Cocker MacHine & Foundry Co. v. Lane Cotton Mills Co.

112 So. 522, 163 La. 664, 1927 La. LEXIS 1691
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMarch 28, 1927
DocketNo. 28011.
StatusPublished

This text of 112 So. 522 (Cocker MacHine & Foundry Co. v. Lane Cotton Mills Co.) 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
Cocker MacHine & Foundry Co. v. Lane Cotton Mills Co., 112 So. 522, 163 La. 664, 1927 La. LEXIS 1691 (La. 1927).

Opinion

LAND, J.

Plaintiff company sues, to recover a balance alleged to be due by defendant company on the following statement of account:

Contract price of dye machine............... $36,200
Price of machine for balling leaders........ 375
Traveling expenses and board of erector.... 850
$37,425
Payment on account....................$10,000
'Two secondhand indigo vats, purchased by plaintiff from defendant.. 2,200
Price of automatic differentials taken
off machine............................ 1,750
Cash advanced to plaintiff............. 825
Material purchased by defendant for plaintiff ............................... 812 15,587
Balance due................................ $21,838

Defendant claims in reeonvention the following items:

1. Loss through manufacture of defectively woven and dyed cloth .................. $ 7,560 00
2. Extra labor running old dyehouse at night ................................. 3,055 00
3. Excess power used......................... 234 00
4. Excess fuel oil used....................... 1,147 60
5. Machine shop labor and material and express charges ........................ 3,768 93
6. Ten balls of leaders or warps ruined In trying out machine.................. 1,440 00
7. Wages of man needed because of no automatic differentials .................... 13,500 00
Total claimed in reconvention......$30,705 43

On Angust 22,1922, defendant ordered from plaintiff one warp indigo dyeing equipment, price of the equipment to be $35,500, f. o. b. Gastonia, N. O., including the services of a competent man to be sent to the mill of defendant company to assist and supervise in the erection and starting of this equipment, defendant to furnish plaintiff’s erector with all common labor that may be necessary in the placing and handling of same, and to pay the traveling, expenses and board of the erector.

There is also included in the contract “one (1) four nest warp coiler, and all additional heads and parts, which, in connection with our two four nest coilers, will enable us to coil twenty (20) warps from our dry cans”; price of coiler and parts to be $700, f. o. b. Gastonia, N. C.

The shipment of this equipment was to be made by December of the year 1922, and earlier if possible.

The terms of payment were to be 50 per cent, of invoice in 30 days from date of shipment, and balance when equipment is in satisfactory operation.

Item 5 of the specifications for one proposed indigo dyeing equipment for Lane Cotton Mills Company is as follows:

“Side shaft drive and transmission as follows: Side shaft drive will be of the worm and worm gear type to the bottom squeeze rolls, complete with clutches and automatic differential tension *667 controls to regulate tension of warps between successive squeezes,” etc.

According to the articles of the agreement, plaintiff company contracted to sell and to deliver to defendant, Lane Cotton Mills Company, one 20-warp, automatic, indigo dyeing equipment or machine.

It is clear from the evidence, however, that this was a new type of machine, the first 20-warp continuous dyeing machine ever erected or operated, the necessary chemicals being constantly fed to the vats so as to maintain at all times a uniform strength of dye liquor. The delay occasioned by the old method of dyeing, in recharging vats, and reversing warps, and in running them through the vats a sepond time, is entirely eliminated in the Cocker machine erected for defendant company by plaintiff company.

If dye liquor of the proper strength is conducted by the machine to the vats, it necessarily follows ’ that the denim or cloth will come from the machine dyed with perfect uniformity of color. The Cocker machine may therefore operate mechanically and perfectly, and yet the. product may not be dyed the desired shade, if the necessary strength is wanting in the dye liquor. As far as proper dyeing is concerned, it is plain, therefore, that this is strictly a chemical matter or difficulty, wholly disconnected from, and independent of, the perfect mechanical operation of the Cocker machine.

There is nothing in the contract of plaintiff company that guarantees to defendant company that the vats will be supplied with dye of proper strength to give the desired color to the denims manufactured by defendant company at its cotton mills.

Defendant company bitterly complains because the Cocker machine is equipped with separating rods, which were not called for in the specifications, and is not equipped with automatic differentials, which are required by the specifications.

Upon starting the machine, when completed March 21, 1923, it was found that the-warps became tangled in the dye vats, and it was suggested, therefore, by Mr. Cocker, who-had developed the machine, that separating-rods should be installed in each of the immersion cages.

The president of the Lane Cotton Mills opposed this plan, which was suggested in order to overcome the tangling of the warps,, on the ground that the ingredients of the dye-liquor would corrode the rods, make them rough, and would injure the threads of the warps as they passed through the rods.

This fear upon the part of the president of defendant company never materialized,'as-the warps were uninjured, after the separating rods had been finally installed, after-weeks of unsuccessful schemes to prevent the-tangling of the warps.

The wrangling over the use of separating rods lasted until June 17, 1923, when the machine was operated for the first time with rods installed in all of the immersion cages, and carried the 20 warps through the various immersions to the dry cans, continuously and without trouble.

Although the mechanical operation of the Cocker machine was perfect on June 17,1923, and' operated continuously until about October 25, 1923,8yét another wrangle arose, as soon as the dispute as to the installation of the separating rods had ended, on June 17. 1923, and “international dye experts” were called in by the president of defendant company to solve the chemical difficulties experienced in obtaining the proper color in the dyed warps.

Although the Cocker machine, at the time, was operating in a perfect mechanical manner, it was subjected to excessive pressure by one of these experts, resulting in the gears and bearings of the machine being repeatedly broken, and requiring Mr. Cocker and his erectors to be continuously on the *669 job repairing the broken parts of the machine.

It finally dawned upon the “international dye.

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112 So. 522, 163 La. 664, 1927 La. LEXIS 1691, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cocker-machine-foundry-co-v-lane-cotton-mills-co-la-1927.