Bonham Cotton Press Co. v. McKellar

26 S.W. 1056, 86 Tex. 694, 1894 Tex. LEXIS 448
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedMay 17, 1894
DocketNo. 161.
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 26 S.W. 1056 (Bonham Cotton Press Co. v. McKellar) 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
Bonham Cotton Press Co. v. McKellar, 26 S.W. 1056, 86 Tex. 694, 1894 Tex. LEXIS 448 (Tex. 1894).

Opinion

GAINES, Associate Justice.

This suit was brought by defendant in error against the plaintiff in error, a private corporation, to recover upon two promises in writing, each for 82500, executed by the defendant corporation, through its president. They were made payable to the Webb Gompress Company, by whom they were transferred to the plaintiff, and were in all respects in the form of promissory notes, save that each contained a condition. There was no question raised in the trial court or upon the appeal with reference to the conditions.

The defendant pleaded a failure of consideration, by a sworn answer, the substance of which is set out in its brief as follows:

“ That on July 12, 1888, certain citizens of Bonham (naming them) combined together to erect at Bonham a cotton compress. That said Webb .Compress Company, through an agent, proposed to said citizens to erect one of their compresses for them on premises to be selected by said citi- . zens, and put it in operation in time to compress the cotton sold during rthe cotton season of 1888. That said compress was to be an 80-inch Webb cotton compress, of the latest and most approved pattern; should *696 be equal to and do the work in quantity and quality of the Morse cotton compress. That it was to be operated by said citizens until January 1, 1889, with the privilege of said Webb Compress Company to direct the running of said compress until said date. That for such a compress said company was to receive $25,000, payable as follows: In promissory notes of said citizens $10,000, $10,000 in money, and $5000 in two notes, due January 1, 1890, and January 1, 1891, respectively. That said proposition was reduced to writing, and on July 16, 1888, accepted and signed by said Webb Compress Company. That said citizens were then preparing to organize themselves into a private corporation, and on July 25, 1888, did incorporate themselves under the provisions of title 20 of' the Revised Statutes of Texas. That said enterprise was formed for the-purpose of compressing the cotton that was raised in Fannin County in the fall of 1888, of which there were 20,000 bales, and for succeeding years. That this purpose was well known to the officers and agents of' the Webb Compress Company while they were negotiating said contract..

“ That in September and October, 1888, said Webb Compress Company delivered and put up at Bonham on defendant’s premises for defendant an 80-inch compress of the Webb patent, with the necessary attachments and appliances. That none of the stockholders at said date had any knowledge about compresses, but defendant relied solely upon the representations of said Webb Compress Company, its agents and officers, that, said Webb compress was equal to and would do the work of the Morse-compress, and upon said guaranty to that effect in said contract. That said Morse compress is the best in the United States, without flaw in its-make and capable of compressing cotton without breakage or delay. That, as soon as said compress was put in operation said Webb Compress Company placed S. J. Webb, the inventor and patentee, in charge of the running of said compress, with the approval of defendant, in accordance with the provisions of said contract, and said Webb continued in said charge until January, 1889.

“ That in October, 1889, while said compress was running, the upper platen of said compress broke so that said compress thereafter could compress not another bale until said platen should be replaced by another. That the weight of said platen is 15,000 pounds and the weight of the upper platen of a Morse compress is 20,000 pounds. That while said Webb was thus running said compress he did not so manage it that a fair test-could be made, but would not apply the full force required to properly compress cotton, nor would he permit sufficient force to be applied to place the cotton in marketable condition, and thereby defendant had to pay numerous reclamations made long subsequently to January 1, 1889, on bales not sufficiently compressed. That said Webb also refused to compress a sufficient amount of cotton a day to test the durability and capacity of said compress. That he compressed only 400 bales a day,,. *697 when the Morse compress compresses 600 bales a day. That he so managed the lever by which the steam was applied that the full amount of pressure for the compressing of cotton was never applied during the time he managed the compress as agent and representative of said Webb Compress Company, and thereby no fair test was made by him of the strength of said upper platen. That these acts of Webb were for the purpose of defrauding defendant and concealing from it the defects in said platen. That none of these facts came to the knowledge of defendant, nor was it aware of the fraudulent acts of said Webb until many months subsequently to January 1,1889. That none of defendant’s stockholders were practical mechanics at the time said Webb was making said pretended test. That thus he was enabled to conceal from defendant said fraudulent devices.

“ That said break in said upper platen was occasioned by a latent defect in the casting of said platen. That there was an old crack or break in said platen when the same was first placed on said premises, but it was concealed from view by being painted over, and defendant could not discover the same. That said break was without fault on defendant’s part, but said compress was then operated by competent and experienced employes. That the platens for said compress were made nowhere else but at York, in the State of Pennsylvania, and none were then procurable in the markets, but had to be manufactured at the factory in said city of York, upon the order of said Webb Compress Company. That immediately upon said breakage defendant telegraphed the general manager of said Webb Compress Company of said breakage, and requested him to order a new platen and have the same delivered to defendant. That the same was done and the same was put in place on November 19, 1889. That during the interval while said compress was idle on account of said breakage, defendant had on hand a great amount of cotton for compressing, and would have compressed 500 bales per day, and was when running receiving 8200 net profit a day. That after said new platen had replaced said broken one said compress was again put in operation, and so continued compressing cotton for defendant until December 26, 1889, when the lower platen was broken while said compress was at work. That the weight of said lower platen was 10,000 pounds, while the lower platen of a Morse compress is several thousand pounds greater. That this breakage was occasioned by a latent defect in the casting thereof, and its design was defective, in this, that it was necessary in the working of said compress that said platen, when raised by the working of the piston rod, should be supported by a flow of water under the platen; that the cylinder, which was a part of the lower platen, was first made too short, and to remedy the same the manufacturers bolted on the end of said cylinder a ring of iron, increasing the length thereof so that the cylinder rested on a part of the machinery known as the seat in such manner as to pre *698 vent the flow of water under the end of the cylinder and destroying thereby the hydraulic force requisite for the proper working of the compress.

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Bluebook (online)
26 S.W. 1056, 86 Tex. 694, 1894 Tex. LEXIS 448, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bonham-cotton-press-co-v-mckellar-tex-1894.