Combustion Fuel Oil Burner Co. v. Memphis Heating Co.

5 Tenn. App. 601, 1927 Tenn. App. LEXIS 99
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJuly 1, 1927
StatusPublished

This text of 5 Tenn. App. 601 (Combustion Fuel Oil Burner Co. v. Memphis Heating Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Combustion Fuel Oil Burner Co. v. Memphis Heating Co., 5 Tenn. App. 601, 1927 Tenn. App. LEXIS 99 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

SENTER, J.

The complainant, Combustion Fuel Oil Company, as the manufacturer of the Combustion Fuel Oil Burners, entered into a written contract with the defendant Memphis Heating Company, dated May 29, 1924, referred to in the instrument as “ Distributor’s Sales Agreement,” by the terms of which the defendant Memphis Heating Company became the distributor or dealer of the complainant for the sale of oil burnei’s used in heating plants for the heating of buildings. The agreement was to1 continue for a period of one year.

The original bill alleges that the defendant is indebted to complainant in the sum of $1571.44 for goods, wares and merchandise sold and delivered to it according to the items set forth in the statement and invoices attached to and made a part of the bill, and seeks to recover of defendant for said amount. The statement in the bill covers several invoices for burners and heating equipment, etc., dated from September 25, 1924, to January 30, 1925.

The defendant answered the bill denying that it was indebted to the complainant in the sum alleged in the bill, or in any amount ■whatever. A cross-bill is incorporated in fhe answer, and in the cross-bill it is alleged that the cross-defendant, the complainant in the original bill, is indebted to it in the sum of $5,400.65, resulting from the alleged breach of the contract entered into between the parties. By the answer and cross-bill it is alleged that one of the principal inducements held out to the defendant in entering into said contract, was the representation made by the complainant that the said Combustion Fuel Oil Burners were approved by the Underwriters Laboratories; that this representation was made to the respondent by the complainant through its agents and officers during the negotiations, and also in the advertising matter which was shown to the respondent, the cross-complainant, and prior to the signing of the contract between the parties. It is further alleged in the answer and cross-bill that the defendant, cross-complainant, relying túpon said representations with reference to said heating apparatus having been approved by the Underwriters Laboratories, proceeded to push the sales of said heating apparatus and procured orders for the installation *603 of the oil burners from its customers, and installed certain of the oil burners; that after a number of orders had been taken and some oil burners had been installed by it, competitors in Memphis discovered and made known the fact that said Combustion Oil Burners had not been approved by the Underwriters Laboratories, and upon investigation and through correspondence with complainant it was found that the approval of the Underwriters Laboratory for this particular type of oil burner had not been procured. It is further alleged in the answer and cross-bill that the insurance rate on the buildings where said oil burners had been installed by cross-complainant was raised, and that permits could not be procured from the authorities in Memphis for the installation of said oil burners because said type of oil burner was not listed among those approved by the Underwriters Laboratories, and that such of the burners as had been installed by cross-complainant were ordered taken out and those that had not been installed the orders were cancelled, resulting in the loss and damage to cross-complainant complained of in the cross-bill, and a recovery for which was sought in the cross-bill. The original complainant and cross-defendant, Combustion Fuel Oil Burner Company, answered the cross-bill of cross-complainant, and in which answer denies that it is indebted to cross-coipplainant as alleged in the cross-bill, or for any other sum. It is also denied in the answer to the cross-bill that cross-complainant was merely a distributor, and it is alleged that cross-complainant, while so designated in the contract, the relation between the parties to the controversy is governed by the contract entered into between the parties prior to any sale by cross-complainant or by any sale made by cross-defendant to cross-complainant.

The answer to the cross-bill further alleged that if there were ever any valid grounds for complaint against the products of cross-defendant sold to cross-complainant because the same had not been approved by the Underwriters Laboratories, this was fully corrected and the approval obtained before any of the items mentioned in the original bill were sold to cross-complainant, and that as to any of the items sold to cross-complainant by cross-defendant under said contract prior to the approval of the Underwriters Laboratories and the Tennessee Inspection Bureau, that, cross-complainant was fully advised as to the actual conditions and status, and well knew that said approval was in course of being obtained, and was fully cognizant of all the facts with reference to the same.

Subsequent to the filing of the answer to the cross-bill, cross-complainant presented its motion to be permitted' to file an amended answer and cross-bill, which motion was overruled and disallowed by the Chancellor, and the Chancellor’s action thereon was duly ex *604 cepted to by cross-complainant. The proposed amended answer and cross-bill set out that since the filing’ of the answer to the cross-bill and by agreement with the complainant, the goods, wares and merchandise on hand with the defendant (cross-complainant), at the request of original complainant, had been shipped back to it; that the value of the merchandise so returned was $2,088.99, which cancelled the claim of original complainant of $1577.64, and left the original complainant indebted on that account in the sum of $511.35, and seeks by said proposed amended answer and cross-bill to recover said additional sum of $511.35 in addition to the alleged claim of $5,400.65. It appears from the record that the Chancellor based his action in refusing to permit the filing of said amendment to the answer and cross-bill on the ground that it was stated in open court by the solicitors representing complainant in the filing of the original bill that complainants whole demand set forth in said original bill had been fully satisfied by defendant.

At the hearing of the cause the Chancellor found and so decreed that all the matters involved in the original bill had been compromised and settled between the parties, and that the complainant, Combustion Fuel Oil Burner Company, had no other or further claim or demand against the defendant Memphis Heating Company. The Chancellor further decreed that the Memphis Heating Company, as the cross-complainant, under the facts as found by the Chancellor was not entitled to any relief against the cross-defendant, Combustion Fuel Oil Burner Company, and dismissed the cross-bill, and decreed a judgment against the Memphis Heating Company for the costs of the cause. To this decree of the Chancellor, the defendant and cross-complainant, Memphis Heating Company, excepted, and appealed to this court assigning numerous errors.

There is an elaborate finding of. the facts as found by the Chancellor contained in the record, and certain additional finding of facts by the Chancellor on the petition of cross-complainant. We deem it unnecessary to set out in detail the facts as found by the Chancellor, but a summary of the same is sufficient to present the questions involved on this appeal.

The Chancellor found that early in the year 1924 the £< Combustion Company” was a corporation organized under the laws of the State of Illinois, and domiciled in Chicago; that William T.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
5 Tenn. App. 601, 1927 Tenn. App. LEXIS 99, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/combustion-fuel-oil-burner-co-v-memphis-heating-co-tennctapp-1927.