Masterson v. F. W. Heitmann & Co.

87 S.W. 227, 38 Tex. Civ. App. 476, 1905 Tex. App. LEXIS 508
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 15, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 87 S.W. 227 (Masterson v. F. W. Heitmann & Co.) 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
Masterson v. F. W. Heitmann & Co., 87 S.W. 227, 38 Tex. Civ. App. 476, 1905 Tex. App. LEXIS 508 (Tex. Ct. App. 1905).

Opinion

NEILL, Associate Justice.

This is the second appeal in this case from a judgment in favor of appellees. As the opinion on the first appeal, which is reported in 77 S. W. Rep., 983, states the pleadings of the respective parties and the nature of the case, they need not be fully stated here.

It is sufficient to state that appellees sued appellant to recover on three separate demands: (1) For $146, balance claimed to be due under a contract of sale of April 3, 1901, of an irrigating pumping outfit erected on appellant’s plantation in Brazoria County, near Sandy Point. (2) $550, balance of purchase price under contract of sale of April 6, 1901, of an irrigation pumping plant, erected on appellant’s plantation in Bexar County near Lacoste on the Medina River. (3) $1,205.63, claimed to be due on an open account with interest thereon at 6 percent per annum from the 1st of January, 1902.

The defendant answered admitting the contracts between him and appellees upon which the two first demands arose, and that the amounts claimed thereon were due, subject to his counterclaim against appellees *479 for a breach of the contract upon which the second claim is predicated. He also admitted that he owed the amount claimed on the open account, except certain items amounting in the aggregate to $343.76. This admission was also made subject to his counterclaim or plea in reconvention. He plead in reconvention $15,000 damages for loss of crop on'his Medina plantation, alleged to have been proximately caused by plaintiffs’ failure to install the pump as they obligated themselves to do by their contract of April 6, 1901, by reason of which failure the crop growing on the plantation could not be irrigated.

The case was tried before a jury who found a verdict in favor of plaintiffs for the entire amounts of the two demands first stated, with interest, and also in their favor on the third demand for $1,305.63, with interest, with a foreclosure of their lien on the pump on the Medina plantation; and in favor of defendant on his plea of reconvention $800, damage to the crop, and $50 incurred for extra labor in completion of the pump. The total amount, principal and interest, found for plaintiffs being $3.336.03, the entire amount for defendant, $850, which being deducted from the amount found for plaintiffs left $1.376.03 in their favor, for which sum judgment was rendered against the defendant.

Conclusions of Fací.—There seems to be no controversy between the parties in regard to the demand of $146, claimed by plaintiffs as the balance of the purchase money due on the Sandy Point irrigation plant. Therefore the verdict for that amount with interest may be regarded as established by defendant’s admission, as well as by the evidence. The principal controversy between the parties grows out of the contract of April 6, 1901, in regard to the installment of the pump on the Medina plantation; and the amount of damages sustained by defendant by reason of plaintiffs’ failure to comply with their contract. As there is a difference between the parties in regard to the interpretation of this contract and the obligation of the several parties created thereby, it will be necessary to state from the record the facts leading up to its execution, as well as the terms in which the contract was expressed by the parties.

The appellant being the owner of a farm on the Medina near Lacoste in Bexar County, which he desired to prepare for irrigation, procured an engineer to make a topographical survey thereof and prepare plans for an irrigation plant. When the survey was made and plans completed, appellant, with a draft thereof, went to appellees, who were engaged in selling and installing pumps and machinery for irrigation, and requested them to give him an estimate of the cost of installing a pump of sufficient capacity to furnish the water necessary to irrigate the farm in accordance with the plans of the engineer. At the time he explained to appellees that unless the pump could be installed and put in operation by the 1st of May, 1901, he did not desire to purchase the same. Appellees would not enter into a contract to furnish such pump by the 1st of May, until they ascertained from the factory that such a pump could be procured at once. Then they agreed to furnish the same and have it installed and in operation by May 1, 1901. The price agreed upon for the pump and necessary fittings and the cost of installing the same was $1,000. When the agreement was made appellant explained *480 to the agent of appellees with whom the contract was made, that he intended to use the boiler which he had on the farm to supply the power for running the pump, and represented that he had on the farm the necessary pipes to convey the steam from the boiler to the pump and that he would have the hauling done, furnish the unskilled labor necessary for work of installing the pump and furnish the material for the foundation. The things which appellant thus promised to furnish and do were not included in the estimate of the cost of the pumping plant.

Appellant then lived and now lives in the city of Galveston, and appellees’ place of business was and is in the city of Houston, Texas. On the day after the agreement was made, appellees telephoned appellant at Galveston asking permission to substitute for the pump contracted for, one that would cost $100 more. In response to the request, appellant met appellees’ agent in Houston, and after conferring with him about the matter agreed to the substitution. Some days after this, appellees’ agent requested appellant to sign a written order for the machinery. This order, so far as it bears upon the issues in this case, is as follows: “April 6, 1901, F. W. Heitmann & Co., Houston, Texas. You will please order for the undersigned, ship to Lacoste on or about April 10, 1901, one 8 x 12 x 12 x 10 Worthington compound duplex pump, with 60 feet of suction and discharge pipe and the necessary fittings; you to furnish a man to superintend erection and setting of pump, I to furnish all foundations and common labor and necessary pipe to make steam connection which is to be connected by you. Pump guaranteed to have a capacity of 1,200 gallons per minute against a 73-foot head with a 60 H. P. boiler; pump to be erected by May 1,

Cash with order ........................$550.00
Note due Nov. 1, 1901 .................. 550.00
(Signed) Branch T. Masterson.”-

The pump was not put up and started to work until June 30, and it was then incomplete from the lack of sufficient discharge pipe.

Each party lays the blame for delay upon the other. As to who was responsible for it largely depends upon the construction of the contract between them of April 6, 1901. The trial court held, and so instructed the jury, that the “contract is ambiguous or uncertain in the following particulars: (1) As to whether the' anchor bolts were or were not a part of the property designated in the contract to be furnished by plaintiffs. (2) As to whether plaintiffs were or were not, in performing their obligation to make the steam connections, to supply, not only the work, but the materials necessary therefor, such as elbows, valves, etc.

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Bluebook (online)
87 S.W. 227, 38 Tex. Civ. App. 476, 1905 Tex. App. LEXIS 508, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/masterson-v-f-w-heitmann-co-texapp-1905.