F. A. Thomas MacHine Co. v. Voelker

50 A. 838, 23 R.I. 441, 1901 R.I. LEXIS 158
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedDecember 27, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 50 A. 838 (F. A. Thomas MacHine Co. v. Voelker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
F. A. Thomas MacHine Co. v. Voelker, 50 A. 838, 23 R.I. 441, 1901 R.I. LEXIS 158 (R.I. 1901).

Opinion

Rogers, J.

This is an action of trover for the conversion of a rotary cloth press, wherein, after a verdict for the plaintiff for $634, the defendant petitions for a new trial on the grounds that the verdict was against the law and the evidence and the weight thereof, and that the court erred in its rulings in improperly admitting testimony on the part of the plaintiff, and in improperly excluding testimony offered by the defendant.

The plaintiff, Fred A. Thomas, who in 1892-3 did business under the name of the F. A. Thomas Machine Company, was a manufacturer of cloth presses and other machines ; and the defendant, George W. Yoelker, who did business under the name of George W. Yoelker & Co., was an inventor and the owner of certain patents relating to cloth presses, and the *442 construction thereof. In 1892 the defendant did not build the presses himself but procured the plaintiff to build them for him, and thus the defendant supplied machines for the customers to whom he had sold them. There is much diversity in the testimony of the parties as to the time of payment for making the machines under the general contract relating to building them prior to the construction of press No. 12 ; and also as to the contract for that particular press in regard to which this suit was brought, while the writings relating-thereto are ambiguous, and the intent and meaning- to be drawn therefrom is far from being plainly stated or easily understood.

The plaintiff swears that at the commencement of their dealings the defendant was to pay him cash for the machines at .the time they were delivered completed ; that at the time of building press No. 12 the plaintiff was to have $712.50 for building each machine; and that the defendant was to furnish the cylinder and the stuffing-box, the stuffing-box being $7.50 and the cylinder $100, which were purchased by the defendant from other parties. The defendant swears that he was to pay the plaintiff for the machines only as soon as he received his pay for them from the people he should sell them to. The machines were built after the defendant’s patterns and under his patents, so that the value of the machines considerably exceeded the amount the defendant was to pay the plaintiff for making them, the value being put at $1,250 a machine.

But whatever the general contract as to the time of payment may have been, it is certain that in the course of their dealings the defendant became indebted to the plaintiff.

The ordinary course of dealing between the parties had been for the defendant to direct the plaintiff to build one or more presses ahead of actual sales by the defendant, so that when a press was sold by the defendant there might be one on hand completed, or in an advanced stage of construction, in order that the defendant might deliver more promptly than he could have done had he waited to direct one to be built until he had actually sold it.

*443 The plaintiff, not having confidence that future bills would be paid by the defendant, had a talk with him on the subject, the statements of the parties as to which varied radically. The plaintiff’s statement was substantially that the defendant told him that he could have this No. 12 rotary cloth press, that he could collect the money for it, and that the defendant would find a customer for him ; that the machine was to be the plaintiff’s property, and that the plaintiff was to bill it and collect the pay for it; and that the defendant would set the machine up and furnish a roll for it. This was late in October or early in November, 1892.

The defendant denied that there was any agreement that the machine was to be the plaintiff’s property but agreed that the plaintiff was to collect pay for it, when sold, and was to apply it to reducing the account between them.

Subsequently the defendant wrote to the plaintiff as follows, viz.:

“November 7th, 1892.
“F. A. Thomas Machine Co.
“Dear Sirs Please finish Press No. 12 at once and ship to Jamestown Worsted Mill, Jamestown, New York, by way of Worcester. You can bill this machine and collect for Same which would be, if satisfactory, $1,250, travelling expenses for setting up charged extra, which I will send you and you can collect it all in one bill. This will make us very near square. You have charged me with two brass linings— where did you send them ?
“ Yours very truly,
“George W. Voelker & Co.”

On the next day the plaintiff wrote the defendant as follows, viz.:

“Woonsocket, R. I., November 8th, 1892.
“George W. Voelker & Co.
“ Gentlemen : Enclosed please find our receipt for $1,270, money received from the Faulkner Manufacturing Co. The brass linings which were charged to you were those sent to *444 the Faulkner Manufacturing Co. at North Billerica, Mass. We enclose bills showing the condition of our books to date. After giving you credit for $14.'TO there still remains $688.56 on the old bill, dated Sept. 13, 1892. If you will give us $400 in cash now and the balance in cash when you get paid for the machine removed from Saugus we shall consider the matter well settled. The machine we are to send to the Jamestown Worsted Mill is to run in competition with a Miller press. The one proving the better to be accepted.
Yours truly,
“F. A. Thomas Machine Co.
“ F. A. Thomas, Manager.”

Twenty days later, to wit, about November 28, 1892, the plaintiff shipped press No. 12 to the Jamestown concern, billing it to them as sold by the plaintiff. The plaintiff never received any payment from the Jamestown Worsted Co., never authorized the defendant to receive payment therefor, or to remove the machine from that company’s premises ; but it is proved without contradiction that the defendant did remove it without the plaintiff’s permission.

The first point of difference between the parties was as to what was the agreement. The. plaintiff claimed it was one thing; the defendant claimed it was another; and in order to show that it could not, in reason, have been as the plaintiff claimed it was, because such an agreement would have paid the plaintiff several hundred dollars more than was due him from the defendant, thus bringing the plaintiff in debt to the defendant for overpayments, the defendant in cross-examination of the plaintiff inquired as to the state of the account between them, particularly as to an amount received for a machine sent to the Washington Mills. The court ruled the question out, whereupon the defendant excepted. Subsequently it came up again, squarely, as to whether this agreement was not made for security, — plaintiff, counsel and court all seeming to assume that trover would not lie unless the title was absolute and unqualified. Upon the defend *445 ant’s cross-examination of the plaintiff, the latter swore as follows, viz. :

“Q. What was the contract, Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
50 A. 838, 23 R.I. 441, 1901 R.I. LEXIS 158, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/f-a-thomas-machine-co-v-voelker-ri-1901.