George v. Birchfield

264 S.W. 632, 1924 Tex. App. LEXIS 962
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 18, 1924
DocketNo. 8555.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 264 S.W. 632 (George v. Birchfield) 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
George v. Birchfield, 264 S.W. 632, 1924 Tex. App. LEXIS 962 (Tex. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

PLEASANTS, O. J.

This suit was brought by appellant against appellee to recover upon promissory notes executed by appellee in part payment of the purchase price of a traction engine sold him by the Twin City Company through appellant, its state agent, and to foreclose a mortgage upon the engine executed by appellee to secure the payment of the notes. In answer to plaintiff’s suit defendant pleaded that the execution of the contract for the purchase of the engine and the notes sued on was obtained by the fraudulent misrepresentations of plaintiff.

The plaintiff sues as the owner of the notes and mortgage. The petition is in the usual form of a petition in a suit upon a note and to foreclose a mortgage. The defendant’s answer avers that the contract for the purchase of the engine was obtained' from him by appellant R. B. George, the general manager of the Twin City Company in Texas, and B. P. Clark, the assistant manager of said company, under the following circumstances:

Defendant went to the office or place - of business of said company in Dallas, Tex., for the purpose of purchasing an extra piece of machinery for a threshing separator owned by him, and while there George and Clark proposed to sell him an oil-burning engine or tractor with which to operate his threshing machine, which he was then operating with a Case engine. <
“That in order to induce the defendant to purchase such tractor George an,d Clark, as agents aforesaid, fraudulently represented to him:
“(1) That the tractor would operate his separator with less expense and trouble than his old engine, and that a boy or inexperienced hand could operate it, and that he would save the expense of an extra team and hand, and that it would not be necessary to have a high-priced or experienced man to attend to it.
“(2) That.it was an oil-burning engine, and would use coal oil and kerosene or distillates or other low grade fuels, and would use any kind of low grade fuel that any other engine could use, and would operate successfully on such fuel.
“(3) That said engine would operate and run on not more than 60 gallons of oil per day of 10 hours steady run, and about 2 gallons of lubricating oil, and would successfully operate his separator fed in the usual and customary manner on said fuel and oil.
“(4) That said engine would successfully pull and operate his separator with all the grain that the. separator would take with a feeder on each side. That George and Clark were acquainted with the character of feeder owned by the defendant at that time and used by him on his thresher, and further knew that it was customary and usual for a man to stand on each side and place grain in the feeder.
“(5) That said engine would successfully operate the separator owned hy the defendant, which was a 32x56 Red River special, in all kinds of grain, and that the said George and Clark were familiar with the Red River special and with the method of operating it, and knew that it was customary for a man to stand on each side of the feeder and place in the feeder all the grain it would contain, and by their representations intended to mean and did mean that said tractor would operate the defendant’s separator while being fed in the usual manner with the customary quantity of grain.
“(6) That the gear in said tractor was steel cut, and that there was no possible chance for it to give trouble.
“(7) That said engine would not get hot enough for the water to boil in the radiator or otherwise to become overheated, and would run properly and successfully.
*633 “(8) That said engine was a successful oil-burning engine in every respect. That the defendant believed said statements and representations, and in reliance thereon on the 26th day of April, 1919. agreed to and did purchase from the Twin City Company through it. B. ^George and S. P. Clark, its agents aforesaid, the Twin City 25 H. P. engine mentioned above and in controversy in this case.”

It is then averred that each of these representations was a material inducement to defendant to execute the contract for the purchase of the engine, and that all of them “were untrue in fact, and were made for the wrongful and fraudulent purpose of inducing, and did induce defendant to execute the contract and the notes sued on.”

The want of knowledge on the part of defendant of the capacity and adaptibility of oil-burning engines for the operation of threshing machines and his reliance upon the representations of plaintiff are fully averred. The answer also makes tender of the engine, which it is averred had theretofore been tendered to plaintiff, and prays that the notes and contract he canceled and that plaintiff take nothing by his suit.

The defendant also pleaded that he would have returned the tractor to plaintiff the first day he operated it but for the representations of the plaintiff, the Twin City Company, and that the said George Clark requested him to operate it, as they could and would fix it, and that he relied upon such representations, which continued up to and including August 10, and that said George and Clark, and each of them, told him that he.did not have to take said tractor until it complied with their representations.

Plaintiff by supplemental petition excepted generally and specially to defendant’s answer, and further pleaded as follows:

“And this plaintiff denies all and singular the allegations in said amended answer contained, and .of this he puts himself upon the country.
“And as to all the allegations in said answer which attempt to recover damages, plaintiff says that, if defendant ever had any cause of action by reason thereof, the same accrued more than two years prior to the filing of said cross-bill, and is therefore barred by the statute of limitations, .which plaintiff specially pleads in bar thereof.
“And, answering the allegations of said answer wherein the defendant pleads that a warranty of said engine was given to him, plaintiff says that a written warranty was given, and that the Twin City Company has in all things complied with the terms of such warranty, and has fully performed its contract with the defendant; that at the time the contract of sale was closed the Twin City Company and defendant entered into a written contract of sale, a copy of which was. duly signed and delivered to the defendant, and which contract contained the following clause, among others:
“ ‘The company warrants the machinery for one year to be well made and of good material and durable, if used with proper care. If within one year from date of shipment of the said machinery any part shall fail by reason of defective material or workmanship, the Twin City Company will furnish a new part free of charge f. o. b. factory, provided the broken part is delivered to the factory of the said company, transportation prepaid, with satisfactory evidence that its failure was due to defective material and workmanship.’

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
264 S.W. 632, 1924 Tex. App. LEXIS 962, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/george-v-birchfield-texapp-1924.