B. A. Stevens Co. v. Whalen

129 S.W. 1081, 95 Ark. 488, 1910 Ark. LEXIS 215
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJune 27, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 129 S.W. 1081 (B. A. Stevens Co. v. Whalen) 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
B. A. Stevens Co. v. Whalen, 129 S.W. 1081, 95 Ark. 488, 1910 Ark. LEXIS 215 (Ark. 1910).

Opinion

McCulloch, C. J.

This is an action instituted by the plaintiff, B. A. Stevens Company, against defendant, Pat Whalen, to recover possession of two pool tables and the paraphernalia connected therewith, which plaintiff had formerly sold to the defendant and had taken chattel mortgages ¡back to secure the purchase price. Defendant purchased one of the pool tables in controversy and the cues, balls, racks, etc., to be used in connection therewith, from plaintiff on October 12, 1907, and executed to the latter a chattel mortgage on same to secure the price, which was divided into eleven promissory notes of $10 each, five of which he paid and six remained unpaid at the time of the commencement of this action. Defendant purchased the other table in controversy from plaintiff on May 18, 1908, and executed a chattel mortgage to secure the price, evidenced by eleven promissory notes of $10 each, one of the notes only having been paid at the time of the commencement of this action. The action was commenced in April, 1909, after all the said notes became due. An order of delivery was issued at the commencement of the action, and the property was taken thereunder and delivered to plaintiff, defendant failing to give a retaining bond.

The evidence tends to show that the second table, purchased on May 18, 1908, was defective by reason of the fact that the slabs of slate out of which the top of the table was constructed did not fit together, and that when the table was put up there were joints between the ends of the pieces of slate; also that one of the ■ carom blocks did not fit the pocket in the table. This table was shipped from plaintiff's factory 01-place of business at Toledo, Ohio, to the defendant at Hoxie, Arkansas, and complete instructions were sent showing how to set the table up. Soon after the table was received and put up by defendant, he wrote to plaintiff notifying it of the defect. He did not, however, reject the table or notify plaintiff that he intended to do so. Further instructions were sent to him by plaintiff about correcting the defect, and after defendant' made an effort to correct the defect he again notified plaintiff of the continued existence of the defect, concluding his letter with the following statement: “Now, I will want you to make good your mistake. Let me hear from you.” He still did not offer to return the table, nor did he notify plaintiff definitely that the same would be rejected. On the contrary, he continued to use the table in his pool room up to the time this action was commenced.

In September, 1908, in response to a demand for payment of the notes then due, he wrote a letter to the agent of plaintiff who had the notes for collection stating that it would be impossible for him to pay then on account of the fact that the cotton crop had not begun moving, and that he could not pay anything until about thirty days later. The notes were after-wards sent to an attorney in Lawrence County, and presented to the defendant, and he refused to pay, failing, however, to make an offer to return the table.

. There was no defect about the first table, and it is undisputed that six of the notes were unpaid and past due at the time this suit was commenced. Defendant introduced testimony tending to prove the defective condition of the table, and also tending to prove the usable value of a pool table. After the introduction of all the evidence, the court refused to give any of the instructions requested by plaintiff, but on motion of defendant submitted to the jury the following interrogatories, which were answered by the jury as indicated below:

“1. Was the last table bought by Pat Whalen from the B. A. Stevens Company defective?
“A. Yes.
“2. Was the plaintiff notified of the defective table?
“A. • Yes.
“3. What was the usable value of a good combination table like the one bought by defendant from the plaintiff in the business house of the defendant, Pat Whalen, at Hoxie, Arkansas?
“A. One dollar per day.
“4. What was the usable value of the table actually received by the defendant from the plaintiff?
“A. Fifty cents.
“5. What was the usable value of the good table taken from Whalen by the replevin action?
“A. One dollar per day.
“6. If the defective table taken by the plaintiff in replevin had been such a table as was intended to have been sold, what would have been the usable value of the same since the replevin was brought?
“A. One dollar per day.
“7. What was the value of any of the property replevied by the plaintiff that was not owned by the defendant at the time the mortgage was given?
“A. $22.18.
“8. How much insurance is included on the notes sued on in this action?
“A. $7.00.
“9. What was the value of the articles replevied? Give the articles and values.
“A. Total $337.20; 1 No. 6864 4x8 Buckeye pool tauie, $143.00; 1 set carom blocks, $2.50; 1 set billiard markers, $1.25; 1 cue rack, $4.00; 1 set 2 Jg No. 910 billiard balls, $20.751 1 ball rack, $4.00; 1 dozen cues, $4.00; 1 brush, 55 cents; 1 bridge, 35 cents; 1 basket, 40 cents; 1 shake bottle, 35 cents; 1 shake ball, 20 cents; 1 triangle, 30 cents; 1 rail fork bit, 20 cents, 1 No. 6535 4x8 Buckeye pool table, $125.00; 1 set pool balls, $16.00; 1 cue rack, $4.00; 1 ball rack, $4.00; 1 dozen cues, $4.00; 1 brush, 55 cents; 1 bridge, 35’ cents; 1 basket, 40 cents; 1 shake bottle, 35 cents; 1 rail fork bit, .20 cents; 1 set shake balls, 20 cents; 1 triangle, 30 cents. Total, $335.20.”

The court then made a finding that the defendant had tendered the defective table at various times, and had paid as a part of the price thereof $45 in cash, $12.77 in freight and $7 insurance, which should be credited upon the notes given for the other table, and that, when so credited, said sums were sufficient to cancel all the notes given for the first table purchased. The court thereupon held that, the purchase price of the first table being thus paid, plaintiff had no right to recover the first table, and that the taking thereof under the order of delivery was wrongful. Judgment was thereupon rendered against plaintiff and the surety on the replevin bond for the recovery of the first table and paraphernalia, viz., the one purchased in October, 1907, or its value, a total of' $155.35, together with the sum of $215 as damages for detention of same during the pendency of the action. Plaintiff appealed.

It has been often decided by this court that if there be a breach of warranty of the soundness or fitness of an article which the vendee has had no opportunity to inspect before delivery, he may make his election, either to rescind the contract, or to affirm the contract by accepting and keeping the property, and, when sued for the price, set up the false warranty by way of recoupment. Plant v. Condit, 22 Ark. 454; Weed v. Dyer, 53 Ark. 155; Bunch v. Weil, 72 Ark.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
129 S.W. 1081, 95 Ark. 488, 1910 Ark. LEXIS 215, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/b-a-stevens-co-v-whalen-ark-1910.