Chas. A. Kaufman Co. v. Gillman

142 So. 159
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 30, 1932
DocketNo. 14019.
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 142 So. 159 (Chas. A. Kaufman Co. v. Gillman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chas. A. Kaufman Co. v. Gillman, 142 So. 159 (La. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

HIGGINS, J.

Plaintiff brought this suit against the defendant for the balance of $132.28 alleged to be due on an open account for merchandise sold and delivered, and also for the balance of $279, said to be due on account of the purchase price of a baby grand reproducing piano sold by plaintiff to defendant under a written contract of sale executed on March 24, 1928.

The defendant admitted an indebtedness on the open account, but averred that a correct and accurate statement had never been furnished him by the plaintiff, and further answered denying liability for the balance of the purchase price of the piano because of redhibitory vices and defects, that evidenced themselves within a week after the piano was purchased, which kept the piano constantly out of order so that it was useless and valueless to the defendant, and that defendant frequently complained of the defective condition of the instrument to the plaintiff, which repeatedly through its employees attempted to repair or remedy the vices or defects without success. Defendant in recon- *160 Vention prayed, that the contract be rescinded and that the sum of $121 in cash paid on account of the purchase price be returned as well as the Strand piano which was accepted by the plaintiff in trade on account of the purchase price of the new piano at a value of $185, and in default of the return of the Strand piano that there be further judgment in favor of defendant in the additional sum of $185, the agreed value of the Strand piano.

Before the case was tried on. its merits, counsel agreed that the amount claimed on the open account was correct, that the Strand piano was delivered to plaintiff at the value of $185, and that plaintiff paid the sum of $121 in cash on account of the purchase price of the new one.

On the trial of the ease on the merits, there was judgment in favor of the plaintiff as prayed for on the open account and dismissing the suit as to the claim for the balance due on the purchase price of the piano. On the reconventional demand judgment was rendered in favor of the defendant and plaintiff in reconvention as prayed for. Plaintiff has appealed.

We shall first inquire into the law governing the case. There is no doubt that the defendant and plaintiff in reconvention bore the burden of proving by a preponderance of the evidence the alleged redhibitory vices and defects in the piano which was sold to him. Article 2530, Civ. Code; Wooley v. Darnell-Berry Horse & Mule Co., 5 La. App. 278; Mackie v. Davis, 13 La. Ann. 475; Landreaux v. Campbell, 8 Mart (N. S.) 478; Porche v. L’Admirault, 1 Rob. 365; McLellan v. Williams, 11 La. Ann. 721; Eglin v. Rufin, Orleans No. 7529, rinreported [see Louisiana and Southern Digest]; Pairque v. Ortolano, 13 Orl. App. 165; Lugenbuhl v. Feitel Bag Co., 13 Orl. App. 429; Pouey v. Surle, 8 La. App. 191.

In the case of Jackson v. Breard Motor Co., Inc., 167 La. 858, 120. So. 478, in discussing the evidence tending to establish red-hibitory vices and defects, the court said:

“After examining the testimony, we are unable to satisfy ourselves that the conclusion reached by the trial judge is manifestly erroneous. Without entering into a detailed discussion of the facts, we find they show, substantially, that, after plaintiff, in the conduct of his business, began to drive the automobile at a speed exceeding 25 miles an hour, the speed at which he had driven the machine for the initial 500 miles according to the manufacturer’s instructions, the defects complained of began to develop. The automobile would not function properly, and was repeatedly returned, without avail, to the defendant company for readjustment or repair. The testimony of the employees of the defendant company that they found no difficulty in operating the automobile is not controlling, since it was no part of plaintiff’s contract that he was to hire an expert automobile mechanic to drive him about the country. in the machine in the pursuit of his business of examining various farm properties offered to his investment company as security for loans to the owners.
“There was no express waiver of warranty by the plaintiff; hence the defendant must be held, under the law, to have warranted the machine sold as fit for the purpose intended. It cannot be denied that an automobile which is not in running condition is not fit for the purpose intended. Crawford v. Abbott Automobile Co., 157 La. 50, 101 So, 871.”

In the case of Hirsius v. Capital City Auto Co., No. 7420 of the docket of this court, unreported [see Louisiana and Southern Digest], the rule as to redhibition was stated to be as follows;

“Unless warranty be expressly waived, the vendor warrants the thing sold as fit for the purpose intended. Fee v. Sentell, 52 La. Ann. 1957, 28 So. 279. * * *
“It is not incumbent upon the buyer in such case to seek out, allege and prove the particular and underlying cause of the defects which make the thing sold unfit for the purpose, intended; particularly when that thing is a complicated piece of machinery; it is sufficient if he alleged and afterwards proves that as a fact such defects exist.
“On the contrary, it is for the vendor in such cases' to show that the defects were such as the buyer knew or might have discovered by simple inspection. Otherwise, we should have the quaint result that the buyer must give the thing an elaborate and thorough examination in order to show that the defect was not discoverable by a simple inspection, or start an expert investigation into the condition of the machine in order to establish the self-evident fact that it did not run.”

In Stewart v. Mumme, 14 La. App. 458, 131 So. 683, 684, we said;

“* *. * But it was demonstrated that he was mistaken, 'both as to the weather conditions and the temperature of the house during the test. Defendants were not obliged to permit plaintiff to indulge in a constant tinkering with the system in the hope that it might ultimately produce results. It is not necessary that the system should have been proven to be utterly worthless. It is sufficient that it be ‘so inconvenient and imperfect, that it must be supposed ¡.ha t the buyer would not have purchased it, had lie known of the vice.’ Rev. Civ. Code, art. 2520. See, also, Bohanon v. Stewart, 4 La. App. 150; Hawley Down-Draft Furnace Co. v. Southern Chemical & Fertilizer Co., Ltd., 51 La. Ann. 915, 25 So. 470.”

*161 In Junius Hart Piano House, Ltd., v. Tauzin, 5 La. App. 495, in upholding the defendant’s demand for rescission of the sale of the piano because of its defective condition, the court said:

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142 So. 159, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chas-a-kaufman-co-v-gillman-lactapp-1932.