C. S. Burt Co. v. Laplace

46 La. Ann. 722
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedApril 15, 1894
DocketNo. 11,354
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 46 La. Ann. 722 (C. S. Burt Co. v. Laplace) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
C. S. Burt Co. v. Laplace, 46 La. Ann. 722 (La. 1894).

Opinion

[725]*725The opinion of the court was delivered by

Breaux, J.

The defendant having determined to change the sugar mill and engine, and to erect other evaporating pans for the purpose of economizing steam in her sugar house, resolved also to buy steam tubular boilers, drums, feeders, spouts and pumps, together with a Gordon Patent Hollow Blast Bagasse Burner.

She contracted with the plaintiffs to furnish part of these improvements.

The plaintiffs bound themselves to furnish the boilers to measure seventy-two inches in diameter and twenty feet long, and erect them on the plantation, and to furnish expert labor for that work — that is, to place them in position to put on the bricks. The defendant agreed to do the brickwork and furnish the material and labor to incase the boilers.

When delivered and ready for the brickwork the price of the four' boilers and attachments was five thousand eight hundred and twenty-five dollars.

She also contracted for two batteries with three automatic feeders, to feed and properly distribute bagasse for the price of five hundred and thirty dollars.

For the Gordon Bagasse Burner she was to pay nine hundred and seventy-five dollars.

The vendors, in order to fully impress upon the ■ defendant the efficiency of the burner, agreed to pay all coal or other fuel for the crop, if the burner did not consume the bagasse, as agreed it should, and prove an advantage to the purchaser.

The guaranteed stipulátion in the contract was limited to the bagasse burner.

The terms of payment of the total amount stipulated in the contract were: one-third upon delivery of the materials and apparatus at the plantation; one-third after the erection of the burner, and the remainder after the test and use, on the 5th of January, 1893.

The plaintiffs collected one-third of the amount.

The defendant having refused to pay the remainder, the plaintiff brought suit for the amount claimed as due.

The defendant interposed a general denial, save certain admissions substantially, that the plant sold by plaintiffs was sold for one price in three equal instalments, and that all the machinery sold was dependent upon the satisfactory working of the burner.

[726]*726That the tests made proved that the plaintiffs failed to comply with the contract.

She avers that she is not bound to pay the amount stipulated in the contract and that she is entitled to demand the nullity of the contract.

In her reconventional demand she claims damages aggregating twenty thousand nine hundred and fifty dollars. The prayer of the answer is that plaintiffs’ demand be rejected and that upon her re-conventional demand there be judgment in her favor in one sum of two thousand four hundred and forty-three dollars, in another sum of ten thousand nine hundred and fifty dollars, and in a sum of ten thousand dollars, with legal interest on each.

The judgment of the District Court annuls the contract; orders the return to the defendant of the first instalment of two thousand four hundred and forty-three dollars paid by her and condemns plaintiff on the reconventional demand to pay the defendant six thou and seven hundred and fifty dollars damages, with interest. A remittitur for the interest was subsequently entered.

Prom this judgment the plaintiff appeals.

Though the Gordon Patent Hollow Blast Bagasse Burner proved satisfactory in a number of sugar houses and sugar mills, for causes not clearly demonstrated it is a failure in defendant’s sugar house.

Witnesses testify as to the value of the apparatus as a bagasse burner in other localities.

The combustion is spoken of by these witnesses as being rapid, and that it makes sufficient steam. This, however, is not the case on defendant’s place, where it only makes a black smoky fire and at times is clogged with bagasse.

The plaintiff was notified of the defect.

He and others connected with plaintiff’s firm repaired to the place but it seems did not succeed in obtaining satisfactory results in the working of the burner.

Finally it was agreed to make a test of the apparatus on the 29th of December while the sugar house was in operation.

At the appointed time the interested parties and a number of witnesses were present and the test was made.

The contract contains the stipulation, requiring a burner to each battery with blast bars, intermediate bars, blower, piping gates complete to burn bagasse and with it to generate the full steam capacity [727]*727of the boilers, supplied with bagasse, at the rate of four hundred and fifty tons daily, or if less number of tons were supplied the steam pressure to be proportionately less.

The test was made in accordance with the conditions of the contract. No objection was urged to the method adopted for the experiment. It is proved that the bagasse was not different from the bagasse made by other mills.

The steam from othey boilers than those sold by the plaintiffs was cut off and the burners fed with bagasse were the only steam-producing power.

The burners became clogged with bagasse and the steam pressure declined and most of the time the mill was stopped.

In seventeen and a half minutes’ time the pressure was reduced from seventy-five pounds to about thirty-seven pounds.

There were planters present of experience, disinterested witnesses, who testified that the bagasse was poorly consumed; that there was but little heat in the burner and the operations were not those of an efficient burner. There were a number of machinists present who testified that it burnt the bagasse incompletely, and that it was altogether an absolutely defective burner.

The plaintiff testified that he made a test a short time preceding. It was the evaporation test on scientific principles.

It is not shown that this test was made contradictorily with the defendant or that any disinterested witnesses were called to witness the experiment. The result is that the correctness of that test is not sustained by the weight of the testimony.

There was no objection offered to the practical manner followed in testing the power of the steam produced, though it is.not as accurate as the evaporation test, it is that generally followed in testing steam power; it proved for all practical purposes that the burner was not the burner plaintiffs agreed to furnish and deliver to the defendant.

If it was possible to show error it should have been established contradictorily, or in view of a number of witnesses sufficient to prove its correctness.

The contract shows that plaintiffs engaged themselves by the declaration that coal or wood can be burned better than with the ordinary furnace if no bagasse is at hand, but in any event they guarantee to give more steam than any other furnace with the same amount of like fuel.”

[728]*728The experiments prove that this guarantee failed.

The unverified evaporation tests of plaintiff do not suggest that in any respect the burner was efficient and not a failure.

The reconven!ional demand is more particularly directed against the unsatisfactory and defective burner.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
46 La. Ann. 722, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/c-s-burt-co-v-laplace-la-1894.