Odinot v. Hoecker

228 S.W.2d 318, 1950 Tex. App. LEXIS 1954
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 2, 1950
DocketNo. 12165
StatusPublished

This text of 228 S.W.2d 318 (Odinot v. Hoecker) 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
Odinot v. Hoecker, 228 S.W.2d 318, 1950 Tex. App. LEXIS 1954 (Tex. Ct. App. 1950).

Opinions

GRAVES, Justice.

This appeal is from a judgment of the 56th District Court of Galveston County, sitting without a jury, dated September 1 of 1949, awarding the appellee a $3,189.69 judgment against the appellant for the breach of the latter’s warranty, covering the sale and installment by him of an air-conditioning unit in the appellee’s store, under a written contract between them, dated February 13, 1947.

An in haec verba copy of such contract is hereto attached as Exhibit A, and made a part hereof.

The decree carried a further provision, giving the appellant the right to remove the air-conditioning unit he had installed upon the appellee’s premises pursuant to such contract, provided he did so not later than November 1 of 1949.

The court filed findings-of-fact and conclusions-of-law in support of its decree, the provisions of which, deemed most material to the controlling questions presented here for decision, being, in substance, these:

“(b) The air-conditioning unit in question was sold by Odinot to Hoeeker and installed in Hoecker’s store about the month of May, 1946, under a verbal agreement as to cost, time of payment, capacity, performance, etc. The verbal agreement was later, on, to-wit, the 13th day of February, 1947, merged into a written agreement, * # *

“(c) The agreed cost of said unit was $2285.10, plus certain installation expenses, [319]*319■which amounted to .$904.59, making a total cost to Hoecker of $3189.69. Hoecker paid Odinot for the unit on April 1, 1947.

II. “(a) I interpret and construe said written agreement as representing and guaranteeing said unit to be of sufficient size and capacity to maintain at all times throughout the store space of the store known as ‘McBride’s Specialty Shop,’ including the office space located above said store, a temperature as low as 76° F.

“(b) * * * as further representing and guaranteeing that said unit would be equipped with an automatic thermostat-control, that could be so set and regulated as to maintain a temperature inside said store of as much as 10° lower than the outside temperature, provided, of, course, that said outside temperature was 86° or higher.

“(c) It is my construction of said agreement that the stipulation with reference to an inside low of 76° and the one with reference to the thermostat control are separate and distinct warranties and should not be construed as conflicting with or destroying one another; in other words, I construe the agreement as warranting that said unit could be regulated so as to maintain a temperature of as low as 76° inside the store regardless of how high the temperature went on the outside and that said unit would be equipped with an automatic thermostat control that could be set so as to maintain an inside temperature of 10° lower than the outside temperature, provided, of course, the outside temperature was 86° or higher.

“(d) I further construe said agreement to bind and obligate Odinot as follows: That in the event said unit be found insufficient in size and capacity to maintain at all times a temperature of as low as 76° inside the store space, including the office, he would remove said unit from the Hoecker store and furnish and install a larger unit (of the kind specified below) of sufficient capacity to produce and maintain at all times a temperature within said store building, including the office, of as low as 76° and that the only charge that would be made to Hoecker for the removal of said unit and the installation of the larger unit would be the difference in the ■ actual cost of the units.

“(e) The unit which was sold to Hoecker and installed in his store in the month of May, 1946, and which was referred to in the written agreement of February 13, 1947, was what is known to the trade as a 3-ton-capacity, air-cooled unit from Odi-not the parties were situated as follows:

“Hoecker, in contemplation of air-conditioning his store, had purchased in Houston an air-conditioning unit or system which required in its installation and operation a water-cooling tower. Hoecker had purchased this unit without first having ascertained whether he could obtain permission from his landlord to erect the water-cooling tower on the roof of the building in which his store was located. After acquiring such unit he found that he could not obtain permission to erect the water-cooling tqwer on the roof of said building. This necessitated Hoecker’s disposing of said unit and determining whether he could obtain an air-cooled system (with capacity sufficient to meet his needs). This situation brought Hoecker into contact with Odinot.

“(b) At this time the defendant Odinot was engaged in the City of Galveston in the business of selling and installing in buildings air-conditioning units and machinery, and held himself out to the public, and particularly to the plaintiff Hoecker, as an expert on air-conditioning.

“(c) In May, 1946, and at the present time, there were and are only two types of air-conditioning units or machines manufactured. One type is known as the ‘water-cooled type,’ which required either a water tower or running water in its operation; the other type is known as ‘air-cooled,’ which type does not require running water in its operation.

“(d) Upon learning that Hoecker desired to air-condition his store, but that he could not obtain permission from his landlord to install a type of machine requiring a water tower or connections for running water, Odinot interested Hoecker in the purchase of the 3-ton-capacity, air-[320]*320cooled unit, the subject of,this suit, which Odinot had in stock at the time, and, as above stated, represented and guaranteed to Hoecker that said unit was of sufficient size and capacity to maintain at all times a temperature inside’ said store space, including the office, as low as 76°, and guaranteed that in the event such unit failed thus to perform and function he would take said unit out and install a larger unit sufficient to maintain such temperature with no cost to Hoecker other than the difference in the cost, of said units.

IV. “(a) In the month of May, 1946, and at the present time, the largest, 'air-cooled' unit or system that is manufactured is a 3-ton-capacity unit such as was sold to Hoecker and installed in his store.

“(h) At the time said unit was purchased by him, Hoecker did not know that a 3-ton-capacity unit was the largest air-cooled unit obtainable and did not know that a 3-ton, air-cooled unit was not large enough to maintain an inside temperature in his store building, including the office above, of as low as 76° at all times. However, I find that at the time said sale was made and said written agreement of February 13, 1947, was entered into, Odinot knew both these facts or that he is charged by law with the knowledge of such facts.

V. “(a) I find that the unit now installed in the Hoecker store is not of sufficient capacity to maintain an inside temperature in the McBride store of 76° during the hot summer weather and that it has no appreciable effect in cooling the office space above.

“(b) I find that the present unit is properly installed and is producing and functioning to its capacity, but that it is too small a unit to maintain the low temperature it was represented and guaranteed it would maintain.

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Bluebook (online)
228 S.W.2d 318, 1950 Tex. App. LEXIS 1954, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/odinot-v-hoecker-texapp-1950.