Burgner-Bowman Lumber Co. v. McCord-Kistler Mercantile Co.

216 P. 815, 114 Kan. 10, 35 A.L.R. 242, 1923 Kan. LEXIS 3
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJanuary 6, 1923
DocketNo. 24,010
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 216 P. 815 (Burgner-Bowman Lumber Co. v. McCord-Kistler Mercantile Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Burgner-Bowman Lumber Co. v. McCord-Kistler Mercantile Co., 216 P. 815, 114 Kan. 10, 35 A.L.R. 242, 1923 Kan. LEXIS 3 (kan 1923).

Opinions

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Porter, J.:

The plaintiff sued J. M. Leeper, a contractor, to recover for building materials sold him and to foreclose a mechanic’s lien on a building belonging to the defendant, The McCord-Kistler Mercantile Company. The defense was that part of the material, consisting of cement, was of inferior quality, and that there was an implied warranty of quality. The trial resulted in a judgment in favor of plaintiff for all the material except for the cement, and from this judgment plaintiff appeals.

The sole question is, whether there was an implied warranty of the quality of the cement. Leeper, the contractor, testified that he ran out of cement, and learning that the plaintiff had two cars on the track, he called up by phone and said he was “up'against it”; “that we were putting down finished floors and that the people were in a hurry; that we were late with our building on account of delays, and that if he would accommodate us we would like to have Portland cement to finish floors with.” The plaintiff agreed to sell him cement, and it was unloaded out of cars on the job. “That was about the only agreement there was to it; he had the cement, and we needed it and we bought it.”

Over the plaintiff’s objections, Leeper was permitted to testify that the-general understanding as to the quality of Portland cement, among the trade in Emporia and that vicinity, was that if [12]*12properly mixed and laid it will make a hard, flint-like surface and will meet the tests laid down by the American Society for Testing Materials.

The court found that during the construction of the building the contractor purchased Portland cement from plaintiff for the purpose of making hard-surfaced concrete floors. He advised plaintiff of the purpose for which the cement was to be used. He did not specify any particular brand of Portland cement, but. had in mind that plaintiff would furnish one of a half dozen standard brands, among which was “K. C.” brand. Plaintiff delivered 1,932 sacks of “K. C.” Portland cement, of which the contractor used 910 sacks. It was of a poor and inferior quality and so defective that it would not produce a solid, smooth, hard, glazed surface on the floors, and the floors checked, dusted, cracked and disintegrated, and it will be necessary to remove and reconstruct them; that

“Portland cement, as understood in the trade, means an article resulting from a certain process, which contains certain chemical and physical properties. There is no given or fixed relationship for said ingredients, but they must be in proper proportions. The quantities and various ingredients that compose Portland cement being of varying consistency, are determined by the chemical and physical properties of the finished product, and such properties, as applied to Portland cement, as known in the trade in Emporia and vicinity, and generally are those fixed by the American Society for testing materials.
“The article furnished by the plaintiff to the contractor in this case did not contain the proper chemical and physical properties to perform the purpose for which it was purchased by the contractor and delivered by the plaintiff.
“The cement furnished by plaintiff to the contractor was properly mixed, with the proper proportions of cement, sand and water, as used in said work, and the work was done by experienced and skilled workmen in such construction and in the customary manner for using Portland cement for that purpose, and the work was done in a careful, painstaking, skilled and workmanlike manner, and the sand and water were of good quality for such work.”

The plaintiff relies upon the old doctrine of caveat emptor and quotes the following statement from 2 Mechem on Sales, § 1349, which was approved in Ehrsam v. Brown, 76 Kan. 206, 91 Pac. 179:

“The implied warranty of fitness is not to be extended to cases which lack the necessary conditions upon which it depends. The essence of the rule is that the contract is executory; that the particular article is not designated by the buyer; that only his need is known; that he does not undertake, or is not able to determine what will best supply his need, and therefore necessarily leaves the seller to make the determination and take the risk; and, if these elements are wanting, the rule does not apply.” (pp. 217, 218.)

[13]*13In this connection, attention is called to the fact that the contractor, Leeper, on cross-examination testified that he did not ask plaintiff if Portland cement was fit to finish these floors with; he knew that Portland cement was the proper material and that plaintiff •“did not recommend anything. I told him.” Further, that if plaintiff had advised him that it was “K. C.” cement which plaintiff had he would have taken it just the same; and that he “would as lief” have that brand as any of the others.

On the other hand, the defendants take the position that there would have been no occasion for this lawsuit if the thing delivered had been Portland cement as the term is generally understood.

Among the cases cited by plaintiff is Ivans v. Laury, 67 N. J. Law, 153, 50 Atl. 355. There, the defendant called the dealer on the phone and asked, "Have you got Portland cement, Atlas Portland cement?” The dealer answered, “Yes”; the defendant said, “Send me some.” Atlas Portland cement was delivered, but of inferior quality. The defense was that the cement did not have the characteristics which Atlas Portland cement should have. The court gave an instruction that the vendor agrees that the article furnished shall correspond with the description of the article asked for; that is, that the vendor shall furnish a cement that will harden rapidly and will have the tensile strength of Atlas Portland cement, which was stated to be of 600 pounds, and when it sets, requires a sledge hammer to break it. There is an implied warranty that the goods shall be of such character. In reversing the case, the supreme court said:

“The cement which was the subject matter of the sale in the present case was purchased by its known designation; that is, as “Atlas Portland cement,” and consequently there was no implied warranty of its quality. The judgment below should be reversed.”

In the present case, however, the article purchased was Portland cement. No brand was designated by the purchaser as in the case cited, where Atlas Portland cement was purchased, and where it does not appear that the dealer was informed of the particular use for which the cement was purchased. Everyone knows that Portland cement is manufactured by numerous concerns; the name does not mean cement manufactured by the Atlas company, the K. C. company, the Iola company, or any particular concern. It is the name given to a cement which conforms to the requirements of the American Society for Testing Materials. A cement that meets [14]*14these requirements is Portland cement; one that fails to do so is not Portland cement, no matter what brand it is.

P. F. Balfour, chief chemist of the company manufacturing the cement, was a witness for the plaintiff and described Portland cement. He gave the following definition:

“Portland cement is the product obtained by finely pulverized clinkers produced by calcining to incipient fusion a properly proportioned mixture of argillaceous materials.”

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Bluebook (online)
216 P. 815, 114 Kan. 10, 35 A.L.R. 242, 1923 Kan. LEXIS 3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burgner-bowman-lumber-co-v-mccord-kistler-mercantile-co-kan-1923.