Arnold v. Koehring Co.

415 S.W.2d 552, 242 Ark. 771, 1967 Ark. LEXIS 1320
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJune 5, 1967
Docket5-4225
StatusPublished

This text of 415 S.W.2d 552 (Arnold v. Koehring Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Arnold v. Koehring Co., 415 S.W.2d 552, 242 Ark. 771, 1967 Ark. LEXIS 1320 (Ark. 1967).

Opinion

Carretón Harris, Chief Justice.

J. T. Arnold, doing business as Aggregates and Transporters, was a subcontractor under the principal contractor, W. R. Pair-child Construction Company, Ltd. The latter company held a contract with the Highway Department to reconstruct a portion of Highway No. 167 in Dallas and Grant Counties. Under the contract, Arnold was to place about 200,000 cubic feet of dirt on both sides of the road, across the Saline River bottoms, as a matter of widening the road from 30 to 52 feet. The road embankment through the bottom is 15 to 18 feet high, and the contractor had to extend the embankment 12 feet on each side. The new fill was put down in layers of 8 inches, and each layer was to be compacted to a density of 95 Proctor.1 To obtain the proper compaction, Arnold had been using a D7 bulldozer to pull a sheepsfoot roller back and forth oyer the fill. Though this method would accomplish the task, the work was slow and expensive, it being impossible to turn a dozer and sheepsfoot roller around on a high, narrow fill. Accordingly, the dozer would have to be operated to a place where there was room to turn.

Arnold had heard or read about a pneumatic roller used to compact earth, which could be driven back and forth without turning it around, and he contacted Boy McDonald, an equipment dealer with whom he had done 'business. McDonald represented the manufacturer of the machine, Koehring Company, doing business as Buffalo-Springfield Company, appellee herein. At Arnold’s request, McDonald and Frank Knolls, a factory representative for appellee, went with Arnold to the Saline Biver bottoms and inspected the four pits from which Arnold planned to obtain the dirt for the fill. Two of the pits were in the river bottom in gumbo mud; another was in sandy soil, and there was another in clay dirt. According to Arnold, these men assured Arnold that the PSB-30 machine (about which Arnold had inquired) would work satisfactorily, and get the required compaction. Arnold, stating that he relied upon their superior knowledge, signed a lease agreement on July 13, 1962, to rent this machine for 6 months for the sum of $1,600.00 per month, and the machine was placed on the job July 23, 1962. McDonald instructed the men how to operate the roller and demonstrated it by driving it himself.2 Appellant placed the machine in use, and thereafter occurred the events which give rise to this litigation, and which will be subsequently discussed. Arnold, contending that the machine did not perform satisfactorily, never did actually pay but $1,-600.00 for rent, turned the machine back in, and refused to make any further payments. Appellee then instituted suit for the balance of the rent due for the 6 months period against Arnold, Fairchild, and the Western Casualty and Surety Company, which, had executed a payment and performance bond as surety (for Fairchild Construction Company) to all who furnished material, labor, and supplies in doing the work under this .contract. Fairchild and Western answered, admitting, the execution of the bond, but denying all other material allegations, and Arnold answered separately, asserting that the machine would not perform, the work as represented by appellee; further, that he had been damaged in. the sum of $3,000.00 because the failure of the machine had delayed him in completing his contract, and his operating expense had risen because of that fact. On trial, the court, sitting as a jury, found that appellee was entitled to judgment in the amount of $7,000.00; that the Fairchild Company and Western Casualty were liable for that period of the lease agreement between July 23, 1962, and October 27, 1962 (when the machinery was being used on the Fairchild job in G-rant County), in the net amount of $2,359.99 ;3 that the cross-complaint of Arnold should be dismissed. From such judgment-comes this, appeal.

. , .There, was a no warranty clause in the lease contract, but appellant argues that this clause only warrants against latent defects in material, workmanship or .capacity, and he asserts there was an implied warranty that the particular type of machine involved would obtain the compaction required. Appellant states:

“*- * * The form used contains a no warranty clause but it is quite clear that the clause was not designed to relieve lessors of their obligation under the implied warranty that the machine was suitable for the use intended. The lessor and the manufacturer knew what was expected and required of the machine on this job.

It is not necessary that we discuss whether there actually was an implied warranty, for we think fact questions dispose of this litigation.

Proof on the part of appellant is to the effect that the roller would not give 95% Proctor compaction. Arnold stated that he could obtain 90, 91 and 92% Proctor compaction, but that he would then have to go back with his old machine to make the additional compaction. He said that his crew had trouble compacting the edge of the roadway, because of the fact that the machine could not get in close to the edge. Arnold mentioned that after a period of time, “the torque converter went out. * * * We were down I would say 10 days, maybe three weeks or longer, which the factory compensated us for as far as the rent was concerned. It was satisfactory how, the arrangement they made as far as that part of it was concerned.”4 Appellant testified that, in operating the roller, the directions given by McDonald were followed, that he was told “to fill it full of water. We filled it full of water. We still come up — that added more weight to it. Then they told us to put more air in the tires, on pneumatic rollers — the amount of air in the tires has something to do with the amount of compaction you get. They told us to do that. We still didn’t get it. In a period of two or three weeks this same factory man came back down and he said as a last resort to get the maximum weight on this roller he said to fill it full of sand and then fill it full of water, and we did that, but we still were unable to come up to this 95 per cent Proctor compaction which was required by the State. All the time we were still having to use the sheepsfoot to get the final four or five per cent compaction, before we could put our gravel and other materials on it.” Arnold took the roller off the Grant County job and sent it to Bald Knob, where he had another contract. In the meantime, he had made his rental payment on September 12. When asked why he retained the machine so long before taking it off the Saline River contract, appellant replied that he was “still in the stage of getting information from the factory,” and he believed in giving the machine “a fair chance.”

According to Randolph Reynolds, superintendent for Arnold on the Saline River job, the biggest trouble occurred on the shoulder. “Yes, where we had the biggest trouble on the shoulders. Take a Sheepsfoot and roll the shoulders because it hangs out a little further and get your compaction that way. ’ ’ He stated that the pneumatic roller could be used up to a certain point, but that the sheepsfoot would have to be then used in order to meet the specifications. He also said that there were times when this old machine would not attain the 95% compaction on the first trial. With the pneumatic roller, according to the witness, one could usually get the required compaction with sandy material. Reynolds said that the machine was top-heavy, and it was “difficult to find an operator that would run it.

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Bluebook (online)
415 S.W.2d 552, 242 Ark. 771, 1967 Ark. LEXIS 1320, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/arnold-v-koehring-co-ark-1967.