C. v. Hill Company Inc. v. Weinberg

19 S.E.2d 430, 67 Ga. App. 44
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedMarch 20, 1942
Docket29192.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 19 S.E.2d 430 (C. v. Hill Company Inc. v. Weinberg) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
C. v. Hill Company Inc. v. Weinberg, 19 S.E.2d 430, 67 Ga. App. 44 (Ga. Ct. App. 1942).

Opinions

Broyles, C. J.

The petition brought by Sam H. Weinberg against C. Y. Hill & Company Inc. substantially averred that the defendant sold the plaintiff “a ten-foot refrigerator display case to be used by plaintiff at his meat market” in Atlanta, Georgia; that the purchase-price of said display case was $1002.72, and that as part payment for said display case plaintiff delivered to defendant another display case valued at and reasonably worth $294, and paid defendant $78.28 in cash, making a total payment of $372.28; that said display case was purchased for the purpose of refrigerating and keeping in good condition meat and meat products, which said pur *45 pose was known to the defendant when the sale was agreed upon; that said display case was wholly unfit for said purpose because it was “improperly insulated,” and contained other defects which caused it “to fail to keep temperatures in the same at a level to prevent spoilage of meat and meat products,” and was also “so improperly constructed as to allow the accumulation of excess amounts of moisture within the same thereby permitting the spoilage of meat and meat products;” that said display case was “not merchantable and not reasonably suited to the use intended and . . contained [undisclosed] latent defects in construction,” and there had been “a total failure of consideration whereby plaintiff is entitled to the return of all moneys paid to the defendant.” (The petition sought also to recover $45, “representing costs to plaintiff of meats spoiled . . in said case,” but this item was stricken on demurrer and the action proceeded for the recovery of $372.28, the sum of the alleged cash paid the defendant and the alleged value of the display case traded in on the one purchased by the plaintiff.)

In its answer the defendant admitted the sale of said display case to the plaintiff “on the date alleged . . for the price alleged,” but denied that the plaintiff paid it $78.28 in cash, and denied that the display case traded in by the plaintiff “was worth the amount allowed therefor.” The answer also averred that said sale “was made as the result of a certain contract . . which contained the entire agreement between the parties,” and notified the plaintiff to produce that contract at the trial of the case. And the defendant further pleaded that “if the temperatures in the display ease . . were not maintained at a proper level, such failure was the result of improper refrigerating machinery and was not the fault of the display case sold . . plaintiff.” After the defendant had demurred to the petition and answered as stated, the plaintiff amended his petition by pleading the breach of an express warranty whereby the defendant warranted the display case “to be free from defects in material and workmanship under normal use and service within the United States, for a period of one year from the date of delivery of the fixture to the original retail purchaser, our obligation hereunder being limited to replacing without cost to such original purchaser within such period, any part or portion thereof, of our manufacture, which upon examination we judge to be thus defective.” The plaintiff further substantially amended his petition by *46 averring that immediately upon discovering the alleged defects in said display case he called the same to defendant’s attention and “did then and there and many times thereafter demand of defendant that it replace the said defective display case or take the same back and pay . . plaintiff . . the moneys paid by him to defendant;” that “defendant did, from time to time, refuse to repair or replace said display case and also refused to take the same back;” that said display case being worthless and of no value to plaintiff, he moved it to a storage warehouse, “notifying the defendant that . . said case was stored for its account;” that while said case was so stored the C. I. T. Corporation, which had bought the notes and the retention-title contract for said case from defendant, foreclosed its retention-title contract and sold the display case at public outcry before the court house of Fulton County, Georgia; that plaintiff had promptly offered to restore said case to the defendant and defendant had refused to accept it; that after it had been seized by legal process, as stated, it became impossible for plaintiff to restore it to defendant; and that while said case was in the possession of plaintiff he “derived no benefit from the same, it having been not only worthless to plaintiff but causing him damage as herein set forth.”

After the petition had been amended as stated it was demurred to and again amended by adding thereto paragraph 4(b), which substantially alleged that said display case was manufactured by the defendant and sold to plaintiff on or about February 28, 1940, and delivered to him on or about March 5, 1940; that when the case was delivered to plaintiff the weather was cold and it “ apparently operated in a satisfactory manner;” that when the warm weather set in about April 15, 1940, plaintiff discovered the defects in said display case and called the same to the attention of the defendant; that “plaintiff called the . . defects and unsatisfactory performance of said display case to the attention of [Moritz] Flatauer [defendant’s agent] on six or eight occasions, that is once or twice a week after April 15, 1940, and that said Flatauer did from time to time send workmen . . to work on the said display case in an effort to put it in satisfactory condition; that on each occasion plaintiff asked the defendant to take the display case back because of its unsatisfactory condition, but that defendant protested that the same could be placed back in satisfac *47 tory condition fox normal usage, and for this reason the plaintiff did retain the same until he finally saw that the same could not be repaired; that . . said case was never put in satisfactory condition by the defendant and, on August 6, 1940, plaintiff” stored it as hereinbefore set out and notified the defendant that it “was stored there for its account;” that “the foreclosure proceedings instituted by the C. I. T. Corporation were filed in the civil court of Fulton County . . on August 22, 1940;” and that “plaintiff continued to use the said display case up to the time he removed the same from his place of business because he was promised by said Flatauer from time to time that the same would be put in satisfactory condition.”

In part, the plaintiff testified in substance that, because of its defective construction, the display case-sold to him by the defendant caused considerable portions of the meat and meat products placed therein by him to spoil, and the display case was “totally worthless.” The defendant, on the other hand, adduced evidence to the effect that, without any change in its condition, the same display case was used by another person a short time after it had been discarded by the plaintiff and was entirely satisfactory. There was also evidence that said display case was refrigerated by a separate machine which the defendant did hot sell the plaintiff, and the evidence was in sharp conflict as to whether this machine was adequate to refrigerate the display case. There was evidence that it was old and not suited to refrigerate the display case, and other evidence that, though it was a second-hand machine, it was in good shape and capable of refrigerating the display case properly. For instance, Mr. T. Y.

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Bluebook (online)
19 S.E.2d 430, 67 Ga. App. 44, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/c-v-hill-company-inc-v-weinberg-gactapp-1942.