Jesse French Piano & Organ Co. v. Gibbon

180 S.W. 1185, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 1152
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 6, 1915
DocketNo. 8257.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 180 S.W. 1185 (Jesse French Piano & Organ Co. v. Gibbon) 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
Jesse French Piano & Organ Co. v. Gibbon, 180 S.W. 1185, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 1152 (Tex. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinion

BUCK, J.

Suit was filed by appellee as plaintiff, and in bis original petition he alleged that he had purchased from appellant a certain piano for which he had agreed to pay $675 as follows: A secondhand piano valued at $75, $100 in cash, and executed five notes in the sum of $100 each; that all of said agreed price, including the notes, had been fully paid. He further alleged that defendant’s agent, in making the sale and in order to induce plaintiff to purchase the piano, had represented that the instrument “was a perfect, high-grade piano in every respect, including material, workmanship, tone, action, finish and in every respect,” and had warranted and guaranteed it so to' be, and guaranteed said piano against all defects of workmanship or materials for a period of five years; that the agent, who was duly authorized to act for and bind the defendant company in the transaction, agreed with plaintiff that if the latter would pur *1186 chase the piano and it should prove, after it was delivered and installed, not to be perfect in every respect, that the defendant would replace said piano so proven to be defective with a perfect instrument. He alleged further that said piano was not a high-grade or perfect piano in every respect, but that the same was inferior, defective, and practically worthless, by reason of inferior materials and poor workmanship used in its construction; that the fall board, keys, pedals, lyre and other parts of the piano failed and refused to operate in the performance of their functions. He alleged a pretended effort on the part of the defendant company to correct the imperfections in the instrument, but that in attempting to so remedy the defects, it had utterly failed and had supplied parts which were not only misfits and utterly useless for the purposes intended, but were of a different color and finish from the rest of the piano purchased, and that plaintiff had been “swindled and cheated out of $700,” for which he prayed judgment, also for $100 alleged to have been paid in rental for another piano.

Defendant, after general demurrer, answered, admitting the trade, price, and terms as pleaded by plaintiff, but denied that it made, through its agent, any warranties whatever. It further stated that said piano was a high-grade piano in every respect; that it was made of good material and that the tone, workmanship, action, and finish were all excellent, and denied that said piano was inferior or defective in any respect, or that the same was worthless. It further denied that said piano at any time failed to answer the purpose for which it was desired by the plaintiff, and denied that it was necessary for the plaintiff to rent a piano for use on account of any defects contained in that sold by the defendant to plaintiff. Further answering, the defendant pleaded that the contract between the plaintiff and defendant was in writing, and that the only warranty given was one from the manufacturers as per their catalogue. That the plaintiff knew and well understood that the defendant company was not the manufacturer of the piano, but was merely the agency of the manufacturers for the sale of said piano, and that the defendant did not undertake on its own responsibility and in its own behalf to make any warranty whatever. It denied that the defendant, through its said agent, had made any warranty as pleaded by plaintiff, and in its answer defendant set out what purported to be the warranty alleged to have been issued by the manufacturers and included in their catalogue, which warranty, omitting formal parts, is as follows:

“We hereby fully warrant Yose & Sons’ piano No. 68854 for the term of five years from date except against the effects of extreme heat, cold, or dampness. Should the instrument with proper care prove to be defective in material, or workmanship during the time named, we agree to put the same in good repair at our factory or replace it with another of the same value. The presence of rust on the metal parts of this piano is absolute proof that the instrument has been affected by extreme dampness and in such a case we will not be_ responsible for damage to the interior or exterior of the piano resulting therefrom.”

Defendant further attempted to interplead the manufacturers and prayed that in case any judgment should be adjudged against it that it have judgment over against said manufacturers in said amount. But inasmuch as the manufacturers, a foreign corporation, were not made parties to this suit, and no exception was taken to the action of the court with reference thereto, it is not necessary to further notice this part of defendant’s answer.

In his first supplemental petition plaintiff, in reply to that portion of defendant’s answer, alleging a written warranty from the manufacturers, denied that there was any written contract made by and between the plaintiff and the defendant specifying, or undertaking to specify, the terms of the warranty of said piano, but the only warranty made was a verbal one by the agent aforesaid; that said agent promised to send plaintiff a written warranty embodying the terms of the verbal warranty, and stated that the manufacturers warranted all of its pianos to the defendant fully and to the same extent that said agent warranted the instrument in question to the plaintiff; that said plaintiff had never seen the catalogue of the manufacturers and knew nothing of any warranty therein contained, but relied upon the statements, representations, and warranties given by the defendant through its agent, and the promise to send him a written warranty covering the terms verbally agreed upon, but that no such written warranty had ever been delivered to plaintiff.

In its first supplemental answer defendant denied the material allegations contained in plaintiff’s first supplemental petition, and further pleaded that if said agent made any other warranty or representation to plaintiff, except those contained in the warranty of the manufacturers, that in doing so he exceeded his authority, and that it was not thereby bound.

In his second supplemental petition plaintiff pleaded that if it should be determined that in making the representations pleaded by plaintiff in his original petition, said agent of the defendant was acting without any actual or express authority, that in so doing he was acting within the apparent scope of his authority, and that the defendant should be bound.

The cause was tried before the court without the aid of a jury, and judgment was rendered for plaintiff against defendant in the sum of $675, with costs of suit, from which judgment the defendant appeals.

*1187 The court filed his findings of fact as follows:

“ (1) That about August 31, 1913, the plaintiff bought of the defendant a certain Vose & Sons piano, at an agreed price of $675, $75 of which was paid by delivering a secondhand piano to defendant, $100, in cash, and the balance in notes, which were subsequently paid by plaintiff.
“(2) That the defendant acting through its agent and salesman, as an inducement to plaintiff to purchase said piano, represented that same was a high-grade, first-class instrument and perfect in every respect, including material, workmanship, tone, action and finish. That plaintiff believed such representations and, relying on same, bought said piano.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
180 S.W. 1185, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 1152, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jesse-french-piano-organ-co-v-gibbon-texapp-1915.