Geiser Mfg. Co. v. Lunsford

139 S.W. 64, 1911 Tex. App. LEXIS 1179
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 7, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 139 S.W. 64 (Geiser Mfg. Co. v. Lunsford) 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
Geiser Mfg. Co. v. Lunsford, 139 S.W. 64, 1911 Tex. App. LEXIS 1179 (Tex. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinions

The petition of J. W. Lunsford and C. T. Doane against defendants, the Geiser Manufacturing Co., the First National Bank of Plainview, and E. A. Harp, alleged, in substance, that the Geiser Manufacturing Company is a foreign corporation, without permit to do business in Texas and without property in Texas; that on March 23, 1908, plaintiffs agreed to buy from said Manufacturing Company a complete new steam-plow outfit, for which they executed to said Manufacturing Company their six certain negotiable notes, and in connection with same gave *Page 65 a mortgage lien on certain horses, and assigned certain collaterals consisting of vendor's lien notes on certain land, two of which notes executed by plaintiffs to said Manufacturing Company, and three of said collateral notes are now in the hands of the defendant National Bank; that after the execution of said six notes and the giving of said mortgage and collaterals the said Manufacturing Company delivered to plaintiffs a steam-plow outfit, which plaintiffs found not to be new or complete; that at the time of delivery of same plaintiffs rejected the same as not complete and not what they had bought, whereupon said company falsely represented to plaintiffs that it was new and complete, and had not been used except for demonstration purposes, and had not plowed over 40 acres, and that if there were any parts impaired, defective, or missing that the same would be at once supplied; that attention was called to the fact that the engine had no extension cab as specified it should have, and that there were no extra shares or stubble bottoms with said outfit, and that same appeared to be worn, whereupon defendant promised and agreed to furnish said parts at once; that relying upon said representations, promises, and agreements, plaintiffs took possession of said outfit, and attempted to use the same, and found that it was old and worn out, that the boiler flues leaked and were unfit for use, that the fire box was not complete, in that the fire brick which belonged to a machine of that kind were not there, and that divers and sundry other defects were discovered that were material, and which could not be seen or discovered until plaintiffs tried to use the same; that they immediately reported the facts to said Manufacturing Company and demanded that it ship them a new plow and engine, that they could not use this one and insisted on a new outfit, and that notwithstanding said demands and agreement defendant failed and refused to ship the necessary parts, and failed and refused to ship them a new outfit; that but for the said representations plaintiffs would never have taken, or attempted to use the same, which defendant well knew; that defendant has from time to time requested plaintiffs to continue to use it until it could send the extra and missing parts, and that if not then found satisfactory that it would ship plaintiffs a new outfit; that plaintiffs have at great loss of time and money tried to use the machinery, but the same is worthless and unfit for use — all of which said Manufacturing Company well knew, and that the consideration for said notes has wholly failed.

The petition alleged further that at the time plaintiffs bargained for the plow outfit they, at the instance of the said Manufacturing Company, made a contract with defendant Harp, who agreed to furnish 1,500 acres of breaking at a certain rate per acre, part of which sum was to go to the Geiser Manufacturing Company; that said contract with Harp was made before the purchase of said machinery by plaintiffs at the instance of and for the better securing of said Manufacturing Company, and the making of such contract was known and understood at the time as a special inducement to plaintiffs to make said purchase; that plaintiffs are informed and believe and so allege that Harp and said Manufacturing Company have a mutual interest in plaintiffs' contract for said machinery and in the notes executed by plaintiffs to said company, and that Harp claims to have some interest in said notes; that as soon as plaintiffs discovered that defendant Manufacturing Company had willfully and wantonly deceived them and did not in fact intend to deliver to them either a new steam plow or to make good the one in question, they tendered, and do now tender and offer to return, the same to said company, and that such use as they have had of the same has not been beneficial to plaintiffs, but should the court consider that plaintiffs should account for the same they stand ready to do so; that plaintiffs have plowed for Harp 235 acres of land, that Harp has withheld and still withholds from plaintiffs $220 due these plaintiffs under said contract, and plaintiffs allege that he holds said sum for the Geiser Manufacturing Company and, unless restrained from doing so, will pay it to said company and leave plaintiffs without adequate remedy therefor; that the defendant Manufacturing Company has sent to the First National Bank of Plainview for collection the first two of plaintiffs' notes. Wherefore plaintiffs pray for a writ of injunction directing and enjoining said bank to hold said notes subject to the further order of the court, for a writ of injunction directing and enjoining defendant Harp not to pay said $220 to the defendant Manufacturing Company subject to the further order of the court; that plaintiffs have judgment against the Geiser Manufacturing Company canceling the contract for the purchase of said machinery, also the plaintiffs' notes, and that defendant be required to receive back the machinery; and, further, for judgment canceling the mortgage liens on the horses, and for the title and possession of the three vendor's lien collateral notes, and for judgment for the $220 held by Harp.

The temporary injunction was granted as prayed for.

The Geiser Manufacturing Company answered by general demurrer and denial, and specially answered that the sale of the machinery was an interstate order or sale to one E. J. Terry from its places of business in Kansas City and Waynesboro, Pa., and took it back from Terry to sell it and relieved Terry's estate of the debt. Also denied that it sold plaintiffs defective machinery, or falsely represented anything in *Page 66 regard to same, but if the same was defective or there were false representations as alleged, that plaintiffs, with full knowledge of the same and of the falsity of the representations, accepted the same and used it, and treated the contract as binding, and elected to hold under the contract, and were not entitled to rescission. There was a verdict for plaintiffs "for a rescission of the contract; * * * that plaintiffs are entitled to a cancellation of all the notes; * * * and that they are entitled to have the chattel mortgage, as described in their petition, returned and canceled; * * * to have returned to them the three vendor's lien notes now in the possession of the First National Bank of Plainview, Tex." Judgment was entered accordingly.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
139 S.W. 64, 1911 Tex. App. LEXIS 1179, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/geiser-mfg-co-v-lunsford-texapp-1911.