Berlin Machine Works v. Jefferson Wood Working Co.

191 S.W. 82, 173 Ky. 347, 1917 Ky. LEXIS 457
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJanuary 23, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 191 S.W. 82 (Berlin Machine Works v. Jefferson Wood Working Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Berlin Machine Works v. Jefferson Wood Working Co., 191 S.W. 82, 173 Ky. 347, 1917 Ky. LEXIS 457 (Ky. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Chief Justice Settle

Reversing on original and affirming on cross appeal.

The appellant, Berlin Machine Works, a corporation engaged in the manufacturing and sale of woodworking machines in Beloit, Wisconsin, on September 16, 1912, sold to the appellee, Jefferson Wood Working Company, a corporation engaged in the mahufacture and sale of wood products in Louisville, Kentucky, “subject to strikes, accidents and other manufacturing contingencies,” to be delivered in good order, the following machinery, “delivered f. o. b. car Beloit, Wisconsin, about four months, one No. 87 seven-inch hardwood matcher with table slide attachment equipped with six knife round heads for top, bottom and side heads, also required heads for attachment necessary for making upper and lower dove tail out at one operation at rate of 100 lineal feet per minute in a clean, accurate and satisfactory workmanship manner. This machine is further equipped with hopper feed capable of supplying 18-inch to 42-inch stock at required speed to maintain feed.” The contract of sale was reduced to writing' on' October 4, 1912, and signed by the parties respectively, but its great length forbids its insertion in the opinion. It contains, among others, the following provisions:

“When machine is ready to test, we (meaning appellee) are to send our man to Beloit with sufficient material to test, and we are to accept or reject machine at your (appellant’s) factory. It is expressly under[349]*349stood that no guaranty is made ns on this machine. If we accept machine at your factory, we assume all responsibility for its action thereafter.”

For the above machine and appurtenances appellee agreed, as stated in the contract, to pay, six months after date of shipment, the sum of $3,750.00, as follows: $500.00 cash on shipment; for the remainder appellee was to execute its six promissory notes, due respectively in one, two, three, four, five, and six months from August 4,1913, the first five of which notes were tó be for $641.00 each, and the sixth and last for $541.70, all to bear interest from August 4, 1913, at the rate of 6% per annum.

It appears from the averments of the petition, and is not denied by appellee, that the machine and appurtenances were ready for delivery to defendant at Beloit the latter part of July, 1913. Appellee, pursuant to the above mentioned requirement of the contract, sent its agent to Beloit to inspect the machine and to accept or reject the same; and.after full inspection thereof the agent, on the 9th day of August, 1913, duly accepted the machine and appurtenances for and on behalf of the appellee, declaring it to be fully satisfactory in every detail, and requested of appellant its earliest possible shipment to appellee at Louisville. Shortly thereafter it was shipped by appellant and received by appellee, immediately following which the latter paid the consideration of $500.00 in cash, and executed its notes, as previously stated, for the remainder. The three notes due in one, two and three months after date respectively were paid by appellee at their maturity; but it having failed to pay those due in four, five and six months, respectively, upon maturity, or at all, appellant brought suit against appellee thereon in the court below, and also upon an account amounting to $399.13 for material and supplies sold and delivered appellee by appellant.

The contract evidencing the sale of the machine and appurtenances described also contains the following provisions:

“It is agreed that title to the property mentioned herein and all subsequent additions thereof shall remain in the Berlin Machine Works (the consignor) until fully paid for in cash; that in case of rejection of the property or failure to pay as stated herein undersigned (the [350]*350purchaser) shall at once return and deliver the property in good, order to consignor f. o. h. cars at Beloit, Wisconsin; that a retention of the property forwarded after thirty days from date of shipment shall constitute a trial and acceptance, being a conclusive admission of the truth of all representations made by the consignor and void all of its contracts of warranty, express or implied. It is also agreed that in case of failure to páy any installment as herein provided, the whole unpaid balance shall at once become due and payable, and consignor or its agent shall have the right, with or without legal process, to retake possession of the said property and, at its option, either retain the same (all payments made theretofore to be forfeited as compensation for its use and as liquidated damages) or sell it at public auction or private sale; that the entire' expense and cost of such retake, return and resale and the deficiency, if any there be after net proceeds are applied, shall at once be paid by the undersigned. It is agreed that this contract is not modified or added to by any agreement not expressly stated herein; that delivery at any specific time is waived. It is further agreed that the undersigned shall, at his own expense, keep the property fully insured against loss or damage in the name and for the benefit of the consignor in the amount of the unpaid purchase price.”

It appears from the averments of the petition that the appellant, instead of attempting, as contemplated by the above provisions of the contract, to retake the machine and appurtenances, asserted a lien thereon, which, by the prayer of the petition, was asked to be enforced by the sale of the property and the application of the proceeds to the three unpaid notes sued on. A personal judgment was also asked against appellee for the amount of the three notes and the account.

There is no controversy as to the account, appellee conceding its indebtedness therefor.

By its answer, which was made a counter-claim against appellant, appellee admits that it made with it the contract set forth, in the writing of October 4, 1912; that the machine therein described was a special make of machine of the particular character desired by appellee and required for its business, which could not be procured elsewhere; that by the use of this machine it could increase the output of its factory without any in[351]*351crease in the cost thereof, and produce a greater number of table slides, a commodity of which it was a large manufacturer, than it had been wont to produce without the use of such machine.

It is also alleged in the answer and counter-claim that appellee was induced to- purchase the machine by the representations of appellant and its promise that it would be completed and ready for delivery to it in about or not later than four months from and after October 4,1912; and that on the faith of this representation, without which it would not have entered into the contract, it, immediately following its purchase of the machine, entered into contracts for the manufacture and delivery to various purchasers of largely increased quantities of table slides to be delivered in car-load lots, such deliveries to begin not later than four months after the date of its contract with appellant; and that-its ability to carry out these contracts depended upon the delivery to it by appellant of the machiné within the four months specified by its contract with appellant; and that appellant, at the time of making the contract with appellee, was informed of its purpose to make the several contracts referred to with its customers for such sales of table slides.

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Bluebook (online)
191 S.W. 82, 173 Ky. 347, 1917 Ky. LEXIS 457, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/berlin-machine-works-v-jefferson-wood-working-co-kyctapp-1917.