Glenn v. Caire

164 So. 2d 656
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 28, 1964
Docket1165
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 164 So. 2d 656 (Glenn v. Caire) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Glenn v. Caire, 164 So. 2d 656 (La. Ct. App. 1964).

Opinion

164 So.2d 656 (1964)

Jesse B. GLENN, d/b/a Lake Charles Alignment & Brake Service, Plaintiff and Appellee,
v.
Dr. John B. CAIRE, Defendant and Appellant.

No. 1165.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Third Circuit.

May 28, 1964.
Rehearing Denied June 17, 1964.

Patin & Patin, by J. Fred Patin, Lake Charles, for defendant-appellant.

J. Bryan Miller, Lake Charles, for plaintiff-appellee.

Before FRUGE, SAVOY and HOOD, JJ.

HOOD, Judge.

This suit was instituted by Jesse B. Glenn, doing business as Lake Charles Alignment & Brake Service, against Dr. John B. Caire to recover the sum of $337.62, being the amount alleged to be due plaintiff by defendant for an automobile air conditioning *657 unit, and for labor performed in installing that unit in and subsequently removing it from defendant's automobile. As a defense to the suit defendant pleads redhibition, alleging that the thing sold has a vice or defect which renders its use so inconvenient and imperfect that defendant would not have purchased it had he known of the vice. The defendant also filed a reconventional demand against plaintiff for the sum of $95.00, basing that claim on allegations that his car was damaged because of plaintiff's negligence in removing the air conditioner and in placing it on the upholstered rear seat of defendant's automobile. After trial, judgment was rendered in favor of plaintiff awarding him the full amount claimed and rejecting the reconventional demands of defendant. Defendant has appealed.

Plaintiff, as the owner of an automobile brake and wheel alignment service, customarily installs and repairs automobile air conditioners. In May, 1963, Dr. Caire contacted plaintiff and inquired as to whether he could obtain and install in defendant's Volkswagen automobile an air conditioning unit which is designed for that type vehicle and which would function properly. Plaintiff thereupon obtained a "Bock" air conditioning unit from Mr. E. G. McFillen, who handles and sells automobile air conditioners, the latter stating that this type unit was a good one and was made especially for Volkswagen automobiles. Plaintiff then advised Dr. Caire that he had obtained such a unit, and that he would install it for him for a stated amount, the consideration being $245.00 for the unit, $40.00 for installing it, and an undetermined additional amount for such Freon gas as was necessary. Defendant authorized plaintiff to install the unit for that consideration, and plaintiff thereupon installed the Bock unit in defendant's car.

Dr. Caire testified that upon driving his Volkswagen automobile immediately after this unit had been installed, he noticed that the motor was sluggish, the car had no pickup, the engine was strained, and the speed was reduced. His testimony to that effect was supported by that of Mr. Holley Heard, who rode as a passenger with him in the car the day the air conditioner was installed. Both of these witnesses testified that Dr. Caire attempted to use the air conditioner on two separate trips that day, but on each occasion it was necessary for him to turn the unit off in order to permit the car to function properly.

Dr. Caire took his automobile to McGhee Motors, the Volkswagen dealer in Lake Charles, on the following day, and after the car had been examined and tested by mechanics in that establishment, defendant was informed by them that the air conditioner was obstructing air to the engine of the car, and that if he allowed the air conditioning unit to remain in his car he could expect trouble from the engine because it would overheat. He was advised by these mechanics to not drive the car with that particular type of air conditioning unit in it.

Upon receiving this information Dr. Caire returned his car to plaintiff the day after the air conditioning unit had been installed, advising plaintiff of the information which he had received from the mechanics and instructing plaintiff to remove the unit from the automobile. Pursuant to those instructions plaintiff removed the unit, and after doing so, he placed the major part of it in a cardboard box and set the box on the back seat of defendant's car. Shortly after the car was returned to him, defendant went back to plaintiff's place of business and offered to return the unit to plaintiff. Plaintiff refused to accept it, however, informing defendant at that time that he expected him to pay for the unit, for installing it and for removing it. Defendant thereupon took the unit back to his home and since that time it has been stored in defendant's garage. This suit was then instituted.

At the trial of this case the service manager and the assistant service manager of McGhee Motors testified that they examined and test-drove Dr. Caire's car while this unit was in it, and that in their opinion the *658 unit was not performing properly, that it is constructed or was installed in such a manner that it prevented the throttle ring thermostat on the car's motor from operating, causing the engine to overheat, and that in their opinion if defendant had attempted to operate his automobile with that type of air conditioning unit in it the engine would have "burned up," and the car would have been seriously damaged within four to six weeks after the unit had been installed. They further testified that the Volkswagen dealer had warranted the motor of defendant's automobile for a period of 24 months or 24,000 miles, whichever came first, that the warranty was still in effect at the time the air conditioning unit was installed, but that the dealer would not have honored the warranty if the automobile had been operated with this Bock air conditioning unit in it. The service manager stated that he had seen and had serviced other Volkswagen automobiles in which Bock air conditioning units had been installed, and which automobiles had been damaged from overheating, the damage consisting of burnt valves and a piston seizure.

Plaintiff, on the other hand, testified that he and Mr. Robert E. Cook, an expert on Bock air conditioning units, inspected and road tested Dr. Caire's automobile after the latter had complained of the unit. They found that the unit which plaintiff had installed was cooling the car, that it had no effect on the operation of the engine at its top speed, and that it had only a slight effect on the engine when operated at low speed, which was normal for any automobile with an air conditioning unit. These two witnesses, and also plaintiff's mechanic who had actually installed the unit, testified that the unit was installed properly and in exact accordance with the directions which come with the unit, and that there is no other manner in which such a unit can be installed in a Volkswagen.

The service manager and the assistant service manager of the Volkswagen dealer in Lake Charles have had specialized training and a considerable amount of experience in the servicing and repairing of Volkswagen automobiles. Neither of these experts, however, have had any training or experience with Bock air conditioning units, although both have had experience with the installation and operation of other type air conditioners in Volkswagen automobiles.

Plaintiff and his mechanic who installed the unit in defendant's car testified that although they had done general repair work on Volkswagens, they had never installed an air conditioning unit in that type automobile before, and they had never installed a Bock air conditioner in any type automobile before installing one in Dr. Caire's car. Neither of these witnesses had had any special training as to Volkswagens.

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Bluebook (online)
164 So. 2d 656, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/glenn-v-caire-lactapp-1964.