Healy Ice Machine Co. v. James B. Clow & Sons

148 Ill. App. 421, 1909 Ill. App. LEXIS 293
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMay 20, 1909
DocketGen. No. 14,498
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 148 Ill. App. 421 (Healy Ice Machine Co. v. James B. Clow & Sons) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Healy Ice Machine Co. v. James B. Clow & Sons, 148 Ill. App. 421, 1909 Ill. App. LEXIS 293 (Ill. Ct. App. 1909).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Adams

delivered the opinion of the court.

The following letters and acceptance passed between the parties:

“Chicago, Apr. 16th, 1904.
Messrs. James B. Clow & Sons,
City.
Gents : We hereby accept your offer to deliver twenty thousand feet of full weight wrought iron pipe in lengths of 20 ft. each, standard thread each end, F. O. B. cars Central Stock Yards, Louisville, Ky., within 15 days, for the sum of ten and one-half cents per foot, less 2%, 10 days.
The Healy Ice Machine Co.,
By F. McArdle, Sect’y.”
“Chicago, 4/18/04.
Healy Ice Machine Company,
30th &. Wallace Sts., Chicago;
Gentlemen: As advised over ’phone today, we can ship you the 20,000 ft. of 2" full-weight wrought iron pipe in lengths of 20 ft. each, standard thread, each end, some time during the coming week. We cannot guarantee its date of arrival at Louisville, but it wifi be shipped from a mill the nearest possible to destination. Please accept this by return mail.
As stated, the time of payment is very important, as we have been able to obtain the promise of shipment only on account of offer of cash discount within ten days.
Thanking you for the order, and trusting that the material will reach you in good time, we remain, Tours truly,
James B. Clow & Sons,
J. C. Clow, Asst. Treas.”
“Accepted:
The Healy Ice Machine Co.,
By F. McArdle, Sect ’y.”

The letter of April 16th, in purporting to be an acceptance, is explained by the evidence that prior to that date, the price per foot of the pipe, the place of delivery and the discount had been communicated to the plaintiff by the defendant. The letters, however, and plaintiff’s acceptance, constitute a complete executory contract between the parties.

The defendant is a dealer in pipe, but not a manufacturer. It purchased the pipe from the Youngstown Sheet & Tube Co., a manufacturer, at Youngstown, Ohio. That company, at the instance of defendant, shipped the pipe, freight paid, to Louisville, Kentucky, April 27 and 28, 1904. After the pipe arrived at Louisville, George Campbell, plaintiff’s erecting engineer, about July 5, 1904, proceeded to use it in the construction of a refrigerating plant for the Kentucky Packing & Provision Co., and completed the construction about August 1, 1904. He testified that he then applied an air test, but could not get over 100 pounds pressure, the refrigerating fluid, liquid ammonia, being inside the pipe and water on the outside, and that, when the pressure was applied the pipes leaked; that there were blow holes all over the pipe, like pin holes, and the pipe leaked, and that, as he figured, about 25 per cent of the entire pipe contained blow holes, and that, in his experience, only about 2 per cent, on the average, of blow holes is found in that kind of pipe furnished for the construction of refrigerating plants. Campbell further testified that the blow holes in the pipe could not be discovered by the eye, but only by an air test. In September or October, 1904, he complained to James C. Clow, plaintiff’s secretary, that the pipe was full of blow holes, and left samples of the defective pipe with him. The evidence that the pipe was defective is not contradicted by the defendant; but it is claimed that the plaintiff should have tested it before using it in the construction of the plant. This, of course, only goes to the question of damages, the plaintiff having been at the expense of taking the defective pipe from the plant and replacing, in its stead, sound pipe, etc. There is no certain evidence that the pipe was tested at the mills before shipment. Mr. W. C. Reilly, superintendent of the Youngstown Sheet & Tube Co., testified that pipe of the kind described is tested by the manfacturer, by subjecting it to a hydrostatic pressure of at least 800 pounds to the square inch; that he had knowledge of the manufacture and test of pipe from day to day, and from such knowledge and observation it was his best knowledge and belief that the pipe in question was, before shipment, tested by hydrostatic pressure of at least 800 pounds to the square inch. It is evident from this testimony, that the “knowledge and belief” of the witness is a mere deduction or conclusion from his knowledge of the custom of his company, in respect to testing. He does not state that he knew of the pipe having been tested. Both this witness and Day, secretary of the Youngstown Co., testified that air pressure is necessary to discover pinholes in the pipe. But William E. Clow testified that the hydrostatic test would show blow holes and sand holes, and is supposed to show pin holes.

William Clow testified that it is the custom of manufacturers to apply the hydrostatic test only. Campbell and McArdle both testified that it is the custom to test the pipes to be used in refrigerating after the plants are constructed and the pipes in them.

Campbell testified that the pipe was in twenty feet lengths, and that, to test the lengths separately it would be necessary to submerge each length of pipe in a water tank, clamp the ends so that they would not leak air, and then apply pressure from an air compressor, and this would be very expensive and would cost as much as testing after the pipe was in place in the plant.

Evidence was offered by the defendant tending to prove that there was a well-known custom of manufacturers and dealers, that, if pipe should prove defective, it should be returned to the seller and made good by him by credit or replacement. The court excluded the evidence, and it is objected by defendant’s counsel that this was error. We cannot sustain the objection. The plaintiff had the right to retain the pipe, and in an action to recover the price to set off the damages resulting from its defective condition, or to institute an independent action for damages. Doane v. Dunham, 65 Ill. 512; Owens v. Sturges, 67 ib. 366; Prairie Parmer Co. v. Taylor, 69 ib. 440; Benjamin on Sales, 6 Am. ed., Secs. 894, 897.

Plaintiff’s counsel contend, and argue at considerable length, that the defendant impliedly agreed that the pipe would be fit and suitable for use in a refrigerating plant, citing this language from the opinion in Telluride Power Co. v. Crane Co., 208 Ill. 218: “The rule is that if an article is to be made or supplied to the order of a purchaser there is an implied warranty of the fitness of the article for the special purpose designed by the buyer.” We are of opinion that this doctrine has no application to the facts of this case.

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Bluebook (online)
148 Ill. App. 421, 1909 Ill. App. LEXIS 293, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/healy-ice-machine-co-v-james-b-clow-sons-illappct-1909.