Bates v. Fish Bros.

50 A.D. 38, 63 N.Y.S. 649
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMarch 15, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 50 A.D. 38 (Bates v. Fish Bros.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bates v. Fish Bros., 50 A.D. 38, 63 N.Y.S. 649 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1900).

Opinion

Spring, J.:

The plan of the plaintiff required the heating of the defendant’s factory buildings with live steam coming automatically and directly from the boiler. The engine and boiler were furnished by the defendant, and it, therefore, devolved upon it to supply sufficient steam to make the system of the plaintiff a success. The hot steam came to the furnace rooms through pipes and was distributed by coils of pipe placed near the ceiling of each room. If ample steam was furnished and if the plant was free from inherent defects the capacity of the apparatus depended upon the radiating surface of these coils. The apparatus involved no especial novelty, either in design or mechanism, but was of a kind in quite general use, and this system had been installed successfully in many factories and buildings.

The plant was evidently satisfactory to the defendant when completed, but it is contended that at that time, and during the residue of that winter season, no proper test could be given of the efficiency of the system, as there was no severe cold weather; that it was not until the succeeding winter that the weather was sufficiently cold to show the lack of capacity in the system to furnish adequate heat, according to the warranty accompanying the contract.

It is plain that the burden was upon the plaintiff to establish that he had substantially performed his contracts precedent to any recovery of the purchase price. This he did primarily by showing the putting in of the system, its test to the satisfaction of the defendant, the acceptance by the latter and the payment on the purchase [41]*41price several months after it began using the apparatus. This, however, was not an absolute acceptance, preventing the defendant from rescinding the contract and returning the machinery and appliances to the plaintiff, if, at the time of the first test, the quality and capacity of the plant could not have been determined. But if later on the defendant ascertained this system was insufficient, it was in fairness charged with the duty to apprise plaintiff of the defective condition, if it sought either to rescind the contract or to hold him for special damages. It could not, after discovering the insufficiency of the plant, continue its use without complaint to the plaintiff, and then claim there was no acceptance on its part. (Chambers v. Lancaster, 160 N. Y. 342 ; Ellison v. Creed, 34 App. Div. 15; Brown v. Foster, 108 N. Y. 387.)

If the inadequacy were not attributable to inherent defects, or to an inefficient system, but could be remedied by the addition of a few coils, or some other slight addition involving no impairment of the plant, then plaintiff should be given an opportunity to supply what was required. The defendant could not accept and enjoy the use of the plant and still repudiate the agreement.

The rule of damages for breach of express warranty in cases where there has been an acceptance of the goods warranted, adopted in Wisconsin, where the contract was made and performed, as well as in our own State, is that the vendee is entitled to recover the difference between the actual value of the article delivered and what its value would have been had it conformed to the warranty. (Boothby v. Scales, 27 Wis. 626 ; Bank of North Collins v. Carry Safe Co., 42 App. Div. 233.)

There is no controversy over this rule of damages, and the referee recognized its existence. He found that the defendant accepted the plant and that is justified by the testimony, as it continued to use it Avithout complaint to the plaintiff after the defendant understood fully that the system had failed to give forth adequate heat. This left the defendant to its remedy for damages accruing by reason of the breach of the express warranty. (Brigg v. Hilton, 99 N. Y. 517.)

The referee found specifically that the plaintiff “ fully performed said contract in all respects, said heating apparatus works properly, [42]*42a circulation of steam is maintained throughout the pipes with a pressure at the tank, as provided by the contract; ” that the number of coils have been substantially supplied; ” that the failure to get the required heat is due either to the failure by the defendant to furnish sufficient steam or its lack of coils; that the radiating surface can be augmented by the addition of coils without disturbance to the operation of the plant, and this would bring the heating capacity up to the guaranty and at a cost of $450. The appellant’s counsel criticises this finding in that it is in the alternative and does not find specifically to what the inadequate heat is chargeable. The criticism technically is a just one, but the defendant cannot complain, for the award of damages on the counterclaim is on the hypothesis that the defective condition was due to the lack of coils. If it is on account of the omission of the defendant to furnish steam, then no damages should be imposed, upon the plaintiff.

Then the referee finds that the apparatus is worth $450 less than it would be if it were of ample capacity to heat all the rooms with which it is connected as provided by said contracts,” and "under the steam pressure and with the temperature outside covered by the guaranty.

These findings involve no serious infringement upon the elementary rule referred to, fixing the measure of damages in this class of cases. To paraphrase his report, he, in effect, finds: That the .system installed complied with the specifications in that it was free from inherent fault and that the work was well done; that perhaps through a misconception of the rigor of the climate or the poor construction of the defendant’s frame buildings he miscalculated the extent of the radiating surface required to heat them properly. This underestimate did not signify any impairment of the efficiency of the plant itself, but additional coils were required to bring it up to the guaranty, and that addition was a simple matter, the expense of which was readily ascertainable. The situation confronting the referee demanded that he allow the defendant the full measure of damages accruing to it by reason of the breach of the express warranty and still enable plaintiff to recover what the plant was fairly worth. That rule was fair to the defendant. It recognized its acceptance of the system, but held that the cause of action [43]*43for failure to comply fully with the guaranty survived such acceptance, and the referee certainly endeavored to mete out that justice to both parties. What it will cost to bring the plant up to the full measure of the plaintiff’s guaranty covers the loss to the defendant, and is in effect making the basis of the damages the difference between the actual value and the value if it had corresponded to the guaranty. That measure is no more speculative than the opinions of the witnesses in any case, who fix a value upon an article of this cumbersome kind in actual use. Mr. Savage, an expert on behalf of the defendant, had testified that it would require an expenditure of $1,500 to $2,000 “ for the apparatus to do the work,” while the cost was way below this if the plaintiff’s witnesses are correct in their estimates. In any event, the referee has taken the highest sum given by the witnesses for the plaintiff, and it is hot for this court to interfere with his deduction as long as it is supported fairly by the evidence.

Competent experts may have a different and yet proper way of arriving at the difference between the value of an article actually and if as represented.

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Bluebook (online)
50 A.D. 38, 63 N.Y.S. 649, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bates-v-fish-bros-nyappdiv-1900.