Page:North Dakota Reports (vol. 3).pdf/266

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226
NORTH DAKOTA REPORTS.

their rights. ‘Is there greater certainty that an expert, acting entirely under the direction of the agent, will bother himself to notify the company of difficulties of which his immediate superior has notice, and which he is setting about to remedy? The waiver of notice must come from some agent having power to waive it. The warranty expressly provides that “no agent or expert has any authority to add to or abride or change it in any manner.” The power to waive notice was not in fact vested in these experts, or any one of them; there was nothing in the nature of their employment or the kind of work they were performing to justify the belief that they were authorized to decide for the company all matters it would be called upon to decide when apprised of a claim of breach of warranty; and therefore they had no power to do away with the necessity of notice. The purchaser was distinctly informed that they had no such power, and in the same connection he agreed to give notice to the company itself,—an act simple in its nature, and easy of performance. Business faith required him to send such notice, whatever the agent or other persons might say, for the very nature of the requirement informed him that the company desired and insisted upon such a notice, that there would be no uncertainty of its receipt at the center of power and responsibility,—to guard against the concealment of facts by local agents who might be tempted to withhold full information. The case is so plain that we do not feel the need of authority. But we find adjudications in harmony with our views: Furneaux v. Esterly, (Kan.) 13 Pac. Rep. 824, and cases cited; Nichols v. Knowles, (Minn.) 18 N. W. Rep. 413.

It is urged that the court erred in striking out what is designated as the equitable defense in the action. On the theory that plaintiff might be able to show, on a new trial, a waiver of the condition requiring notice to be sent to the home office, we will refer to this point. The true theory of this action is that the consideration for the $110 note failed because of a breach of the warranty, followed by the performance by the plaintiff of all the conditions of the warranty, and by a complete rescission, and that it then