Fred W. Wolf Co. v. Northwestern Dairy Co.

104 P. 1123, 55 Wash. 665, 1909 Wash. LEXIS 819
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 15, 1909
DocketNo. 8095
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 104 P. 1123 (Fred W. Wolf Co. v. Northwestern Dairy Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fred W. Wolf Co. v. Northwestern Dairy Co., 104 P. 1123, 55 Wash. 665, 1909 Wash. LEXIS 819 (Wash. 1909).

Opinion

Parker, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment rendered' upon the pleadings in favor of the plaintiff. By the complaint it is alleged, in substance, that on September 23, 1905, defendant entered into a written contract with plaintiff, by the terms of which defendant purchased from plaintiff an ice-making and refrigerating plant, of twenty tons refrigerating- - capacity, consisting of the machinery and materials specifically detailed and set forth in the contract, which plant was by plaintiff furnished, installed, and completed in all things in accordance with the terms and conditions of the contract, a copy of which is attached to the complaint, by which it appears to have been executed October 6, 1905, and among other things contains the following:

All necessary pipe, fittings and hangers for tlie direct expansion of ammonia for the proper cooling of the following rooms will be-furnished:
One storage room 24' x 15' x 9' 6" 32°
One ice storage room 14' x 15' x 9' 6" 28°
One ice cream stg. room IT x 15' x 9' 6" 14°
This piping will be placed in the ceiling of the above rooms and: will be guaranteed to maintain the temperatures required.....
And we agree that this machine when properly operated and connected to an electric power plant of ample capacity, will have a, refrigerating duty equal to the melting of 20 tons of ice during 24 hours of continuous operation at 70 R P M......
CAPACITY. We further guarantee that this machine will include-an ice-making capacity of 5 tons every 24 hours, besides doing all the necessary work, with a continuous run of 21 hours daily . . .
After the plant is started we will furnish an engineer to have charge of its operation for 10 days, during which time we will do the-work and produce the guaranteed results herein specified. While-we are in charge you are to furnish all necessary help, together with. [667]*667fuel, light, water, steam, oil waste and all other necessary supplies for the successful operation of this plant. At the end of the above mentioned 10 days you shall accept or reject the plant, it being understood, however, that if the conditions of this proposition be fulfilled the plant shall be accepted. If rejected, you shall notify us in writing thereof and hereby permit us to enter the premises and remove our equipment without charge to you and upon refunding to you whatever money has been paid us. An acceptance after the above mentioned period shall be in full discharge of all agreements hereinbefore contained.

that on January 11, 1906, the plant having been fully installed and tested for the period of ten days as required by the contract, the defendant accepted the same in writing as follows:

Seattle, Wn., Jan. 11th, 1906.
The Fred W. Wolf Company,
Chicago, Ills.,
Gentlemen:—
This is to certify that the twenty ton refrigerating plant, including a five ton ice-making and direct expansion piping for room, has been erected in a proper manner and that the machine is giving every satisfaction. We hereby render this as an acceptance of the contract which was entered into with you on October 6, 1905.
Yours truly,
Northwestern Dairy Company, (Signed) per J. C. Burnam.

that the agreed purchase price of the plant was $5,750, payable twenty-five per cent at time of acceptance, twenty-five per cent twenty days after acceptance, twenty-five per cent sixty days after acceptance, and twenty-five per cent ninety days after acceptance; and that defendant has made all payments as they fell due, save the last one falling due ninety days after acceptance, being April 11, 1906, for which judgment is prayed, with interest from that date.

By its answer, defendant denies the allegations of the complaint as to plaintiff’s compliance with the terms of the contract, but admits the making of the contract and admits that it executed the written acceptance, and “alleges that said writing was signed under a mistake of fact in this that the defendant supposed that the plant erected by the plaintiff would maintain the temperature warranted by plaintiff and [668]*668that the plant would be of the capacity warranted by plaintiff,” and that it relied on the warranty in plaintiff’s contract. Defendant denies it is indebted to plaintiff in the sum claimed or in any sum. For an affirmative defense, and counterclaim, defendant alleges and prays judgment as follows :

“That at the time the said plaintiff completed the construction of said refrigerating and ice making plant which was in the month of January, 1906, the said plant would maintain the temperatures named and this defendant supposed that the temperatures would be maintained by said plant during the summer months and supposed that the said plant was of the capacity of twenty tons daily and shortly before April 11th, 1906, defendant discovered that said plant was not coming up to the warranty of plaintiff and defendant thereupon refused to make another payment until the plant should be thoroughly tested, but this defendant was not able fully to discover that said plant would not do" the work which it was warranted to do and that it was not of the capacity of twenty tons daily until about the month of July, 1906, and thereupon this defendant notified the plaintiff, and the plaintiff by its agent, George L. Clayton, with whom all the deals between plaintiff and defendant were had, and to whom all payments were made, at divers and sundry times during the summer of 1906, and during the year 1907, endeavored to make said plant produce said refrigerating capacity and to maintain the temperatures of said premises as warranted by said plaintiff and the said plaintiff was totally unable to make said plant come up to its warranty, and this defendant has since and during said time given the said plant a thorough test and said plant as constructed by the plaintiff is not of the capacity of twenty tons refrigeration daily and would not and will not maintain the temperatures of said premises during the summer months as warranted by the plaintiff to the great loss and damage of the defendant.
“That by reason of the failure of said plant as erected by the plaintiff to maintain the temperatures of said premises as guaranteed, and by reason of its failure to maintain the refrigerating capacity warranted by plaintiff', this defendant has suffered great loss and damage and has been compelled to hire experts to put the machinery in proper shape and was for two summers deprived of the use of the plant [669]*669which it had contracted for and thought had been erected by reason of endeavoring to make the said plant do the work which it had been guaranteed to do by the plaintiff to the loss and damage of the defendant in the sum of three thous- and ($3,000).
“Wherefore, this defendant prays that it may go hence without day and recover of and from the plaintiff the sum of fifteen hundred sixty-two and 52-100 ($1,562.52) dollars, together with the costs and disbursements of this action.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
104 P. 1123, 55 Wash. 665, 1909 Wash. LEXIS 819, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fred-w-wolf-co-v-northwestern-dairy-co-wash-1909.