Me. Justice Dibell delivered the opinion of the Co urt.
Appellants were manufacturers at York, Pennsylvania, of a farm implement called a potato digger. Appellee was a dealer in agricultural implements at Bockford, Illinois. Appellee ordered one potato digger of appellants and *473received it about June 1,1894. Then he ordered three more. He tried them in dry soil and they seemed to work well. He paid for these four. About the last of August, 1894, he ordered twelve more, which were received by him. He afterward claimed they were unmerchantable and not fit for the purpose for which they were designed, and refused to pay for them, and offered to return them to appellants. Appellants then brought this suit to recover the price of said twelve potato diggers, which was $75. In the Circuit Court appellants had verdict and judgment for $37.50, from which judgment in their favor they prosecute this appeal.
There was no express warranty in the sale of these implements. There was therefore an implied warranty. The main controversy is as to the extent of such implied warranty. Appellants claim it was only as to material and workmanship. Appellee claims that as appellants were the manufacturers of the implements designated, and named them “ potato diggers,” there was an implied warranty that they were reasonably fit and proper for the use indicated, that is, for digging potatoes. The Circuit Court, in its rulings upon the evidence and instructions, took the latter view. In Beers v. Williams, 16 Ill. 69, it was held that upon the sale óf a boiler by the manufacturer there was an implied warranty that it was fit for a boiler. In Archdale v. Moore, 19 Ill. 565, the court said : “ Where the seller is the manufacturer the law implies a warranty that it is reasonably fit for the use for which it is intended.” 1 Parsons on Contracts, star page 469, states this rule, or rather exception to the general rule, thus: “ If a thing be ordered of a manufacturer for a special purpose, and it be supplied and sold for that purpose, there is an implied warranty that it is fit for that purpose.” In a long note the author reviews the cases. In Brenton v. Davis, 8 Blackf. 317, the court said : “ If a manufacturer of an article sells it at a fair market price, knowing the purchaser designs to apply it to a particular purpose, he impliedly warrants it to be fit for that purpose; and if, owing to some defect in the article not *474visible to the purchaser, it is unfit for the purpose for which it is sold and bought, the seller is liable on his implied warranty.” 2 Benjamin on Sales, Section 988. We are aware that the case at bar comes very close to the line of the converse of the above proposition, being the position contended for by appellant, and which is thus stated in 2 Benjamin on Sales, Section 987: “Where a known, described and defined article is ordered of a manufacturer, although it is stated to be required by the purchaser for a particular purpose, still if the known, defined and described thing be actually supplied, there is no warranty that it shall answer the particular purpose intended by the buyer.” We, however, think the Circuit Court correctly held the law as applied to this case. Appellee had received four of these potato diggers, the first nearly three months before the order for the dozen was given, but at a season of the year when such implements are but little used. He had tried them in dry ground. The evidence seems to show very strongly, and without contradiction, that when applied to the conditions usually existing at the time of potato digging these implements would not work. The very name “ potato digger ” implies that it is an implement calculated and intended to take potatoes out of the ground and leave them on top of the soil. The evidence is all one way that these machines would not do this, but only shoved the soil and potatoes to each side, leaving the potatoes still in the soil. A common plow would do the same thing. This implement, according to the evidence, was of no aid in digging potatoes, and it is not shown to have been fit for any other use. We hold that one who manufactui-es an implement, names it a potato digger, and sells it to another, impliedly warrants that- it will dig potatoes and place them on top of the ground, ready to be picked up. If we are right in this conclusion, the principal rulings of the Circuit Court were correct.
It is argued the court below should have admitted the letter of May 1, 1894, written by appellee to appellants. All it would have proved was that appellee ordered and received one potato digger from appellants, but the facts on *475that subject were fully disclosed by appellee when called by appellants as their only witness. It is also urged the verdict of $37.50 can not stand, because if appellee is right there should have been no recovery. While appellee testified that none of these twelve implements received were ever sold “ only as they came back,” and that he notified appellants they were all on hand subject to their order, yet he also testified that he did not know how many of the diggers he had left in his warehouse, and that of the twelve implements in controversy he had sold “ in the neighborhood of three ” that were not brought back; and that there were “ perhaps four or five altogether—that' is, what you would call a sale,” explaining that where the parties brought them back he did not consider that was a sale. His offer to return could not extend to diggers which he had sold and which had not been returned to him. The .jury charged him with six implements at the contract price, and we think substantial justice was done. Judgment affirmed.