Feagins v. Texas MacHinery & Supply Co.

185 S.W. 961, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 539
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 18, 1916
DocketNo. 7457. [fn*]
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 185 S.W. 961 (Feagins v. Texas MacHinery & Supply Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Feagins v. Texas MacHinery & Supply Co., 185 S.W. 961, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 539 (Tex. Ct. App. 1916).

Opinions

RASBURY, J.

Appellee sued appellants upon two promissory notes aggregating $2,-294.25, executed by appellants and payable to appellee, seeking judgment for the principal, interest, attorney’s fees, and foreclosure of lien upon an engine in payment of which the notes were given. Appellants admitted execution of the notes and the lien, but alleged that the consideration therefor had failed. In connection with such plea it was alleged that the engine was guaranteed to be of good material, to furnish sufficient power to operate a four 70 saw Continental cotton gin plant in a steady and reliable manner, so that the saws used in the. gins would maintain a specified and necessary speed, and at a specified cost, in consideration of which appellants, in addition to executing the notes, paid appellee $764.75 in cash and $200.20 on freight when the engine was installed, upon the fraudulent representation by appellee that the engine had been tested and would do its guaranteed work. Appellants also alleged, in effect, that the engine failed to do the work it was guaranteed to do, and that after the engine failed so to perform its work a new contract was entered into between the parties in which it was agreed that the engine would be tested anew, and, if it failed to perform, the notes would be canceled and all payments refunded, and that it did on the last test fail to meet the guaranty. Prayer was that the notes and lien be canceled and appellants recover the cash items paid. Appellee, in response, to appellants’ pleading, averred i that the engine had been tested and unconditionally accepted by appellants under the provisions of a contract between the parties, and denied the making of the new contract, as well as the other affirmative matter pleaded by appellants. There was trial by jury, to whom the court referred for their determination special issues of fact. Upon the findings of the jury judgment was for appel-lee. Hence this appeal.

The sale of the engine to appellants and the execution of the notes originated in a written contract and specifications between the parties. The contract and specifications are not in dispute, but it is necessary to an intelligent understanding of the issues that their salient and material provisions be stated. By the contract, which is dated July 12, 1912, appellee sold appellants, at an agreed price, an engine known as horizontal type N 60 brake horse power, designed for cotton gin service, to be delivered, erected, and tested in appellants’ plant in Alsdorf under the superintendence of a competent engineer furnished by appellee at the expense of appellants. The engine was guaranteed to be of good workmanship and material, and when properly installed to furnish needed, steady, reliable power for operating a four 70 saw Continental cotton gin plant to normal capacity at a specified operating fuel expense, using either gasoline, kerosene, or distilled oil as fuel. After test, hot to exceed five days, appellants, if the engine performed according to guaranty, were to give appeliee unconditional written acceptance of same. Notes, being the ones sued on, were to be executed, secured by lien upon the engine. The contract also recited that it covered all matters relating to the sale and excluded any oral changes or modifications thereof.

The engine was installed September 14, 1912, but for reasons unnecessary to enumerate could not be tested at that time. On September 28, 1912, however, the agreed test was made at which time appellants signed .and addressed to appellee a memorandum stating:

“Mr. J. S. Curtis, erecting engineer, has properly installed and tested the machinery covered by the contract between Texas Machinery & Supply Company and Feagins & Atwood, dated July 5, 1912¡ and has demonstrated that said machinery is in accordance with and has operated according to the specifications and guaranty set forth in said contract, and is now operating successfully and is accepted.’’

In addition to the foregoing appellants introduced testimony tending to support the allegations of the defense, and the appellee introduced testimony tending to dispute such allegations. The evidence so introduced was sufficient to have supported a finding of the jury either way.

[1] The first assignment of error challenges the action of the court in admitting testimony. Appell.ee, in rebuttal of the evidence [963]*963introduced by appellants in support of their defensive matter, offered E. S. Brack as a witness, who testified, in substance, that he had had an .experience of fifteen years in ginning cotton, and had for four years been conducting a gin on the line of Hunt and Delta counties. He further testified that his gin plant was substantially the same as that of appellants in reference to the number of stands, size and number of saws, and other details, and was constructed by the same factory that constructed appellants’ outfit, and that he operated same with the same type of engine that was sold to appellants and manufactured by the same concern. He then testified that said engine had for three years furnished satisfactory power for operating his gin plant. One of the issues raised by appellants in their pleading and evidence was that the engine sold them failed to develop power sufficient to operate the gin outfit at the necessary speed to properly separate the lint from the seed. The contention, presented from several angles, is that in rebuttal of such defense it is improper to admit proof that another engine, identical in all respects and a product of the same factory, did, at another place, furnish sufficient power to operate a plant substantially similar in all respects to the plant of the one for which it was claimed it was insufficient. The character of evidence here objected to has been much inveighed against by the courts and text-writers, and cannot be said to be regarded by either favorably, and yet the sum of the discussion may be said to be that it is admissible at the discretion of the trial judge, subject to review in case of abuse. 17 Cyc. 274, 276, pars. 1, 2. The same authority states the rule as to the relevancy of similar occurrences to be:

“That a fact existed or event occurred at a particular time cannot be shown by evidence that another fact existed or event occurred at another time unless the two facts or occurrences are connected in some special way, indicating a relevancy beyond mere similarity in certain particulars. Such relevancy is found where similarity in all essential particulars is shown to exist. Evidence of other facts or occurrences are then admitted, provided the court deems this course a wise exercise of its administrative discretion.” 17 Cyc. 283, 284.

On the precise issue in the instant case other jurisdictions have held the testimony inadmissible. Lander v. Sheehan, 32 Mont. 25, 79 Pac. 406; Fox v. Harvester Works, 83 Cal. 333, 23 Pac. 297; Stockton v. Glen Falls Ins. Co., 121 Cal. 167, 53 Pac. 565; Murray v. Brooks, 41 Iowa, 47. The tendency in this jurisdiction is in the opposite direction. Southern, etc., Engine Co. v. Adams et al., 169 S. W. 1143. The purport of the case last cited is that within limitations the evidence is admissible. The fact that the limitations are narrow makes the evidence none the less admissible when within the limitations.

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Bluebook (online)
185 S.W. 961, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 539, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/feagins-v-texas-machinery-supply-co-texapp-1916.