Braden v. Mountain Iron & Supply Co.

32 F.2d 244
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedMarch 21, 1929
DocketNo. 8213
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 32 F.2d 244 (Braden v. Mountain Iron & Supply Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Braden v. Mountain Iron & Supply Co., 32 F.2d 244 (8th Cir. 1929).

Opinion

McDERMOTT, District Judge.

The trial court struck the vital parts from an amended answer and counterclaim. Thereupon judgment was entered for the plaintiff upon the pleadings. The plaintiff (appellee) sued for the price of some 4" oil well casing. The defendants claimed that some 5%o" easing, previously bought and paid for, parted while being run, and as a result the defendants lost their well, and they therefore counterclaim for some $14,000. There is no claim of express warranty. The defendants rely upon an implied warranty of fitness.

The answer alleges that the plaintiff was a '“supply house” engaged in the business of “dealing and selling to producers and drilling contractors” easing and other oil well equipment; that the plaintiff knew about the well°defendants were drilling, kfiew its depth, and the strength necessary to run such a long string of casing, some 3,700 to 4,000 feet; the plaintiff knew the difficulties and dangers in running such a string, and knew casing and the qualities and fitness necessary for such a job. The defendants then allege:

“That on or about the' 25th day of July, -1926, the defendants after having informed the plaintiff of the character of well they were drilling and that the defendants wanted to purchase a string of five and three-sixteenths (5s/ie) inch easing suitable and fitted for drilling said well the plaintiff thereupon recommended a string of five and three-sixteenths (5%e) inch twenty (20) pound Standard Seamless Casing as most suitable [245]*245and fitted for this purpose, and that it was specially fitted and specially manufactured for the purpose of being used in a well of this type and to meet all of the exigencies and conditions reasonably to he expected to he encountered in a well of this depth drilled in this locality. Plaintiff offered to sell and solicited defendants to purchase Standard Seamless Casing as fitted and in every respect suitable for this special and particular purpose of drilling this particular well. That defendants upon such recommendations and relying thereon orally purchased from plaintiff the following casing: 4,139 feet 3 inches of 5Yio inch 20 pound Standard Seamless Casing, and plaintiff, in the regular course of business, sold to defendants 4,119 feet 3 inches of 53ie inch 20 pound Standard Seamless Casing for the sum of Four Thousand Seven Hundred Thirty-four and 09/100 Dollars ($4,734.09).”
“That the same persons [agents named] made the recommendations referred to in the foregoing allegations and that such recommendations were made at various times, the exact date of which the defendants cannot state, but during the month of July, 1926, and thereabout.
“Defendants do not remember the exact words that were used, hut the substance and effect of the words used were that the particular casing in question was recommended and offered as suitable and fitting for the work which defendants had to do in drilling a well of the depth, character and kind which defendants were then undertaking to do in the locality and at the place at which the said well was to ho drilled.”

It is then alleged that the casing was bought and shipped to the defendants, who received it, unloaded it, and hauled it to the location, and later attempted to run it, when it parted; that the defendants had no means ■ of testing such easing, and paid for it before they ran it; that defendants ran the easing carefully, but it nevertheless parted. Concerning the casing, the defendants allege:

“That said easing dropped and caused the damage as herein alleged by reason of the fact that the same was made of insufficient and worthless material and was constructed in such a maimer that it was unfitted and not suitable for the purpose for which it had been sold to and purchased by the defendants. That it was not of sufficient strength to withstand and carry its own weight, which casing used for this purpose would necessarily have to do and also- to be suitable and fit for this purpose would have to carry great additional weight and pressure, which this casing in its poor, weak and defective condition could not and would not have done in completing the drilling of said well.
“'That by reason of the general unfitness and insufficient and defective condition of said casing the defendants are unable to state each and all of the defects which caused or contributed to the failure of said casing to perform the sendee for which it was purchased by and sold to these defendants, but that among its other defects the said easing was defective in that the collar upon the top "joint and at which point the said casing was suspended in said hole, and which collar had been placed thereon by plaintiff prior to the time of its receipt by defendants and as to which collar the defendants had no knowledge and no opportunity to examine the same, was defective and insufficient as those defendants believe in the following particulars:
“a. The collar was made of defective and insufficient material.
“b. That it was not made in a good, workmanlike manner suitable for the purpose for which it was intended to be used and sold.
“e. That the said collar was further defective in that in the making of the same it was so threaded and machined that instead of having an equal and sufficient amount of material on all of its sides that on one side it was so cut away that the quantity of material left on such side was insufficient to withstand the strain that it necessarily would be put to- in its use as a easing and such side rolled back, causing the weight of said easing then suspended to be hung upon and borne by the other side of said collar, which was insufficient to carry said weight and which caused said collar to come off from the easing, allowing the entire string to drop into the hole causing the damage and injury as alleged herein.”

We have then a ease where the defendant bought a standard article with a trade-name. Four times in one paragraph the defendants describe it by its trade-name, “Standard Seamless Casing,” the capital letters denoting the proper name being those of defendants. It was bought on the plaintiff’s recommendation ; five times in the same paragraph the defendants use the words “recommended” or “recommendations” as an accurate description of the plaintiff’s act. This occurs in an amended answer. After the trial court’s order to strike, accompanied by a memorandum opinion, and after the trial court had [246]*246offered the defendants 20 days to plead further, if desired, the defendants declined to plead further. It must be assumed that the amended answer stated the ease as strongly as the facts justify. The defect was a latent one, for the defendants received, hauled, stored, and ran this easing — handling it at least three times — without discovering any defect. It is further alleged that the plaintiff sold this casing for “the regular and listed price' established by the plaintiff for easing of this size and good quality” which, it is alleged, was a fair price for good easing. No express warranty is alleged, and no extra consideration paid for such an express' warranty, which it is fair to assume would be demanded if a dealer were to assume the risk always attendant upon running a string of pipe a half mile or more into the ground.

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Bluebook (online)
32 F.2d 244, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/braden-v-mountain-iron-supply-co-ca8-1929.