some
difficulty in determining the loss resulting from the breach
under consideration. The damages is to put the Defendant so
far as money can do it, in the same position as if the contract
had not been broken. The Defendant claims extinction of price
which he would have had to pay as his damages. I allow it.
9. In
the result, the Plaintiff will have judgment for $3,476.19
with interest at 6% until payment.
----------OO----------
|