Petrolia Supply Co. v. Hemphill

258 S.W. 861
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 19, 1924
DocketNo. 10482.
StatusPublished

This text of 258 S.W. 861 (Petrolia Supply Co. v. Hemphill) 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
Petrolia Supply Co. v. Hemphill, 258 S.W. 861 (Tex. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

CONNER, O. J.

The appellant sued upon a verified account totaling $223.74. The defendant in his answer" admitted liability and alleged due tender for all the items in the account except a charge made on January 30, 1922, for two California working barrels, gas fitted, for $94.50 each, totaling $189, and a charge of $6 for drayage on the delivery of the same. As to these items the defendant alleged that he did not contract therefor, but—

“That said machinery was bought for a specific purpose and was warranted by the plaintiff to do and perform the work required by the defendant, and that it was agreed and understood between the parties that defendant should have a reasonable time within which to put said machinery to a test, that if such test was satisfactory to the defendant that such negotiations were to be in effect for the sale, and the title would pass to the defendant, and the defendant should be liable to the plaintiff for the price thereof.”

It appears that the barrels charged -for were contrivances for use in the bottom of oil wells to more readily extract the oil from the contiguous soil, and by further allegations of the answer it was charged that the defendant at the time of the negotiations for the sale “informed the plaintiff of the purpose for which he desired to use said material, and stated to plaintiff that unless the same would perform the work and labor in the manner and in the capacity and according to the character of work desired to he done, that he would not buy the same.”

It is further alleged that— '

The defendant “put said' machinery to a full and fair test, and that the same wholly failed to meet the requirements of his purpose, and-wholly failed to come up to the warranty given by the plaintiff, and that said machinery would not perform and carry out the work that the defendant bad informed plaintiff be desired to be done; that after a reasonable and fair test of said machinery, the defendant informed the plaintiff of such failure of warranty, and failure to perform the work, and requested plaintiff to repossess said machinery, as he would not consummate the alleged sale, and further offered to reimburse the plaintiff for any reasonable outlay in removing said machinery.”

The case was tried, before the court without a jury, and resulted in a judgment for the plaintiff in the sum of $28.74, which had been duly tendered in court, but denied the plaintiff judgment for the balance of the account, amounting to $195, and the plaintiff has appealed.

The evidence of defendant was to the effect that at the time of the negotiations in question he was pumping his oil wells with ordinary barrels in general use that cost $7 each, but that he had had trouble with them, and that in the fall of 1921 Mr. Pope, a traveling agent of the Petrolia Supply Company, visited him several times, trying to sell the California working barrels, and that finally, upon the assurance of Mr. Pope that if he would try the California barrels, and “if they did not satisfy me after a trial that all I had to do was to pull them out and he would come out and get them, and that the pumps would not cost me a cent.”

Defendant further testified that the pumps were sent out on January 30, 1922, and were put in two of the wells, hut that—

“The pumps would not work. We tried them for two weeks and then pulled them out. They have been in my warehouse ever since, subject to .being taken out by the Petrolia Supply Company. * * * I told Mr. Pope that the barrels were no account and were not satisfactory to me and I did not want them. * * * The trouble we had with the barrels was that they would choke up, fill up with sand and break the pump line. This necessitated pulling the entire pump and barrel out of the well, which would *863 take a day, and then it would require a day to put them back. They would choke up as soon as put back. We would only get about one day’s pumping out of three days’ work. * * * t>arre;[g were taken by me with the understanding that they would be returned if they were not satisfactory to me. They were not satisfactory to me and I refused to pay for them.”

We are of the opinion that the allegations of the defendant’s answer referred to presented a sufficient defense, and hence the court did not err in overruling the plaintiff’s demurrer to the answer, and that the evidence stated, which was evidently credited by the court, is amply sufficient to sustain such defense. '

In 24 R. C. L. §§ 726 and 727, it is said, so far as pertinent:

“Frequently in contracts of sales it is stipulated that the article shall be satisfactory to the buyer, and it is held that such a provision does not affect the mutuality of the contract. A stipulation that the article shall be satisfactory, without stating to whom, means that it shall be satisfactory to the buyer. * * * The authorities are not in accord on the question whether the dissatisfaction of the buyer, where he is in fact and in good faith dissatisfied, must be based on reasonable grounds. Some authorities take the view that if the article is such as the buyer ought to be satisfied with, that is, if there is no reasonable ground on which to base his dissatisfaction, he is bound to accept it. The better view, however, is that, if there is no bad faith, and the buyer is honestly dissatisfied, his judgment is conclusive irrespective of whether he 'had reasonable grounds for dissatisfaction or not. "Thus where the contract was for the purchase of a suit of clothes to be made to the satisfaction of the buyer, it has been held that, though the clothes when, made were such as the buyer ought to have been satisfied with, he still had the right to reject them as unsatisfactory.”

The author in following sections discusses other phases of the subject, citing authorities to the effect that the buyer has not the right to arbitrarily reject an article for the purpose of avoiding the payment therefor, and that good faith should be exercised, stating that the burden, however, of showing bad faith in the refusal to accept is upon the seller. These phases of the subject are not important at this time, inasmuch as plaintiff in his pleadings does not present the issue of bad faith on the part of the defendant in rejecting the articles in question. Should other authority be desired, it is htat-ed in 35 Cyc. p. 220, that— ■

“The rule that has received its sanction being that if the buyer is honestly and in good faith dissatisfied, it is immaterial that he ought in fact to be satisfied and that his dissatisfaction is unreasonable; that the law will not make contracts for people sui juris. It is, however, very distinctly recognized in this line of decisions that the dissatisfaction must be real and in good faith, and not result from caprice or a dishonest design to be dissatisfied in any event.”

See, also, Phelps v. Willard, 16 Pick. (Mass.) 29; Exhaust Ventilator Co. v. C., M. & St. P. Ry. Co., 66 Wis. 218, 28 N. W. 343, 57 Am. Rep. 257; Mulcahy v. Dieudonne, 103 Minn. 352, 115 N. W. 637. In the case last cited, it is said, quoting from the headnote:

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Bluebook (online)
258 S.W. 861, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/petrolia-supply-co-v-hemphill-texapp-1924.