La Villa Fair v. Lewis Carpet Mills, Inc.

548 P.2d 825, 219 Kan. 395, 19 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 120, 1976 Kan. LEXIS 377
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedApril 10, 1976
Docket47,899
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 548 P.2d 825 (La Villa Fair v. Lewis Carpet Mills, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
La Villa Fair v. Lewis Carpet Mills, Inc., 548 P.2d 825, 219 Kan. 395, 19 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 120, 1976 Kan. LEXIS 377 (kan 1976).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Miller, J.:

This is an action for rescission of a portion of a contract for the purchase of carpet and for the recovery of the purchase price, interest thereon, incidental damages and loss of profit. Plaintiff (the purchaser) is a wholesaler and retailer of carpet and other furnishings specializing in apartment projects and commercial buildings. It is a Kansas corporation and its principal place of business is Lawrence, Kansas. Defendant is a carpet manufacturer, incorporated in Georgia with its principal place of business- in Carters-ville, Georgia.

*396 The genesis of the business dealings of these parties was the solicitation of the plaintiff by the defendant’s agent and representative in Kansas, Cla-Mar, Inc. during the winter months of 1966, 1967. These solicitations took place at the plaintiff’s office in Lawrence, Kansas, and through telephone conversations between Cla-Mar in Topeka, Kansas and the plaintiff in Lawrence. As a result of these dealings plaintiff placed an order for the purchase of approximately 12,000 square yards of carpet, which order was accepted by the defendant by letter dated May 29, 1967. The oarpet ordered, described as $2.80 per yard F. O. B. mill, 25 oz. face weight — 100% acrylic cut pile of first quality (no seconds) was to be delivered on defendant’s truck to either Kansas City, Missouri, or Lawrence, Kansas, at six cents per square yard. Prior to the shipment in question eleven smaller deliveries were made from defendant’s mill to plaintiff between July 24, 1967 and August 24, 1967. All conformed to the specifications and were accepted and paid for without incident.

The oarpet which gave rise to this action is twenty-one of the forty-five rolls shipped by the defendant to the plaintiff on April 26, 1968. These rolls averaged about 180 square yards each. Due to a construction strike in Kansas City in the spring of 1968, the plaintiff’s purchaser, Stanley Christopher Investment Company of Lawrence, an apartment builder, was not ready to receive the carpet. Plaintiff 'therefore arranged with the defendant to have the defendant transport and deliver the carpet to Wagner Cartage Company, Kansas City, Missouri, for storage in their bonded warehouse until Christopher was in a position to make use of it. Apparently other carpet was also transported to Wagner Cartage for the plaintiff diming April, 1968. There was some confusion at trial whether the carpet ultimately inspected by the plaintiff was the same carpet that was delivered to Wagner Cartage by the defendant but the parties’ Stipulated Summary of Trial Proceedings apparently resolves that issue on appeal. The stipulation shows that the parties agreed for purposes of this appeal that the portion of plaintiff’s order that was delivered by the defendant to the warehouse designated by the plaintiff in Kansas City was carpet manufactured by the defendant and that the carpet ultimately delivered to the company designated by plaintiff’s purchaser to do the installation and that was rejected was also carpet manufactured by the defendant.

By January 2, 1969, Christopher Investment Company, plaintiff’s *397 purchaser, had collapsed financially and had been taken over by its financier, James B. Nutter Company. Nutter was aware of Christopher’s intention to purchase oarpet from the plaintiff. It was ‘also aware that the carpet was stored in the bonded warehouse. Both Christopher and Nutter paid part of the storage charges. Nutter gave the plaintiff assurances that it would honor the Christopher contract, and would pay for the oarpet as soon as it was cut and laid at the apartment project site. On or about January 2, 1969, Nutter indicated to the plaintiff that it was ready to receive the oarpet. Plaintiff 'therefore arranged for the carpet to be moved from Wagner Cartage to Lay-Rite Carpet Company, which company was employed by Nutter to cut the oarpet and to install it in the apartment complex. Employees of Lay-Rite inspected several rolls of the carpet, but were unable to find 23 feet of carpet that matched so as to lay carpet in one display apartment. Lay-Rite informed Nutter, who also inspected the carpet. Nutter rejected the carpet and refused to pay to the plaintiff the purchase price of $10,791.10. Plaintiff then informed the defendant that it, too, rejeoted the carpet. After the exchange of some correspondence, this action was filed August 1, 1969. In its supplemental memorandum opinion filed September 10, 1973, the trial court found in favor of the plaintiff in the amount of $11,805,44 plus the costs of the action, less a $202 judgment in favor of the defendant against the plaintiff. The court directed that judgment be entered against the defendant after applying funds on hand from the court-ordered sale of the carpet on November 17, 1971 ( amounting to $2,944) and the $202 judgment in favor of the defendant. It is from that judgment of $8,659.44 plus costs that the defendant appeals.

The district court made numerous findings of fact and conclusions of law upon which it based its ruling. It found that the oarpet in question was part of a 12,000 yard. order by plaintiff accepted by the defendant’s letter of May 29, 1967. That letter fixed the price of the carpet at “$2.80 yard F. O. B. Mill”, “25 oz. face weight — 100% acrylic cut pile”, “Carpet will be 1st quality (no seconds).” The court further found that delivery was to be made on defendant’s truck in 9,000 yard lots at six cents per square yard at either Kansas City, Missouri or Lawrence, Kansas. The court found that the shipment in question was made on defendant’s truck to Wagner Cartage Service, a bonded warehouse, as prearranged. The shipment, tire court found, included 45 rolls of oarpet, 9 of which were reshipped to a Lawrence warehouse. The *398 court found .that the 21 rolls complained of in this action were moved from Wagner to Lay-Rite Carpet for cutting for plaintiff’s purchaser. The court determined that Lay-Rite examined three or four 100-foot rolls in an attempt to get a piece 23 feet long that would match in order to lay carpet in a “show” apartment. Lay-Rite, the .trial court found, considered the carpet defective in that it was extensively patched, delaminated in places, and was not 25 oz. face weight. Lay-Rite’s owner, the court stated, opined that some damage had resulted from storage, but that this was limited to only the outer four or five feet of some of the rolls. The court found that an independent oompany inspected the carpet on February 11, 1969 for the defendant and made substantially similar findings to those of Lay-Rite.

The court concluded that the plaintiff showed that 21 rolls shipped by the defendant was the same carpet handled and inspected as set forth above. The court also concluded that the defendant had been advised that the carpet would be stored in a bonded warehouse due to a building trades strike to await plaintiff’s purchaser’s requirements and that therefore plaintiff’s inspection at the time of cutting for installation was not unreasonable. The court ruled that the carpet was not in conformity with the specifications of plaintiff’s order, of which the defendant was seasonably notified by the plaintiff as provided by K. S. A, 84-2-602.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
548 P.2d 825, 219 Kan. 395, 19 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 120, 1976 Kan. LEXIS 377, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/la-villa-fair-v-lewis-carpet-mills-inc-kan-1976.