Harnischfeger Sales Corp. v. Sternberg Dredging Co.

191 So. 94, 189 Miss. 73, 1939 Miss. LEXIS 7
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 11, 1939
DocketNo. 33421.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 191 So. 94 (Harnischfeger Sales Corp. v. Sternberg Dredging Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harnischfeger Sales Corp. v. Sternberg Dredging Co., 191 So. 94, 189 Miss. 73, 1939 Miss. LEXIS 7 (Mich. 1939).

Opinions

Harnischfeger Sales Corporation appeals from an adverse judgment of the chancery court, in which court it initiated proceedings against the appellee, Sternberg Dredging Company, to recover a balance due on a series of notes, the principal of which was in excess of $16,000, and the balance of which alleged to be due after credits allowed thereon was $9,876.07, interest included to December 4, 1934.

The jurisdiction of the chancery court was obtained by means of garnishment proceedings against the defendants, appellees here, who are alleged to be indebted to the appellant.

Both corporations are non-residents of this state.

Sternberg Dredging Company filed its answer to the suit, in which the indebtedness, evidenced by the notes exhibited with the bill, was denied, and a cross-bill was filed against the appellant company in which it was alleged that these notes were executed by the Sternberg Dredging Company as a part of the consummation of the sales contract by which the appellant, Harnischfeger Sales Corporation, sold to the appellee company one Model 775-A Diesel dragline, with standard 50-foot boom and 10-foot extension — and Model E Kohler 1500-Watt Lighting Plant, to be installed in the plant of appellee. The price for the equipment was $26,630 and the terms of payment were $3,000 cash, and the balance in twenty promissory notes, payable monthly, dated August 1, 1930, secured by a chattel mortgage on the machine. The cash payment was made, the notes executed, and several of the notes paid.

Sternberg Dredging Company contended that the machine would not do the work for which it was bought, that of building levees along the Mississippi River in *Page 89 Louisiana and Arkansas. This machine was delivered to the Sternberg Dredging Company by the appellant at Eudora, Arkansas. The complaints against the machine are set out in detail, unnecessary to be recited here.

The real defense to the notes is, in substance, as follows: That before the execution of the sales contract and the notes, the salesmen of the appellant knew the purpose for which the appellee was buying the machine, the president thereof having told them that a machine with a sixty-foot boom, which would operate a two-yard bucket, was wanted, and that before entering the contract, the appellee was assured that the machine described would operate a two-yard bucket, when, in truth and fact, the machine never did operate a bucket of that capacity. The plea, with the answer and cross-bill, in effect, set up that there had been a breach of warranty on the part of the seller making these oral representations and sought to recover damages as against the seller in favor of the buyer in the sum of $22,000.

The appellant filed its answer to the cross-bill denying all the material allegations therein, and further interposed, as part of its answer, a plea of res adjudicata, setting up in detail the litigation had between it and the appellee in the State of Louisiana, and exhibiting and offering in evidence a full and complete record of all the proceedings in the Louisiana case, including the entire record of the cause appealed from the lower court to the Supreme Court, together with the opinion rendered by that court in that case. As briefly as can be stated, the plea of res adjudicata set forth that in the district court of Louisiana, proceedings had been instituted by the Harnischfeger Sales Corporation against the Sternberg Dredging Company to enforce a chattel mortgage as against the machine, and prayed for a personal judgment for the amount of the notes, then alleged to be about $16,000, the chattel mortgage and notes having been executed by the Sternberg Dredging Company at its office and domicile in Missouri, and delivered to Harnischfeger *Page 90 Sales Corporation at its office in Wisconsin. A writ of sequestration was issued by the lower court in Louisiana, and the machine seized.

In the Louisiana proceedings, the Sternberg Dredging Company appeared and entered a motion to dismiss the cause for want of jurisdiction — both parties being non-residents and the contract not having been executed in the State of Louisiana. This plea was overruled by the lower court. Thereupon the Sternberg Dredging Company, as a defense to the proceeding, plead substantially the same facts as are set forth in the Mississippi proceeding, the case here at bar, to-wit, a breach of the oral representation as to the adaptability of the machine to carry a two-yard-bucket load. The lower court there heard the evidence in the entire case and rendered a decree adjudging that the Sternberg Dredging Company was indebted to the appellant for the full amount of the notes then unpaid, directing that the machine involved be sold for the payment of said debt, and also rendered a personal decree for the amount of the notes against the Sternberg Dredging Company.

On its appeal to the Supreme Court, that Court held that the decree of the lower court enforcing the mortgage lien was proper; and it further held that it was proper and necessary for the court to ascertain and decree the amount of the indebtedness against the machine and affirmed that part of the decree. But the Court held further that the lower Court in Louisiana did not have jurisdiction to render a personal decree against the Sternberg Dredging Company for the amount due on the notes — that it was a judgment in rem in that particular. It further held that the lower court had jurisdiction to ascertain whether anything was due on the notes; and in a full and complete discussion of the defense offered on the incapacity of the machine to carry a two-yard bucket, that Court found that the plea was not sustained and approved the action of the lower court in excluding the evidence with reference thereto. See Harnischfeger *Page 91 Sales Corporation v. Sternberg Co., Inc., 179 La. 317,154 So. 10.

Subsequently, according to the Louisiana record, the machine was sold in the manner prescribed by the decree, and at the sale thereof, Sternberg Dredging Company bought the machine for $8,000, the writ of the officer showing the collection of that amount and the application of the balance, after paying costs, to the indebtedness sought thus to be enforced.

About six months after the plea of res adjudicata was interposed by the appellant, the appellee amended its pleadings so as to charge that misrepresentation of facts by the agent as to the sixty-foot boom with a two-yard bucket constituted a fraud and misrepresentation in the following language: "That the said complainant (Harnischfeger Sales Corporation) well knowing that said dragline was not so constructed as to do the work for which it was purchased, and that it could not successfully be operated, still induced defendant Sternberg Dredging Company to purchase the same; that these representations and inducements, with full knowledge of the facts, were a fraud upon your respondents and vitiates the said contract."

On the motion of the appellee, the court struck from the record the plea of res adjudicata, and also excluded the record of the Louisiana proceedings, and the case was then heard on the plea of fraud and deceit, namely, in that oral representation was falsely made which induced the appellee to enter into the contract. The evidence was conflicting on this point.

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191 So. 94, 189 Miss. 73, 1939 Miss. LEXIS 7, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harnischfeger-sales-corp-v-sternberg-dredging-co-miss-1939.