A. Wyckoff & Son Co. v. Town of Winnfield

58 So. 338, 130 La. 563, 1912 La. LEXIS 892
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMarch 25, 1912
DocketNo. 19,230
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 58 So. 338 (A. Wyckoff & Son Co. v. Town of Winnfield) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
A. Wyckoff & Son Co. v. Town of Winnfield, 58 So. 338, 130 La. 563, 1912 La. LEXIS 892 (La. 1912).

Opinion

BREAUX, C. J.

Plaintiff, a corporation •organized in Louisiana under her laws, brought this suit for the sum of $2,317.36 and interest, stipulated in a contract entered into between the parties, in which plaintiff bound itself, in accordance with specifications, to deliver and to put in a proper waterworks system in the town of Winnfield.

The defendant corporation was authorized to enter into the agreement.

Through a waterworks commission the municipality ordered from plaintiff on May 8, 1910, a number of thousands of feet of pipe to stand 110 pounds pressure. Plaintiff bound itself to furnish a competent inspector to see the material properly laid.

Plaintiff avers that it furnished the materials aggregating the contract price, and an inspector was detailed to see to the work of laying the mains properly; that it performed its part of the contract.

The testimony discloses that the municipality had a sum of about $3,000 in bank to meet the account of plaintiff derived from bonds issued and sold by the town.

Plaintiff obtained an injunction to restrain defendant from applying as much of this amount as was necessary to pay its claim to the payment of any other claim.

Defendant denied all indebtedness on the ground that the pipes and material sold under the contract were not fit for use; that they.never were used, as they are not such as plaintiff represented they would be. Defendant denies all indebtedness, and, in addition, reconvenes for damages in the sum of $1,692.25, and details the items of alleged damages.

The facts are: That the pipes are wooden water pipes of which there was little known in this state, but it is said that they are extensively used in other localities and take the place of iron. They are, we are informed by the evidence, used for waterworks, well curbing, mine shaft crossings, flumes for irrigation, sewers, and other works.

That no contract was written and signed by the parties is one of the complaints of the defendant, although there was a verbal agreement that such a contract would be signed.

Plaintiff, without insisting upon a written contract, shipped pipes and fittings, and defendant, it is admitted, had them unloaded from the cars.

[565]*565An inspector was sent by plaintiff company ■to see to the laying of the pipes and properly connecting them.

The complaint is that these pipes leaked, ■and thereby a large volume of water escaped from the pipes which rendered pumping water pretty expensive. Although in operating the plant the pressure was diminished, there were leaks along the line of the wooden main of thousands of gallons of water.

Defendant avers that the company represented to the waterworks commission that wood piping was as useful and satisfactory as iron piping.

Either the plaintiff promised too much, or the defendant expected more than it should. It ended by defendant refusing to use the pipes and to pay for them.

On the part of plaintiff it appears that these pipes have passed the experimental period, and are giving entirely good service elsewhere. The pipes are made of cypress, with pitch inside and outside. The joints fit, and are watertight.

The extremes in this instance are far from meeting. According to plaintiff, defendant very much exaggerates in setting up numerous defects, while the defendant is equally as positive that the claim of plaintiff is entirely without merit.

Although there was no contract, the following is a fairly sufficient substitute:

“Please book our order to:
6.000 ft. 6“ pipe for 100 lb. pressure at 31$.
2.000 ft. 4" pipe for 100 lb. pressure at 22$.
“Same to be constructed according to your standard specifications and shipped when required after thirty days from date. The quantities mentioned are approximate, and may be departed from, a reasonable amount to be later determined. You are to furnish free of cost to us a competent inspector, to see that ■the material is properly laid.
“6" tees at $4.50, 4" tees at $3.50.”

On this score it is too late in this litigation to write down conjectures as to what might have been the result if a contract had been written. It remains that it does not appear upon whom it devolved to prepare and write a contract and to have it signed.

The plaintiff’s witnesses have testified without contradiction in support of plaintiff’s claim. Witnesses for defendant are equally as positive and direct that plaintiff failed to furnish good material and piping to enable defendant to have satisfactory waterworks.

The contract entered into between plaintiff and defendant did not receive due attention. It was not written, and performance was left to the good faith of the parties to it. It consisted of an order for the material at price agreed upon and the shipment of the material by plaintiff to defendant. Plaintiff, by the effect of the agreement, bound itself to deliver the wooden pipes and other materials to withstand 110 pounds. The defendant paid the freight. The defendant was to dig the ditches necessary to put in the back filling.

It was also agreed that plaintiff would send an Inspector to inspect the work, and another to see to the laying of the pipes. This was done.

It is unfortunate for defendant that delay arose at the very first in regard to accepting delivery of the pipes. Immediately after receiving the order, the pipes were loaded in cars at Alexandria, but the shipment was stopped by defendant during one month.

It has given plaintiff some ground for the complaint that, although the pipes were exactly as agreed upon, as proven by the testimony of its witnesses, they were damaged while left in the loaded cars at Alexandria, La., from which place they were shipped to defendant; that during that time the pipes were drying, owing to the hot days of August.

There was unquestionably delay, which should have been avoided. No good reason is given why this delay was not avoided. Plaintiff’s contention is that the material [567]*567was delivered on the cars at Alexandria, from which time it was at the risk of the town of Winnfield. Throughout the trial plaintiff’s contention was that it had done all that it had promised to do, but that, owing to the cause just stated, and on account of other failures to attend properly to its part of the work on the part of the defendant, it was not possible to furnish materials that would answer the purpose, as no material will prove as useful as it should if the needed labor is not applied; that, under the circumstances,-it, plaintiff, is not responsible for the uselessness of the mains.-

The evidence does not sustain the conclusion that plaintiff’s pipes were originally defective and unfit for the purpose intended. There was a test made by defendant’s employes after the pipes had been laid and were in operation. It does not appear that determined protest was made, or that defendant’s agent sought during the trial to put the' responsibility for any defects upon the plaintiff.

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Related

Layne & Bowler Co. v. Town of Winnfield
64 So. 127 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1914)

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Bluebook (online)
58 So. 338, 130 La. 563, 1912 La. LEXIS 892, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/a-wyckoff-son-co-v-town-of-winnfield-la-1912.