J. Kennard & Sons Carpet Co. v. Houston Hotel Ass'n

197 S.W. 1139, 1917 Tex. App. LEXIS 896
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 23, 1917
DocketNo. 237.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 197 S.W. 1139 (J. Kennard & Sons Carpet Co. v. Houston Hotel Ass'n) 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
J. Kennard & Sons Carpet Co. v. Houston Hotel Ass'n, 197 S.W. 1139, 1917 Tex. App. LEXIS 896 (Tex. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

HIGHTOWER, O. X

The statement of this case, as made by appellant in its brief, is found to be correct, and is adopted by this court, and is substantially as follows:

“The appellant, J. Kennard & Sons Carpet Company, sued the appellee, Houston Hotel Association, owner of the Rice Hotel in the city of Houston, to recover' the sum of forty-two hundred and fifty-four ($4,254) dollars, alleged to be due appellant by appellee, for certain electric light fixtures in the way of chandeliers, brackets, etc., and for which the appellee agreed to pay the price set opposite each article, viz.:

6 ceilings. .$ 74 00
6 ceilings.. 215 00
4 ceilings. . 175 00
6 brackets.. 82 00
4 brackets
(ballroom) 82 00 4 crystal ceilings... 250 00
$ 444 00 1,290 00 700 00
492 00 $2,926 00
328 00
1,000 00
$4,254 00
“Appellee answered, claiming that it had never authorized any one to purchase for it the four crystal ceilings, amounting to $1,000, and admitting that it had ordered the other fixtures, amounting to $3,254.00, but that there was a partial failure of consideration, in that the fixtures as actually furnished were not according to the contract between the parties. The. case was tried with a jury, whose verdict consisted of answers to special issues, and judgment was rendered upon this verdict in favor of appellant for the sum of twenty-one hundred and ninety-six ($2,196) dollars, with interest, making a total of twenty-five hundred and eighty ($2,580) dollars, that being the $3,254 less $1,058, the cost of making the fixtures according to the contract.”

The item of the four crystal ceilings mentioned above, and for which appellant claimed appellee owed it $1,000, was not submitted at all for the jury’s consideration; and it might also be here stated that the first item above mentioned, consisting of six ceilings, at an aggregate value claimed to be $444, was determined and found in favor of appellant by the jury, and that item is therefore out of consideration on this appeal.

The first five assignments of error relate to the action of the trial court in refusing to sustain certain special exceptions directed by appellant against that portion of appellee’s answer, which reads as follows:

“(3) Defendant says that at the time the order was given for. the fixtures which defendant did order from plaintiff, plaintiff represented to defendant that the fixtures to be supplied by it would be made and furnished, both in design, workmanship, and material, in accordance with the plans and sketches submitted to defendant at the time the selections were made by Mr. Jones in New York. All of the ceiling fixtures were to be furnished with a series of cut glass prisms in regular order and close together, whereas in each of said fixtures furnished the prisms are scattered, ragged., and irregular, and each fixture is furnished with several hundred prisms less than is stipulated by the contract of purchase. Defendant says likewise that the bands on which the prisms are hung are irregularly placed and improperly placed, and the fixtures throughout present an irregular and improper appearance. Six of the ballroom fixtures plaintiff agreed to furnish with a central *1140 plate from which eight chains radiated to support the fixture. The fixture furnished has a central plate with only four chains radiating therefrom and the fixture has aboye five hundred (500) cut glass prisms less than called for by the contract of purchase. Defendant says that these fixtures have no market value as such, but the reasonable and fair cost in the city of Pious-ton of making alterations in the fixtures so as to make them comply with the contract would be, on the six fixtures referred to, one hundred dollars ($100) each.
“(4) Plaintiff furnished to defendant ten bracket fixtures at eighty-two dollars ($82) each. These were agreed to be furnished with nine lights each and instead they were furnished with one light with a round ball. The fixtures agreed to be furnished were to stand ten inches from the wall, and to be of the workmanship and design shown on the photographs and sketches supplied by plaintiff to defendant, instead of standing ten inches from the wall, as called for by the sketches, so as to present a neat and attractive appearance, the fixture is shorter and rests with the glass ball shoved against the side of the wall and the design of the fixture in the scroll work and supports thereof is not in accordance with the contract between plaintiff and defendant, and defendant says that there is no market value for the fixtures as furnished, but that the reasonable cost of rebuilding each of the fixtures, so as to comply with the contract, would be thirty-five dollars ($35).
“(5) There were supplied four other ceiling fixtures for the ballroom which lacked approximately five hundred cut prisms each of having thereon the number of crystals called for by the contract. There is no market value for the fixtures as furnished, but defendant says that the reasonable cost of taking down the fixtures and supplying the crystals and making it comply with the contract between plaintiff and defendant would be .twenty-seven dollars ($27) for each fixture.
“(6) There are six other ceiling fixtures listed at seventy-four ($74) dollars each in plaintiff’s petition, which lack approximately two hundred and fifty cut prisms each of having the number of prisms called for by the contract. Defendant says that these fixtures have no market value as such, but that the reasonable cost of furnishing the labor and material to make the fixtures comply with the contract of purchase would be eighteen dollars ($18) each.
“(7) Defendant says that if it is mistaken in its allegation that the fixtures supplied have or had no market value at the time they were furnished by plaintiff to defendant, then defendant says that the difference in the market value of the fixtures furnished and those contracted to be furnished is the same for each fixture as the amount alleged as the reasonable cost of labor and material to make the same a compliance with the contract of purchase!
“(8) By reason of the facts hereinabove alleged, the plaintiff has been guilty of a breach of its warranty as to the design, workmanship, and material in the fixtures furnished, by reason of which breach this defendant has been damaged in the sum of eleven hundred and sixty-six dollars ($1,166). Defendant therefore, pleads the amount of its damage herein as an offset against any recovery which plaintiff may make against this defendant herein.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
197 S.W. 1139, 1917 Tex. App. LEXIS 896, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/j-kennard-sons-carpet-co-v-houston-hotel-assn-texapp-1917.