Anderson Brothers Corporation v. Robert W. O'meara, Robert W. O'Meara v. Anderson Brothers Corporation

306 F.2d 672, 1962 U.S. App. LEXIS 4300
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedAugust 14, 1962
Docket19405
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 306 F.2d 672 (Anderson Brothers Corporation v. Robert W. O'meara, Robert W. O'Meara v. Anderson Brothers Corporation) 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
Anderson Brothers Corporation v. Robert W. O'meara, Robert W. O'Meara v. Anderson Brothers Corporation, 306 F.2d 672, 1962 U.S. App. LEXIS 4300 (5th Cir. 1962).

Opinion

JONES, Circuit Judge.

The appellant, Anderson Brothers Corporation, a Texas corporation engaged in the business of constructing pipelines, sold a barge dredge to the appellee, Robert W. O’Meara, a resident of Illinois who is an oil well driller doing business in several states and Canada. The appel-lee brought this suit seeking rescission of the sale or, in the alternative, damages. After trial without a jury, the appellee’s prayer for rescission was denied, but damages were awarded. The court denied the appellant’s counterclaim for the unpaid purchase price of the dredge. Both parties have appealed. 1 Appellant contends that no relief should have been given to the appellee, and the appellee contends that the damages awarded to him were insufficient.

The dredge which the appellant sold to the appellee was specially designed to perform the submarine trenching necessary for burying a pipeline under water. In particular it was designed to cut a relatively narrow trench in areas where submerged rocks, stumps and logs might be encountered. The dredge could be disassembled into its larger component parts, moved over land by truck, and reassembled at the job site. The appellant built the dredge from new and used parts in its own shop. The design was copied from a dredge which appellant had leased and successfully used in laying a pipeline across the Mississippi River. The appellant began fabrication of the dredge in early 1955, intending to use it in performing a contract for laying a pipeline across the Missouri River. A naval architect testified that the appellant was following customary practice in pipeline operations by designing a dredge for a specific use. Dredges so designed can be modified, if necessary, to meet particular situations. For some reason construction of the dredge was not completed in time for its use on the job for which it was intended, and the dredge was never used by the appellant. After it was completed, the dredge was advertised for sale in a magazine. This advertisement came to the appellee’s attention in early December, 1955. The appellee *674 wanted to acquire a dredge capable of digging canals fifty to seventy-five or eighty feet wide and six to twelve feet deep to provide access to off-shore oil well sites in southern Louisiana.

On December 8, 1955, the appellee or someone employed by him contacted the appellant’s Houston, Texas, office by telephone and learned that the price of the dredge was $45,000. Terms of sale were discussed, and later that day the appellant sent a telegram to the appellee who was then in Chicago, saying it accepted the appellee’s offer of $35,000 for the dredge to be delivered in Houston. The appellee’s offer was made subject to an inspection. The next day Kennedy, one of the appellee’s employees, went to Houston from New Orleans and inspected the dredge. Kennedy, it appears, knew nothing about dredges but was familiar with engines. After inspecting the engines of the dredge, Kennedy reported his findings to the appellee by telephone and then signed an agreement with the appellant on behalf of the appellee. In the agreement, the appellant acknowledged receipt of $17,500. The agreement made provision for payment of the remaining $17,500 over a period of seventeen months. The dredge was delivered to the appellee at Houston on December 11, 1955, and from there transported by the appellee to his warehouse in southern Louisiana. The barge was transported by water, and the ladder, that part of the dredge which extends from the barge to the stream bed and to which the cutting devices are attached, was moved by truck. After the dredge arrived at his warehouse the appellee executed a chattel mortgage in favor of the appellant and a promissory note payable to the order of the appellant. A bill of sale dated December 17, 1955, was given the appellee in which the appellant warranted only title and freedom from encumbrances. Both the chattel mortgage and the bill of sale described the dredge and its component parts in detail.

The record contains much testimony concerning the design and capabilities of the dredge including that of a naval architect who, after surveying the dredge, reported “I found that the subject dredge * * * had been designed for the purpose of dredging a straight trench over a river, lake or other body of water.” The testimony shows that a dredge designed to perform sweep dredging, the term used to describe the dredging of a wide channel, must be different in several respects from one used only for trenching operations. The naval architect’s report listed at least five major items to be replaced, modified, or added before the dredge would be suited to the appellee’s intended use. It is clear that the appellee bought a dredge which, because of its design, was incapable, without modification, of performing sweep dredging.

On July 10, 1956, about seven months after the sale and after the appellee had made seven monthly payments pursuant to the agreement between the parties, the appellee’s counsel wrote the appellant stating in part that “Mr. O’Meara has not been able to put this dredge in service and it is doubtful that it will ever be usable in its present condition.” After quoting at length from the naval architect’s report, which was dated January 28, 1956, the letter suggested that the differences between the parties could be settled amicably by the appellant’s contributing $10,000 toward the estimated $12,000 to $15,000 cost of converting the trenching dredge into a sweep dredge. The appellant rejected this offer and on July 23, 1956, the ap-pellee’s counsel wrote the appellant tendering return of the dredge and demanding full restitution of the purchase price. This suit followed the appellant’s rejection of the tender and demand.

In his complaint the appellee alleged breaches of expressed and implied warranty and fraudulent representations as to the capabilities of the dredge. By an amendment he alleged as an alternative to the fraud count that the parties had been mistaken in their belief as to the operations of which the dredge was capable, and thus there was a mutual mistake which prevented the formation of a con *675 tract. The appellee sought damages of over $29,000, representing the total of principal and interest paid the appellant and expenses incurred in attempting to operate the dredge. In the alternative, the appellee asked for rescission and restitution of all moneys expended by him in reliance on the contract. The appellant answered denying the claims of the appellee and counterclaiming for the unpaid balance.

The district court found that:

“At the time the dredge was sold by the defendant to the plaintiff, the dredge was not capable of performing sweep dredging operations in shallow water, unless it was modified extensively. Defendant had built the dredge and knew the purpose for which it was designed and adapted. None of the defendant’s officers or employees knew that plaintiff intended to use the dredge for shallow sweep dredging operations. Gier [an employee of the appellant who talked with the appellee or one of his employees by telephone] mistakenly assumed that O’Meara intended to use the dredge within its designed capabilities.
“At the time the plaintiff purchased this dredge he mistakenly believed that the dredge was capable without modification of performing sweep dredging operations in shallow water.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
306 F.2d 672, 1962 U.S. App. LEXIS 4300, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/anderson-brothers-corporation-v-robert-w-omeara-robert-w-omeara-v-ca5-1962.