Nichlos v. Hanbury-Russell Supply Co.

1934 OK 295, 33 P.2d 198, 168 Okla. 371, 1934 Okla. LEXIS 181
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMay 15, 1934
Docket22272
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 1934 OK 295 (Nichlos v. Hanbury-Russell Supply Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nichlos v. Hanbury-Russell Supply Co., 1934 OK 295, 33 P.2d 198, 168 Okla. 371, 1934 Okla. LEXIS 181 (Okla. 1934).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

The plaintiff’s petition in substance alleges that in 1925 it sold and delivered to the defendant, under an oral contract, gas and oil well pipe and supplies in the total value of $1,481.75, for which defendant agreed to pay, and did thereafter pay thereon the sum of $500 in cash, leaving a balance of $981.75 due the plaintiff, no part of which has been paid, and prays for judgment against the defendant for said amount, and the foreclosure of a material-man’s lien upon a certain gas well and real estate described in the petition.

The defendant in his answer and cross-petition admits the purchase of the pipe as alleged, and that there is a balance of $852.15 thereof that has never been paid, and as a defense contends that in March of said year he was planning the drilling of five gas wells, and entered into an oral contract with the plaintiff by which it was to furnish him second-hand or used casing, as good as new, such as he might need for said wells; and deliver the same to him a sufficient time before it was to be used, for him to inspect the same and cull out such thereof as he could not use, and thereafter deliver to him a sufficient amount of Sc-inch second-hand easing • for two wells known as wells Nos. 5 and 6, Harwell lease; that he inspected the same and found it in good condition and accepted it. That after-wards and before he was ready to use it, the plaintiff borrowed a portion thereof and agreed to return to him before he would need it a like quantity of good second-hand 8í4-inch casing or new pipe in place thereof. That upon said promise and guarantee of the plaintiff, he permitted the plaintiff to borrow the same, and it thereafter failed to deliver or return other pipe in its place until after the defendant had started placing the pipe still on hand in the well, and delivered it at night so defendant could not inspect the same, but was compelled to run it in the well without inspecting it, and that it was defective and not as good casing as the plaintiff borrowed and not as good as new, but was so defective that after being placed in the well a joint or joints of said casing split or cracked, and by reason thereof the well blew out. That when drilled the well produced an open flow of about 62,750,000 cubic feet of gas each 24 hours, of the reasonable market value of 10c per thousand cubic feet, and defendant was unable to control same or stop the flow of gas therefrom for 18 days, to his damage in the sum of $25,000, and in order to control said well he was compelled to expend $8,427.72, and prays judgment against plaintiff for the difference between (he amount due the plaintiff and $88,427.72.

In its reply, the plaintiff denies all the allegations of this answer and cross-petition, and these allegations and denials constitute the issues in the case.

During the trial, the plaintiff conceded a credit to the defendant of $129.60 for 108 feet of pipe at $1.20 per foot, and the jury returned its verdict for the plaintiff and against the defendant for $852.15, upon which judgment was rendered by the court, together with a foreclosure of plaintiff’s lien, $125 attorney’s fees, and costs. In dun time the defendant filed his motion for a new trial upon the grounds and for the reasons therein set forth, which motion was denied, defendant excepted, appealed by case-made, and the appeal is now before this court for review.

The record in the case is voluminous, comprising more than 600 pages of testimony and exhibits. As will be inferred from the pleadings, the chief controversies were as to the quality of certain oil well casings which the plaintiff delivered to the defendant in return for what it had borrowed from him temporarily until he should need the same, and the promises, representations, and warranties as to the quality thereof, as *373 well as tlie cause of the blowing out of the well and some differences as to just what well had been cased with the pipe so returned in place of what had been borrowed.

The defendant based his cross-petition upon the alleged breach of an express warranty on the part of the defendant. As testified to by the defendant, that warranty was made by Mr. Hanbury, of the plaintiff company, and, as he states it, was:

“And he told me then, T will guarantee it, I will sell you pipe as good as new and I will send it to you in plenty of time so you and your men can clean it or inspect it and any of it you don’t like or don’t think safe to run, just throw it out and we will take it back; and we will guarantee everything we sell you regardless of whether new or second-hand,’ so then I made the deal with him to purchase enough pipe for five wells.”

Mrs. Lorena McCalister, then secretary for the defendant, testified to some matters tending to corroborate the defendant’s testimony. As to the borrowed pipe, she further testified that Mr. Hanbury told her at the time he borrowed it, that “he wanted to borrow it, and that he would furnish as good pipe when we were ready to use it,” and “said he -would have just as good pipe for Mr. Nichlos- when he was ready for it.” As to this borrowed pipe the defendant testified that Mr. Hanbury called up, “he wanted to borrow that pipe. He guaranteed he would return it in plenty of time. * * * That he would bring it back in plenty of time and guarantee it would be just as good pipe, but if he didn’t get as good pipe he would furnish us new pipe in place of it.”

As to whether any guarantee was made as to the original purchase, Mr. Hanbury, who sold the pipe to defendant, in his testimony on this point, said:

“Mr. Nichlos * *'* told me that he would like to have good second-hand pipe. I told him ‘That is the only kind I handle’; I managed to give him the right kind of second-hand pipe that ho could use. I don’t think I made any guarantee like that (to be as good as new) because we can’t guarantee second-hand pipe. It was not as good as new. I don’t really remember the exact terms we used; we agreed to furnish him the proper pipe he could use out there, but we didn’t denominate any kind, or all that stuff. Did you guarantee any part of the second-hand pipe to be ns good as new? I did not. Was it as good as new? It was not.”
“Q. Now, this pipe that you borrowed from Mr. Nichlos, of course you had tested it? A. Yes. Q. And then the pipe that you returned, of course, you tested that? A. Yes, sir. Q. And you had agreed to give Mr. Nichlos good second-hand standard pipe? A. We were very careful in testing that pipe we sent to Mr. Nichlos. Yes, sir.”

We have examined the record. The examination and cross-examination of the witnesses by counsel were lengthy, searching, and exhaustive. Upon almost every material point the evidence was in hopeless conflict. The foregoing will show how conflicting was that which came from the only witnesses testifying to one of the most important matters involved in the issues.

Similar conflicts appear throughout the evidence. There was a disagreement as to the very number of the well in which the casing which had been borrowed and after-wards returned was used. If it was well No. 5 that blew up, then the casing used in that was good easing of which the defendant had no complaint. There was conflict as to when the borrowed casing was returned, whether in daylight, in the early part of the night, or after midnight. There was conflict as to the reasonable possibility of inspecting the returned casing for defects as it was being run in the well.

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Bluebook (online)
1934 OK 295, 33 P.2d 198, 168 Okla. 371, 1934 Okla. LEXIS 181, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nichlos-v-hanbury-russell-supply-co-okla-1934.