Air Conditioning Engineers, Inc. v. O'Neal Electric Co.

212 F.2d 915, 1954 U.S. App. LEXIS 3466
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedMay 14, 1954
Docket14452_1
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 212 F.2d 915 (Air Conditioning Engineers, Inc. v. O'Neal Electric Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Air Conditioning Engineers, Inc. v. O'Neal Electric Co., 212 F.2d 915, 1954 U.S. App. LEXIS 3466 (5th Cir. 1954).

Opinion

BORAH, Circuit Judge.

This is an appeal from a final judgment of the District Court in favor of the plaintiff O’Neal Electric Company and against defendant Air Conditioning Engineers, Inc., in a suit based on a contract for the installation of electrical transformers.

Plaintiff instituted this action in the Chancery Court of Harrison County, Mississippi, to recover from the defendant and a named garnishee the sum of $3,181 with interest from July 18, 1950. The bill of complaint alleged that on the 30th day of March, 1950, defendant entered into a contract with plaintiff for electrical installation work to be done on the Edgewater Gulf Hotel in Harrison County at and for a price of $6,681 for electric equipment, labor and materials; that plaintiff complied with the terms of the contract and completed it according to plans and specifications; was paid the sum of $3,500 on account; and there is now due and owing to plaintiff the sum of $3,181, the balance due under the contract. The defendant removed the cause to the United States District Court for the Southern District of Mississippi on the ground of diversity of citizenship. Thereafter, and after entering into a stipulation with plaintiff releasing the garnishee, defendant filed an answer and counterclaim in which it alleged that plaintiff had not furnished sufficient transformer capacity for the carrying out of the contract and demanded judgment against plaintiff for expenses incurred in completing this work in the total sum of $5,816.76 with interest. Issue was joined; a trial was had before the court without a jury; and the trial court entered its written opinion 1 and final judgment dismissing the *917 counterclaim and awarding plaintiff the amount sued for. Defendant appealed.

It is shown by uncontradicted evidence that on February 17, 1950, the defend■ant entered into a written contract with Edgewater Gulf Hotel under the terms ■of which it agreed to install in the hotel (1) a 100 ton air conditioning system to service the public rooms and (2) certain electric transformers which were described in the contract as “transformers large enough to supply this system .and a total of three hundred (300) % horsepower room air conditioners * * which are to be installed under a separate contract.” Prior to entering into the prime contract and following its usual custom defendant decided to sub■contract the electrical work. Pursuant to such decision, it sought bids and incidental relevant factual information from various electrical contractors and ■obtained a written bid from Economy Electric Construction Company, Inc., on December 20, 1949, in which the bidder ■offered to install three 100 KVA transformers but made no representation that these transformers would be large enough to supply both the 100 ton air conditioning system and the proposed individual room air conditioners. In computing the amount to be bid for the performance of the prime contract, the defendant used the figures supplied by Economy Electric Company as a basis • of cost for the electrical work. There- • after, defendant continued to solicit bids .and in the month of March, 1950, after having received a second written bid which also proposed to furnish and in- . stall three 100 KVA transformers, defendant approached the plaintiff.

It affirmatively appears from the tes-timony of plaintiff’s witness, Achee, that • defendant’s sales manager, Keith, brought Achee to the hotel, showed him the proposed location of the equipment .and the transformers, and told him that he wanted a bid on three 100 KVA transformers. Thereafter, on March 17, 1950, plaintiff submitted a detailed written bid by the terms of which it agreed Ao furnish all labor and materials necessary to complete the installation of two 50 ton air conditioning units, including furnishing and installing, ready for service, three 100 KVA transformers, at and for a price of $6,681. On March 30, 1950, defendant’s vice president, Mutchnick, telephoned plaintiff’s office and advised Achee that plaintiff had the job and it should go ahead and start assembling the materials and begin work; and that defendant would send plaintiff a purchase order that day or at a later date. Mutchnick admitted that' he initiated this telephone call, and that after advising Achee that his price was right and was the most competitive he authorized plaintiff to proceed. This in substance is the contract relied upon by plaintiff and it is not disputed that plaintiff did proceed to furnish and properly install the three 100 KVA transformers for which it demanded the sum specified in its bid.

We next consider the evidence bearing upon the defendant’s version of the contract. On direct examination by counsel for defendant, Mutchnick gave an affirmative answer to the following leading question:

“Q. Then as I understand it you called Mr. O’Neal [plaintiff’s president] and told him that he was going to be awarded the contract and you were sending your counter proposal to him? A. Yes, sir, that is correct.”

This so-called “counter proposal”, a label which counsel ascribed to the purchase order, was drafted by Mutchnick following his telephone conversation with Achee. On the day following which was March 31, 1950, Mutchnick wrote plaintiff stating that he was enclosing a “purchase order” covering the work to be performed by it at Edgewater Gulf Hotel. The letter recites that the purchase order was self explanatory, but if there were any questions, defendant would appreciate being advised; and plaintiff was requested to acknowledge receipt of the order and proceed to make arrangments for its portion of the work. The enclosed purchase order read in part *918 as follows: “Confirming verbal order of Mr. Mutchnick to Mr. Oscar O’Neal and Mr. N. S. Achee as of 3/30/50: This is your authority to proceed with the electric wiring for the service and air conditioning equipment at the Edgewater Gulf Hotel, Gulfport, Mississippi, as per your proposal of March 17, 1950.” This language was followed by a statement which does not comport with the plaintiff’s bid to furnish these 100 KVA transformers in that the order further recites among other things that plaintiff is to supply and install transformers “of adequate size to handle the 100-ton air conditioning system and the 300 % H.P. single phase room air conditioners.” While defendant insists that this statement constituted a counter proposal, Mutchnick himself explained his reason for including this statement in the purchase order. More specifically he testified that it was his custom and practice to insert in purchase orders the pertinent parts of the prime contract and that he had done so in this case. That the reason for so doing was because his company was obligated to furnish the hotel precisely what was stated in the purchase order and he in turn was outlining and passing on to plaintiff what it had to furnish. If, then, this was an attempt to pass on to plaintiff the responsibility of determining the transformer requirements that information was certainly conveyed in a most casual manner when viewed in the light of the fact that plaintiff had not been asked to bid on transformer requirements in the beginning and defendant had already accepted its bid.

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Bluebook (online)
212 F.2d 915, 1954 U.S. App. LEXIS 3466, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/air-conditioning-engineers-inc-v-oneal-electric-co-ca5-1954.