Palestine Ice, Fuel & Gin Co. v. Walter Connally & Co.

148 S.W. 1109, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 1141
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 23, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 148 S.W. 1109 (Palestine Ice, Fuel & Gin Co. v. Walter Connally & 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
Palestine Ice, Fuel & Gin Co. v. Walter Connally & Co., 148 S.W. 1109, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 1141 (Tex. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

WILLSON, C. J.

The appeal is from a judgment in favor of appellees against appellant for the sum of $1,102 as the damages suffered by the former because of a breach by the latter of its undertaking to receive and pay for certain machinery it had agreed to buy of appellees.

The contract breached by appellant was in writing, and in the form of an order for the machinery. So far as material to questions made, the order was as follows:

“Name of purchaser, Palestine Ice, Fuel & Gin Company. Factory order No. -. Entered Order Book, page-. Acknowledged to salesman,-. Acknowledged to purchaser 2/4/. Entd. 197. Salesman, F. James. Date, 2/1/1911. Order for machinery.
“The undersigned hereby purchase from Walter Connally & Co., Inc., Tyler, Texas:
“4 70-saw Pratt huller gin with Brown drive;
“4 70-saw Class O feeders with tilting board;
“1 280-saw battery condenser;
“2 Iron dust flues;
“1 280-saw steel lint flue;
“1 double box hydraulic (belt driven pump) press with friction tramper, with all fittings (750 pound bale);
“1 12" Class D galvanized steel elevator complete (8");
“1 13" seed-blowing elevator complete (S");
“4 34x8 pulleys for gins;
“1 38x10 pulleys fan C shaft;
“1 8x4 pulleys seed conveyor;
“1 8x4 pulleys seed feeder;
“1 6x3 pulleys condenser;
“1 5x2 pulleys A. C. O. valve;
“1 5x2 pulleys feed conveyor;
“With all leather belting according to plan of Continental Gin Company, to be shipped to Palestine on or before the 1st day of June, or as soon thereafter as practicable, which we agree to receive on arrival and pay freight charges on same and in addition thereto, to pay to Walter Con-nally & Co., Inc., at Tyler, Texas, $2,400.00 cash on delivery. $2,400.00 Total. F. o. b. Palestine.
“In case we fail or refuse to receive said machinery, or any part thereof, before or after shipment, or on arrival, we agree to pay Walter Connally & Co., at Tyler, Texas, twenty-five per cent, of the amount of this contract, and ten per cent, thereon as at *1111 torney’s fees, if placed in the hands of an attorney for collection, as stipulated, as liquidated damages, and not as a penalty. •It being the express intention of the parties to this contract that said amount of damages shall be ascertained, stipulated and liquidated damages agreed on for our said breach of this contract.
“Palestine Ice, Fuel & Gin Go.,
“Geo. Pessoney, Prest.”

[1] In their petition appellees alleged that the machinery was what was “known to the gin trade as a special outfit, and was not su’ch machinery as is usually and customarily carried in stock by factories and machinery houses, and was of such character that the same had to be manufactured and made to order.” Appellant specially excepted to said allegation, “because,” quoting from its answer, “it fails to set out such facts as show that said order was a special order, and fails to show wherein said contract calls for a special order, and fails to show the items of said machinery which amount to a special order, and fails to show the nature and character of such special order, or that it was a special order.” The action of the trial court in overruling the exception is made the basis of an assignment in appellant’s brief. The assignment indicates that appellant construed the allegations excepted to as an attempt by appellees to set up a right to recover special damages. We do not understand that to have been the purpose of the allegations. Appellees did not seek, and were not awarded, special damages. They sought and recovered only such damages as were the “ordinary, usual, and commonly to be expected consequences” {2 Mech. on Sales, § 1757) of the refusal by a purchaser to receive, and pay for property he had agreed to receive and pay for.

The trial court found as facts established by the testimony: That appellant made the order as set out above. That to fill it appel-lees on February 4th ordered the gin outfit therein described of the Continental Gin Company at Dallas. That on May 23d appellant wrote appellees not to ship the machinery it had ordered, unless they were willing to allow a rebate of §200 on the contract price which it claimed appellees’ salesman, one James, had agreed to give it. That about June 1st the machinery was shipped from Dallas to appellant at Palestine. That when the machinery reached the latter place appellant refused to receive and pay for it. That thereafterwards,' on July 3d, and for 10 consecutive days after that date, appel-lees, by publication made in a daily newspaper at Palestine, advertised that the machinery would be sold on appellant’s account at the freight depot in Palestine of the International & Great Northern Railroad Company on July 15; and sent copies of the advertisement to appellant and its attorneys; that at a sale openly and fairly made in accordance to the advertisement said Continental Gin Company was the highest bidder, and the machinery was sold to it for the sum of $1,200. None of the findings specified above are attacked by any of the assignments in appellant’s brief. The court further found as facts established by the testimony: (1) That the machinery ordered by appellant was “a special order outfit, consisting of machinery .that had to be manufactured and made up specially to fill” its order, “and was not such machinery as was usually and customarily carried in stock.” This finding is attacked by appellant as not supported by the testimony. (2) That appellant’s letter of May 23d telling appellees not to ship the machinery unless they were willing to allow the rebate claimed was received by appellees before the machinery was shipped from Dallas, but after it had been manufactured and was practically ready for shipment. This finding is also attacked as not supported by the testimony, '’appellant’s contention being that there was no testimony showing “when the machinery was made, nor when it was ready for shipment.” (3) That a rebate as claimed by appellant had not been promised by ap-pellees or their agent James. This finding is attacked as against the preponderance of the testimony. (4) That because the machinery was “a special order lot of machinery, made especially in accordance with the contract sued on, it had no market value, either at Palestine or Dallas, but its value was the same at both points.” This finding also is attacked as against the preponderance of the testimony. We think the several findings objected to were authorized by the testimony, and therefore overrule the assignments presenting the objections made to them.

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Bluebook (online)
148 S.W. 1109, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 1141, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/palestine-ice-fuel-gin-co-v-walter-connally-co-texapp-1912.