Calhoun v. Paule

26 Mo. App. 274, 1887 Mo. App. LEXIS 418
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 17, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 26 Mo. App. 274 (Calhoun v. Paule) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Calhoun v. Paule, 26 Mo. App. 274, 1887 Mo. App. LEXIS 418 (Mo. Ct. App. 1887).

Opinions

Thompson, J\,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This action was brought before a justice of the peace to recover the purchase price of a steam engine sold by the plaintiffs to the defendant. On a trial de novo, in the circuit court, the plaintiffs had a verdict and judgment for two hundred dollars, the sum being fifty dollars less than the agreed purchase price, from which judgment the defendant prosecutes this appeal. The plaintiffs were dealers in agricultural implements at -Carrollton, Illinois, and the defendant was engaged in business, in partnership with Mr. Mummert, at East Caron&elet, Illinois. He and Mr. Mummert desired the engine for use in a small feed mill, which they were then erecting at East Carondelet. Immediately after the transaction in controversy, the defendant and Mummert ■dissolved partnership, Mummert selling out his interest in the firm to the defendant. The. engine was shipped by the plaintiffs to the defendant, i'n compliance with the following order:

“St. Louis, Mo., November 9, 1885.
Messrs. .John B. Qalhoun & Go.:
“Gentlemen: — Please prepare and ship at your -earliest convenience, the following goods, viz: .
“1 Ten-horse large engine, Harr, Scott & Co.’s [276]*276make, now at Carrollton, for two hundred and fifty dollars, said engine guaranteed to be in first-class running order, according to the letter of Oswald Jackson, Car-rollton; Ill. Terms, cash.
“No agreements, conditions, or stipulations, verbal or otherwise, save those mentioned, will be recognized.
“Yours respectfully,
“ Paule & MuMmért,

The letter of Oswald Jackson, referred to in the-above letter, which, it would seem, had previously been shown by the plaintiffs to Paule and Mummert, was as follows:

“ Carrolltoh, III., Nov. 4, 1885.
John R. Calhoun &,Co. :
“Dear Sirs : — Mr. Geo. Parr has just now handed me your letter referring to his Garr-Scott engine on wood wheels. I put Mr. Parr’s engine in thorough repair last fall, tested it to one hundred and fifty pounds, cold water pressure, which it stood — new piston ring— re-fixed slide valve and seat, etc.
“The engine, to the best of my knowledge and belief, at the present time, is in perfect repair.. Mr. Parr assures me he has worked it but one day since I repaired it; it is a very powerful engine for its size, even more than one would suppose.
“ Yours respectfully,
“Oswald JacksoN.”
“The above engine referred to is ten-horse power.”'

The engine was shipped by the plaintiffs, on November 11, in pursuance of the above letter, by rail, to East Carondelet, and a duplicate of a bill of lading was forwarded to the defendant by mail. When the engine arrived on the car at East Carondelet, the defendant, Paule, inspected it, and had it inspected by Mr. Williams, a millwright, and wrote to the plaintiffs to the effect that it was not the engine which he had contracted lor, and declined to receive it. Some negotiations, then [277]*277■and thereafter, took place between the plaintiffs and the defendant, in which Mr. Williams participated. The evidence is conflicting as to the result of these negotiations, but it appears that the plaintiffs agreed to throw off fifty dollars of the purchase price, if the defendant would take the engine, which he declined to do. The engine remained on a car on a side track, at East ■Carondelet, until January .6, when-the defendant wrote to the plaintiffs as follows :

“Railroad company wants that engine out of the •way at East Carondelet. What shall I do with it? Please send me word at the earliest time.”

Thereafter the railroad company took the engine to its warehouse, at East St. -Louis, Illinois, where it remained on storage until the day of the trial. No part ■of the agreed purchase price was ever paid or tendered by the defendant.

The contract, under which the engine was sold, must be construed to have embodied a special warranty, on the.part of the plaintiffs, that it was “ in first-class Tunning order, according to the letter of Oswald Jackson.” The statements in the letter of Oswald Jackson, thus imported into the contract, -were to the effect that the engine was “in thorough repair,” ‘.‘in perfect repair,” tested to a cold water test of one hundred and fifty pounds pressure, “a powerful engine for its size,” .and of “ ten-horse power.”

Testimony, drawn from the plaintiffs’ witnesses, on -cross-examination, tended to show that the engine was not in perfect repair; that some essential parts of it were missing, and that other parts were not in good condition, though it was in a condition to be operated. These witnesses of the plaintiffs, however, while admitting these facts, expressed opinions that the engine was in fair condition and good condition. Testimony adduced by the defendant was to the effect that it was in a very bad condition ; that it was not a ten-horse power •engine; that it was in such a condition that it would [278]*278have been dangerous to use it, and that it would not support a pressure of more than forty pounds to the square inch. According to the testimony of the plaintiffs’ witnesses, on cross-examination, the cylinder head was patched, and so was the supply; the fire box was-burnt, and patched with a flange and screw bolts, called a “soft patch;” the frame door was cracked; some of the stirrups were missing ; there was no water gauge or steam gauge; the wheels and frame were partly worm eaten; the engine had no blow pipe and no belt; the governor was without a belt. Those engines were not built with blowers on them at the time when this-was built, though it does not appear that blowers were subsequently added, or that a blower was not necessary to put such an engine “in perfect running order.” One of the plaintiffs’ witnesses, ivho had worked twenty years for the makers of these engines, having inspected it, testified, as others did, that it was in “fair running order.” He and another witness, for the plaintiffs, testified that the patching of the crown sheet would not interfere with the running of the engine, though he admitted that “patching a boiler does.not do it much-good.” There was one patch on the boiler and one on-the cylinder head. This witness said: “Some bolts were wanting, and other things; but this would not. constitute a defect in the engine. The wheels and frame-were not broken or rotten, except that one spoke w as-gone, but that did not affect its first-class running order.”

This testimony, as to the bad condition of the-engine, drawn from the plaintiffs’ own -witnesses, was greatly strengthened by the testimony of the defendant’s witnesses, who inspected the engine. They were all expert machinists. One of them took off the cylinder head and found that the cylinder could not be re-bored ; the crown sheet of the fire box was broken, and very poorly patched, and showed leakage; the door frame was broken, and a couple of bolts were missing j [279]

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Bluebook (online)
26 Mo. App. 274, 1887 Mo. App. LEXIS 418, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/calhoun-v-paule-moctapp-1887.