Hemenway, Inc. v. Williamson

173 So. 781, 1937 La. App. LEXIS 184
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 1, 1937
DocketNo. 5423.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 173 So. 781 (Hemenway, Inc. v. Williamson) 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
Hemenway, Inc. v. Williamson, 173 So. 781, 1937 La. App. LEXIS 184 (La. Ct. App. 1937).

Opinion

DREW, Judge.

Plaintiff instituted this suit for the amount of $785.88, being the alleged balance due on a chattel mortgage note representing the unpaid purchase price of a milk-cooling unit which was sold to defendant on April 10, 1936. The note and chattel mortgage are dated April 29, 1936.

The milk-cooling system is alleged to Rave been installed on May 3, 1936, and the monthly installments, according to the tenor of the note, in the sum of $21.83, became due on the 20th of each month thereafter. At the time this suit was filed, September 9, 1936, the installments due for May, June, July, and August had not been paid. Plaintiff alleged that all installments had become due and payable on account of the accelerating clause in the note and mortgage.

Defendant in answer admitted the execution of the note and chattel tnortgage, but denied owing plaintiff any amount for the alleged reason it had breached its warranty of the thing sold; that the system would not cool the milk as it was guaranteed to do; that the cost of operating it was greatly in excess of the amount warranted by plaintiff; that it was improperly installed and would not and did not run ,as it was represented; and, in general, was unfit for the purpose for which it had been sold.

The defense is set out in the following language:

“3. Further answering, defendant alleges that he is a farmer and dairyman located near Stonewall, DeSoto parish, Louisiana, where he has been, more or less, extensively engaged in the dairy business for the past 20 years or more; that the greater portion of his income during this period has been derived from the sale of milk to the public, and especially, by wholesale, to the Creamery Companies in the city of Shreveport, Caddo parish, Louisiana.

“4. Defendant. further shows that, in order to meet the demands of the public and the sanitary requirements by the purchasers and health authorities of the city of Shreveport, Louisiana, and of the state of Louisiana, he is and has been required to properly cool and preserve his supply of milk so as to deliver the same to the purchasers in the city of Shreveport, Louisiana, and elsewhere, at a temperature of not higher than 50 degrees Fahrenheit, and that this cooling process has been accomplished for the past 20 years or more'by the use of ice twice daily immediately after his dairy herd has been milked in the morning and in the afternoon.

“5. Defendant further shows that- by the use of ice, as aforesaid, he has been able to properly cool and preserve his supply of milk to the right temperature and meet all sanitary regulations and made said milk more wholesome for public consumption, but at considerable expense to your defendant.

*782 “6. Defendant further shows that a short time prior to April 29, 1936, a representative of the plaintiff company called on the defendant at his home at Stonewall, Louisiana, inspected defendant’s dairy and his method of cooling his supply of milk and thereon agreed to sell and install certain cooling equipment for defendant in his dairy,'which equipment the said representative guaranteed would reduce by one-half defendant’s expense in properly cooling and preserving said milk and that said equipment, when installed, would also amply cool and preserve all of defendant’s supply of milk to meet all sanitary conditions and requirements and at less expense, as aforesaid, and with considerable less time and trouble to defendant.

“7. Defendant further shows and alleges that he is and was ignorant of the mechanics of the cooling system which plaintiff’s representative proposed to sell and install for said defendant, and your defendant accepted as true the statements and warranties made and agreed upon by plaintiff’s representative; that after plaintiff’s representative personally inspected, as aforesaid, defendant’s dairy and all his equipment, defendant agreed to purchase the articles properly installed, described in paragraph 2 of plaintiff’s petition, which equipment said representative guaranteed would give perfect satisfaction, properly cool and preserve defendant’s supply of milk, reduce defendant’s expense by one-half and, in substance, that said equipment would serve defendant’s purpose for which he had purchased same.

“8. Your defendant further shows and alleges that he executed said note and chattel mortgage, which are dated April 29, 1936, and at the time said chattel mortgage and note were executed by defendant, the representative of plaintiff company agreed that said cooling equipment would be installed immediately, and, as a matter of fact, said equipment was not installed for a period of approximately four weeks; that said delay. was inexcusable and unreasonable, and that during said period several persons or mechanics of the plaintiff company visited defendant’s dairy appearing to do some small job in connection with the installation, but none of them seemed to know just what they were to do.

“9. Your defendant now alleges that said equipment is inadequate, defective and was not properly installed to serve the purpose for which it was sold to defendant; that the defectiveness and inadequacy of said equipment is more peculiarly within the knowledge of plaintiff company.

“10. Your defendant further shows that immediately after said equipment was finally installed (so-called), defendant began to have trouble with said equipment in that it would not continuously run and that when it did run, said equipment would not properly cool and preserve his supply of milk, as aforesaid; that defendant immediately notified plaintiff company to rectify the trouble, but that defendant continuously from the time said equipment was installed up to and around July 20, 1936, was making demands on the plaintiff company to adjust the defects in said equipment, but that plaintiff company made no effort to, refused and failed to adjust said equipment so as to properly and efficiently cool and preserve defendant’s supply of milk for which said equipment was sold.

“11. Your defendant further shows that he gave plaintiff’s equipment, as aforesaid, approximately three months’ trial and all during this time he was continuously having to buy ice and having trouble with the equipment which plaintiff installed.

“12. Your defendant, therefore, for the reasons set out above, shows and alleges that the consideration for said note and chattel mortgage has failed and, for the reasons hereinabove set out, the warranties made out by plaintiff, express and implied, as aforesaid, have been breached and that, for said reasons, defendant owes plaintiff nothing, and which defenses are hereby specially pleaded against plaintiff’s claim in this suit.

“And, now, assuming the position of plaintiff in reconvention, defendant avers:

“13. Defendant reaffirms all the allegations in the above and foregoing answer, and further alleges that defendant at the time the said note and chattel mortgage were signed, he paid the plaintiff company the sum of $74.00 as part of the purchase price of said equipment and for which said amount defendant alleges that plaintiff is indebted unto him, with interest at the rate of 5% per annum from judicial demand until paid.

"14. Your defendant further shows that, for the reason alleged in the above *783

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Related

United Furniture Stores, Inc. v. Dees
193 So. 490 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1940)
Hemenway, Inc. v. Roach
175 So. 892 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1937)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
173 So. 781, 1937 La. App. LEXIS 184, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hemenway-inc-v-williamson-lactapp-1937.