Ford v. Illinois Refrigerating Construction Co.

40 Ill. App. 222, 1890 Ill. App. LEXIS 571
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMarch 13, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 40 Ill. App. 222 (Ford v. Illinois Refrigerating Construction Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ford v. Illinois Refrigerating Construction Co., 40 Ill. App. 222, 1890 Ill. App. LEXIS 571 (Ill. Ct. App. 1891).

Opinion

Moran, P. J.

Appellee brought its action against appellant to recover the contract price for building for appellant a certain refrigerator. The work was done under the following proposition, which was accepted by appellant, and which both parties agree constituted the written contract between them.

“ Chicago, 4-5-1888.

“ Mr. J. Ford, Adams street.

“Dear Sir: We now beg to submit plans and estimate for your refrigerator, 38½ x 14 x 16 double decker. We propose to construct same under the most improved method of dead air spaces. The walls, flooring and ceiling will have four linings of best resin and straw-board paper, all scaled with our patent cement. The walls to be six inches thick, the exterior to be finished with ash, and interior walls of meat room with white wood;, floors and ceilings of pine, all selected and thoroughly dry. The meat room to have six windows and three doors, as shown in plan, to be nine feet high inside, and fitted with racks as required.

“The poultry room to be six feet clear inside, to have six window's and one door, with steps and platform, and whatever fittings and partitions required; the windows to have three linings of D. T. Am. glass, and both rooms fitted with piping and connections suitable to run the rooms at any temperature desired down to 25 degrees under our Anhydrous Am. system. The entire work to be finished in first class workmanlike manner for the sum of $1,290.

“In addition to the piping, we furnish electric batteries, regulators, valves, fountains and absorbers, but it is hereby understood and agreed that those appliances shall always remain the property of the company. A deposit of $25 is required for the use of same, and should you at any time determine to change the system or cease using these appliances, this deposit will he rebated upon return of said property.

“We further undertake to furnish and deliver all the Anhydrous Ammonia which may be required for running these refrigerators at the rate of three cents per pound for one year from date of agreement, or at three and one half cents per pound on a contract for three years.

“We further guarantee that both refrigerators can be run at an average temperature of 35 degrees on an average consumption of 120 pounds ammonia per day,, due allowance to be made for first filling, and the refrigerators to be operated with proper watchfulness and care.

“ Should our system fail to give satisfactory results within a reasonable time, and should you desire it, we undertake to remove our ammonia appliances and substitute for same, free of any extra cost, the most approved system of ice refrigeration, and will undertake to have your meat room ready for use by the 27th inst, and poultry room as soon afterward as possible.

“Will shellac the interior, and give the exterior a good hard oil finish. We further undertake to keep these refrigerators in good running order and repair, free of expense, for one year from date of contract.

“ Awaiting your decision, we are

“Yours truly,

“ Illinois Refrigerating Cons. Co.,

“ per J. McGregor, Mgr.”

“ P. S. Payment, say half in thirty days, balance in sixty days. ' J. McG.”

The appellee built the refrigerator and fitted it up for operation under the Anhydrous Ammonia system and claims that it was completed about the first of May, and about the eighth of May, appellant placed h is meats in it, upon the representation by appellee’s manager that it was ready for use. Upon putting in the meats appellant found that the temperature of the refrigerator was not low enough to preserve the meats, but appellee’s manager promised to get the temperature down inside of an hour or two. He failed to do so, though he kept on insisting from day to day that he would get the temperature down, and excusing his failure to do so on the ground of lack of ammonia and temporary failure of the apparatus to work until at the end of a trial lasting some six weeks, the manager admitted that the attempt was a failure and the box was changed over to an ice cooler. At no time during the continuance of the experiment or test of the box did the temperature get below forty to forty-two degrees, when the meats and poultry were in it, and appellant was induced to keep the meats in the refrigerator and persevere in the test by the continued assertions of the manager that the temperature would be brought down to the necessary degree. On one or two occasions during the test, appellant had to remove all the meats from the refrigerator on account of the escape from the pipes in the box, of ammonia, which appellant claimed spoiled the meats. On the trial in the court below appellant sought to recoup or set off under a plea of set-off filed, the amount lost by him in meats injured because of the high temperature in the refrigerator during the time he used it, and for meats spoiled by reason of the leakage of ammonia upon them.

The court refused to admit evidence of the loss of or injury to meat from any other cause than the escape of ammonia upon it by reason of defective piping or construction.

Appellant offered to prove the quantities of meat lost during the time the box was running and the dates when lost, but the evidence was excluded. It seems to have been the theory of the trial court, that as appellant was desirous that the system of refrigeration attempted should succeed, and as he continued the trial of it with the knowledge that the temperature was not brought low enough to preserve his meats, he should, as a matter of law, be compelled to bear whatever loss from high temperature the continuance of the trial entailed.

We are of opinion that this view is erroneous. Tt is of course the well settled rule that the damages which may he recovered for a breach of contract are those “immediately flowing out of the breach complained of, something immediately connected with the breach of contract and not merely connected with it through a series of causes intervening between the immediate consequences of the breach and the damage or injury complained of;” but injury to the meat placed in the refrigerator can not be said to be too remote as a matter of law.

The guaranty of the contract is that the refrigerator could be run at an average temperature of thirty-five degrees. It was built, as shown on the face of the contract, for the purpose of storing meats.

“ What is the proximate cause of an injury is ordinarily a question for the jury. It is not a question of science or legal knowledge. It is to be determined as fact in view of. the circumstances or facts attending it. 94 U. S. 475.

The law imposes on one subjected to injury from a breach of contract, the duty of making reasonable exertions to lighted the damage, and if through his negligence the damage is enhanced, he must bear the burden of the increase. But in every case the question of whether by reasonable diligence he could lessen the damage, or whether the increased amount of it is due to his wilfulness or imprudence, is one for the jury to determine upon a consideration of all the facts and circumstances of the particular case.

In Jones v.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
40 Ill. App. 222, 1890 Ill. App. LEXIS 571, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ford-v-illinois-refrigerating-construction-co-illappct-1891.