Frigid Fluid Co. v. Sid Westheimer Co.

189 S.W. 334, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 1029
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 26, 1916
DocketNo. 604.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 189 S.W. 334 (Frigid Fluid Co. v. Sid Westheimer 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
Frigid Fluid Co. v. Sid Westheimer Co., 189 S.W. 334, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 1029 (Tex. Ct. App. 1916).

Opinion

WALTHALL, J.

This suit was brought on a written contract in the county court at law by the appellant, Frigid Fluid Company, against the appellee, Sid Westheimer Company, to recover the purchase price of 40 cases, or 960 bottles of an embalming fluid known as Frigid Fluid. The contract is in the form of an order for, goods; its date is September 5, 1911; order is to ship to ap-pellee at Houston, Tex.; to be shipped at once; the price is stated to be $16.20 per case, first payment $25, due February 1, 1912, and $25 monthly until paid; 5 per cent, discount. The or.der includes one table, $95, gratis. It is alleged that the goods were delivered to the Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fé Railway Company, at Chicago, Ill., consigned to appellee; that the goods were shipped during the months of October and November, 1911, and were received in good condition and accepted by appellee and used fpr many months; that appellee had paid $51.08 of the total price, and defaulted as to the balance; *335 that the embalming table was- delivered gratuitously, provided appellee would pay for the fluid; that prior to the time of this sale, appellee had bought and used goods similar to the goods sued for. Appellee admitted the execution of the written order, but denied that it evidenced the entire agreement, and alleged that appellant’s agent, making the sale, had made certain representations as to the quality, fitness, and efficiency of the fluid for the purposes for which it was known the fluid was to be used; that said agent warranted the fluid to be of the very finest and highest quality, and fit in every way for embalming dead human bodies; the same would' give appellee satisfaction, and could be returned if unsatisfactory or not as represented; that said warranties and representations were material and the inducing cause of the sale; that appellee relied thereon; that the fluid was absolutely worthless for the purpose of embalming dead human bodies • — and pleaded a breach of warranty. Appel-lee prayed for a rescission, and tendered back the unused fluid and table, and offered to pay the contract price for the used portion of the fluid, and in the alternative, if rescission were denied, that appellant take nothing because of a total failure of consideration, and recovery of the $51.08 and the freight charges paid by it, and in the alternative for damages in offset to the contract price for partial failure of consideration. Ap-pellee admitted in its pleadings that it had used at least eight eases of the fluid; that about August 1, 1912, it had offered to return the remainder of the fluid and the table on discovering the unfitness- of the fluid. Appellant pleaded that appellee, by using the fluid for so long a period, had waived any right to return same and was estopped to deny its liability for the purchase price. The case was tried before a jury, and submitted upon special issues. The issues and answers are as follows:

“(1) Do you believe from a preponderance of the evidence that the fluid which plaintiff shipped to defendant, and which has not been used, would perform the service of embalming dead bodies in a satisfactory manner, if properly used by a skilled embalmer, or do you not? Answer: We do not.
“(2) Do you or do you not believe from a preponderance of the evidence that the said fluid that has not been used by defendant had any value for use as an embalming fluid in Houston, Tex., at the time it was shipped by plaintiff to defendant in Houston? Answer: We do not.”
“(4) Do you or do you not believe from a preponderance of the evidence that said fluid that has not been used by defendant had any value for use as an embalming fluid in Chicago, Ill., at the time it was shipped by plaintiff to defendant? Answer: We do not.
“(5) How many bottles of said fluid which plaintiff shipped to defendant have been used by defendant? Answer: 264 bottles.
“(6) What was the reasonable market value of the table mentioned in the testimony in Chicago, Ill., at the time it was shipped to defendant? Answer: $90.00.”

Thereupon the court entered this judgment: In favor of plaintiff against the defendant for the sum of $239.11, being the amount due at the contract price for 11 cases (264 bottles) of the fluid used by defendant, and $.90 for the table, plus interest to date of judgment; that plaintiff also recover of the defendant the remaining 29 cases of fluid now in defendant’s possession, and in the event defendant failed or refused to deliver same to the plaintiff within ten days, that plaintiff, in that event, should also recover of . defendant the sum of $469.80, being the value of the remaining cases of the fluid at the contract price. From this judgment, the plaintiff appealed.

[1] Appellant’s first ground of error is directed to the refusal of the court to give a peremptory instruction to find for appellant for the full amount of its claim, on the ground that appellee had waived any right to return the goods, and by using about one-third of the entire goods was estopped to assert that they were of no value. It is a valid objection to the giving of a peremptory charge, when the evidence raises an issue of waiver or estoppel; it being a question of fact. The issue should have been submitted to the jury. In this case, appellee pleaded that the “fluid was worthless at the very time and moment of its delivery to said railway company,” and “unfit for use and worthless, and was not then or at any time in good and mercantile condition, and was at all times unfit for the preparation of dead human bodies for burial,” and states the reasons why the fluid was worthless. There was evidence offered to sustain these allegations. Westheimer said:

“If Frigid Fluid was good fluid, it was worth it ($8.10 per dozen bottles) but in the condition this was, it wasn’t worth anything; it wasn’t fit for use; it would be a detriment to my business. * * * I discontinued making further monthly payments as I agreed to do because my embalmers complained to me that the fluid wasn’t doing the proper work.”

Fogel said:

“There were instructions given by the Frigid Fluid Company as to how this particular fluid should be used. I followed those instructions in embalming these bodies. This fluid made the bodies that were embalmed with it kind of ashy. * * * All those which I embalmed which we held would turn a dull grayish, or putty-like color. * * * This wasn’t good fluid.”

Other witnesses testified to practically the same. The appellee alleged and offered proof to the effect that an agent of appellant represented and warranted the fluid to be of the highest grade and quality, and fit' in every way for the purposes and uses of embalming dead human bodies. The jury found that the fluid was worthless for the purpose of embalming dead human bodies.

In the case of Hayden et al. v. Houghton et al., 24 g. W. 803, an action by the seller against the purchaser of cigars, sold by an agent or drummer, in which the purchaser alleged that the goods were purchased under a *336

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Bluebook (online)
189 S.W. 334, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 1029, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/frigid-fluid-co-v-sid-westheimer-co-texapp-1916.