Aultman & Taylor Co. v. Hefner

2 S.W. 861, 67 Tex. 54, 1886 Tex. LEXIS 615
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 26, 1886
DocketNo. 2103
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 2 S.W. 861 (Aultman & Taylor Co. v. Hefner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Aultman & Taylor Co. v. Hefner, 2 S.W. 861, 67 Tex. 54, 1886 Tex. LEXIS 615 (Tex. 1886).

Opinion

Stayton, Associate Justice.

This action was brought to recover on three promissory notes, executed to the appellant, by the appellee Heffner, to secure the purchase money for machinery sold to the latter by the former, and to foreclose a chattel mortgage made to secure the notes. One of the notes was signed by the defendant Davenport, and the three notes bore indorsements which showed that the defendants, Bowser & Lemon, “ for value received, waiving presentment for payment, protest, and notice thereof, guaranteed the payment of the notes at maturity or any time thereafter.”

The purchase of the machinery was made through one White and Bowser & Lemon, who, under the evidence must be held to have been the agents of The Aultman & Taylor Company, which seems to have been the manufacturers of the machinery.

The contract through which the purchase was made- consisted of an order signed by Hefner and directed to the appellant, which requested them to send forward the machinery, and bound him to take it and settle for it by the notes to be executed.. This order was made out on a form evidently prepared by the appellant, and among other things contained warranties as to the machinery.

The machinery was forwarded by the appellant and received by the appellee, who, with one of the agents of the appellant, in accordance with the instructions sent with the machinery, directing how it was to be put' up and operated, attempted to put it up, and to use it for the purposes to which the warranties relate, and it was then found that the machinery would not operate as warranted to do.

Soon after this, one of the firm of Bowser & Lemon, the agents of the appellants, came to Hefner’s place and asked him to execute notes as contemplated by the order on which the machinery was sent out. This Hefner at first declined to do, for the reason that the machinery was not such as was required by the warranty. This agent, however, insisted that the machine would perform the work it was warranted to do, and stated that if White could not make it do so he would send a person from Dallas who should make the machinery operate as it was warranted to do. With the understanding and promise that this should be done, Hefner executed the notes and mortgage sued on and continued in possession of the machinery.

Neither the appellant nor any of its agents, after the notes [58]*58were executed, made any effort to have the machinery put in such condition that it would perform the work it was warranted to do, although the agents were repeatedly requested to do so. The evidence shows very clearly that the machinery, with skillful management, could not be made to do the work it was warranted to do.

In the answer of the defendant, Hefner, he set up the breach of warranty, and alleged that he had paid as much on the notes as the machinery was worth.

The order on which the machinery was sold was made in duplicate, on printed forms evidently furnished by the appellant, and one of them was left with Hefner and the other sent to the appellant. The one left with Hefner seems to have been accidentally destroyed, and in his answer notice was given to the appellant to produce the one forwarded to it.

In Hefner’s answer the warranties set out in the order were substantially alleged, and in some respects his averments may have gone further than did the warranty, relying, perhaps, on conversations between him and the agent of the appellant, made about the time the notes were executed as to some matters as warranties.

The appellant, assuming that the notes and mortgage on which it had sued were the sole evidence which could be looked to to ascertain what the contract between the parties was, and assuming that the acts and declarations of its agent at the time the notes were executed were not binding upon it, and assuming that Hefner was bound to pay the full amount of the notes on retaining the machinery under the circumstances stated in the answer, raised these several questions by exceptions which were overruled. The action of the court in this ruling is assigned as error.

When the appellant accepted the order, which was made subject to the warranties contained upon its face, it became as much a part of the contract between the parties as could the notes and mortgage, had they been executed without any understanding as to anything further to be done as the consideration for them. In so far as the answer set up the warranties contained in that paper and alleged the breach, the pleading was sufficient.

The acts and declarations of the appellants’ agent, at the time he took the notes and mortgage, created no new obligation, and only go to show that there was no waiver of the warranty in running the machinery after it had been tested and found to be not as it was warranted to be.

[59]*59It was provided in the very face of the contract between the parties that the notes should be executed in settlement as a condition on which the warranty should attach.

- It contained this clause: “It is also fully understood and agreed that if the purchaser does not make full settlement with cash or notes, as above provided, upon its delivery to him, he thereby waives all claims under this warranty.” The answer setting up the facts attending the execution of the notes and mortgage were well pleaded.

At most, then, we have simply a case in which a manufacturer has sold machinery, warranting it to have certain qualities, and when well managed to be capable of performing certain work, which upon fair trial it is found that it will not do, and for the full value of which, if as warranted to be, the purchaser has executed notes.

For the purposes of this case it may be admitted that, under the facts, Hefner received the machinery; that it became his property, and that he has not now the right to return it to the seller and have his notes canceled, as would be his right if he had acted promptly in case of an executory contract to buy machinery, unseen, but represented by the seller to possess given qualities not found to exist.

The title passed to him with the warranty for his protection, and if there was a breach of that warranty he might have either of two remedies: First, after running and accepting the ma-machinery he would be entitled to maintain an action for damages, in which he might recover, not only a sum equal to the difference between the value of the defective thing: and one of its kind not defective, but in which he might also recover any such sum as, under the rales of law, he might be entitled to as consequential damage. Second, when sued for the purchase money he may set up the defective quality of the thing warranted in diminution of the price.

The rule was thus stated in the case of Mundel v. Steel, 8 M. & W., 858: “The rule is, that it is competent for the defendant not to set off by a procedure in the nature of a cross action the amount of damages which he has sustained by breach of the contract, but simply to defend himself by showing how much less the subject matter of the action was worth by reason of the breach of contract, and to the extent that he obtains, or is capable of obtaining, an abatement of price on that account, he must be considered as having received satisfaction for the breach of [60]*60contract.” This is the effect of the decision in Brantley v. Thomas, 22 Texas, 275, and Blythe v. Speake, 23 Texas, 436.

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Bluebook (online)
2 S.W. 861, 67 Tex. 54, 1886 Tex. LEXIS 615, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/aultman-taylor-co-v-hefner-tex-1886.