Miller-Stone MacHinery Co. v. Balfour

61 S.W. 972, 25 Tex. Civ. App. 413, 1901 Tex. App. LEXIS 457
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 15, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 61 S.W. 972 (Miller-Stone MacHinery Co. v. Balfour) 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
Miller-Stone MacHinery Co. v. Balfour, 61 S.W. 972, 25 Tex. Civ. App. 413, 1901 Tex. App. LEXIS 457 (Tex. Ct. App. 1901).

Opinion

BOOKHOUT, Associate Justice.

This suit was instituted by Thos. Balfour against the Miller-Stone Machinery Company, William Capps, and G. E. White for the rescission of a contract and for damages sustained by a breach thereof.

Plaintiff alleges that on the 16th day of July, 1897, plaintiff and defendant Miller-Stone Machinery Company, entered into a contract whereby plaintiff purchased and defendant agreed to deliver to him in Sherman, Texas, certain machinery (a gin outfit) by August 20, 1897, and represented and warranted that the same would, with proper management, perform well, and that said machinery was of superior quality and manufacture, and would gin from forty to fifty bales of cotton per day, and further represented that said machinery, except the engine and boiler, were manufactured in Birmingham, Ala., and would be shipped from said point, and would be of the Smith manufacture. The consideration was the payment of freight, not over 70 cents per hundred, and $2875, for which he executed and delivered to said defendant his promissory notes set out in defendant’s answer. And at the time of the execution and deliery of the notes plaintiff executed a chattel mortgage on said machinery to secure the payment thereof. Plaintiff alleges that *414 with proper management said machinery failed to perform well and to do the work as warranted. The plaintiff properly notified defendant of the defects, stating as far as he was able the particular defects, and wherein it failed to conform with the warranty, and furnished all the aid and .assistance in his power to remedy the defects, and defendant sent its practical engineer to Sherman several times, and made certain changes in the arrangement of said machinery, but failed to make it conform to its warranty, and wholly failed to take said property back and substitute other machinery, and alleged specifically certain defects in the machinery, and on or about October 9, 1897, he declined to pay his firs! note due, and tendered back the machinery and filed suit. That the machinery contracted to be delivered was worth $4000, and that delivered not more than $1000.

As special damages the following items are alleged: Drayage, $45; cost of placing machinery in the building, arranging and fitting same up .according to instructions of defendant, $250.

Plaintiff, as cause of action against Smith Sons Gin and Machinery Co., William Capps, and G. E. White, alleges that as soon as this suit was filed, defendant, Miller-Stone Machinery Company, transferred the note first due to said Smith Sons Gin and Machinery Company, fraudulently and for the purpose of defeating the jurisdiction of this court; that G. E. White is'trustee under said deeds of trust, and William Capps substitute trustee and attorney for defendahts, Miller-Stone Machinery Company, and Smith Sons Gin and Machinery Company, instituted suit in the County Court of Tarrant County on said note for. said Smith Sons Gin and Machinery Company, and at same time advertised the machinery for sale by substitute trustee to pay all notes, and prayed for writ of injunction.

Defendants answered by demurrer, exceptions and general denial, special answer setting up the notes and chattel mortgage .and praying for foreclosure and judgment on the notes, also facts for writ of sequestration, and on 2d day of September, 1898, sequestered the machinery and took it into possession of Miller-Stone Machinery Company. The notes, eight in number from date August 4, 1897, aggregated $2875, bearing 10 per cent interest from August 15, 1897, and 10 per cent attorney’s fees if placed in the hands of an attorney for collection or sued upon, and stipulated that failure' to pay any one matured all.

Defendants also allege that the machinery was in all particulars what it was represented to be, and defendant complied with its contract. And then, under the warranty, written notice must be given, wherein it fails to comply with the warranty and a reasonable time given to remedy the defect; then the purchaser is to render all necessary aid, and if it can not be made to work, and the fault is in the machinery (which fact is to be determined by the practical engineer of defendant), in such case it is to be taken back and new machinery substituted. Defendant denied that there was any defect in the machinery, and charged that if the ma *415 ehinery did not perform well, it was the result of bad management on the part of plaintiff and his employes.

There was judgment for plaintiff for $949.13 and costs, and the injunction against the collection of the notes was perpetuated.

Conclusions of Law.—Appellants complain of the action of the court in overruling their special exception to that part of the petition claiming ■damages for freight and for drayage and damages for putting the machinery in place in the building. 'The objection made to these items of damage is that they are remote and speculative. There was no error in overruling this exception. The petition sought a rescission of the contract, and there might have been shown a state of facts that would, have authorized a recovery for these items.

The court did not err in overruling the exception to the allegations in the petition in reference to the notice given by plaintiff to the machinery company. The petition alleged that the machinery company acted upon the notice as given, and sent a practical engineer to Sherman to make "the necessary changes in the machinery. The ease was tried upon special issues. The jury found, among other things, that the plaintiff was unable to make the machinery perform well,’upon starting it; whereupon lie notified defendant machinery company of this fact; that defendant ■sent his engineer, who examined it and determined that there were defects in the fan and seed flue. .These defects could be repaired at a cost of $50 for the seed flue and $80 for the fan. That the defects could have been remedied in three days, at a loss to plaintiff of $30. That •entire pneumatic suction and elevator system, including the fan, could have been put in in about two weeks, at a cost $375.

It was shown in evidence that about the latter part of September there were changes made in the fan and other parts of the elevator system. ‘The jury found that on October 1, 1897, up to the time the machinery was shut down, it performed tolerably well. The jury further found "that the machinery had it come up to the terms of the contract, would have been worth $3257. That the machinery delivered was worth $2000. That the drayage amounted to $45, and that the cost of placing the machinery was $250.

The court found that the value of the machinery on September 2, 1898, when sequestrated by the company, was $2500. The court declined to rescind the contract, but gave judgment for plaintiff for the difference between the value of the machinery, had it complied with the contract,, and the value of the machinery delivered, to wit, $1257, and to this added the cost of putting it in place and of drayage, making $1552, and deducted this sum from the contract price, $2875, and on this difference, $1323, allowed interest at 10 per cent per annum up to September 2, 189$, and added 10 per cent as attorney’s fees, making $1612.96, and deducted this amount from the value of the machinery at the time it was sequestered and converted by the company, as found by the court, to wit, *416

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

J. I. Case Co. v. Fry
125 S.W.2d 395 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1939)
Liquid Carbonic Co. of Texas v. Migurski
229 S.W. 661 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1921)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
61 S.W. 972, 25 Tex. Civ. App. 413, 1901 Tex. App. LEXIS 457, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-stone-machinery-co-v-balfour-texapp-1901.