Radalec, Incorporated v. Automatic Firing Corp.

81 So. 2d 830, 228 La. 116, 1955 La. LEXIS 1348
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJune 30, 1955
Docket42060
StatusPublished
Cited by49 cases

This text of 81 So. 2d 830 (Radalec, Incorporated v. Automatic Firing Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Radalec, Incorporated v. Automatic Firing Corp., 81 So. 2d 830, 228 La. 116, 1955 La. LEXIS 1348 (La. 1955).

Opinion

McCALEB, Justice.

This is a redhibitory action.- In April of 1950, plaintiff, a domestic corporation engaged in the sale and installation of heating and air-conditioning equipment, bought two 7% ton air-conditioning units from defendant manufacturer, a Missouri corporation, for $1,148.38 each. Thereafter, in the course of its business, plaintiff sold these units to J. I. Roberts and R. O. Smith for use in a tourist court about to be opened by them, but both units failed to function shortly after installation in July of 1950. Upon being thus advised by its purchasers, plaintiff at once contacted an officer of defendant by long-distance telephone at his home in St. Louis, the day being a Sunday, informing him of the inability of the units to function and requesting that they be replaced immediately. This officer declined to make any commitment at that time. During the early part of the next week, Roberts and Smith,, having already required plaintiff to remove-the air-conditioners from their premises and' being anxious to open their new tourist court, purchased satisfactory machines from another source. After the units were removed, defendant advised plaintiff that a replacement order could be forwarded forthwith but plaintiff declined this offer.

Subsequently, Roberts and Smith brought suit against plaintiff for an overpayment on their contract of $3,390, representing the purchase price paid by them to plaintiff for the unacceptable air-conditioning units, and were given judgment which was affirmed here on appeal. See Roberts v. Radalec, Inc., 222 La. 831, 64 So.2d 189. In that case, it was established that the units would not function and it has since been shown, as a result of an examination made by defendant, that their failure to operate was due to defective material and workmanship inside the motors.

Plaintiff’s petition, after alleging the existence of redhibitory vices and defects rendering the units unfit for air-conditioning purposes, prayed for a recission of the contracts of sale and for judgment of $3,390, the sale price which it would have received from its vendees if the units had performed the function for which they were sold. In an amended petition, plaintiff additionally claimed $398.77 for storage and transfer *121 expenses and $5,000 for alleged damage to its business during the year 1950.

The defense to the suit is founded on three grounds — (1) that the action of redhibition will not lie because the implied warranty of fitness of the units has been fulfilled; (2) that plaintiff did not allow it to replace the defective parts, as provided for in its written warranty and (3) that this express warranty excluded the existence of any implied warranty.

After a hearing on these issues, the trial court found for plaintiff and rescinded the sales, awarding plaintiff $3,688.77, which is the aggregate of the purchase price, lost profits and storage and transfer expenses. Defendant has appealed.

The contract of sale between the parties included a written warranty that the machines were “ * * * free from defects in material and workmanship under normal use and service; the Manufacturer’s obligation under this guarantee being limited in making good at their factory any part or parts thereof which shall within twelve (12) months after delivery to the original purchaser disclose to the Manufacturer’s satisfaction in their investigation to have been defective”. The warranty also set forth the procedure to be followed by the distributor: “When making any claim under this Warranty, advise the Manufacturer immediately and they will forward replacement part or parts (Sight Draft, Freight Collect). Distributor should then return the part or parts to the Manufacturer, satisfactorily packaged or crated (Freight Prepaid). Should the Manufacturer’s investigation disclose to their satisfaction the part or parts to have been defective, the Distributor’s account will be credited accordingly”.

At the outset, it is contended by defendant that the redhibitory action is not available in this case as the defects complained of were not such as to render the air-conditioners useless or imperfect within the meaning of Article 2520 of the Civil Code. 1 The theory of the proposition is that, whereas the motors of both machines contained defects due to faulty workmanship in one case and defective material in the other* the air-conditioning units, of which these motors were merely a part, were not so imperfect as to be intrinsically or inherently incapable of performing the task for which they were designed and sold as the defects could have been easily remedied either by repair, or by the installation of new motors.

We find no substance in the argument. In actions of redhibition, it is essential only that the buyer show that the imperfection of the thing sold be of such a nature as to warrant the supposition “that the *123 buyer would not have purchased it, had he known of the vice”. Article 2520, Civil Code. In this case, we think it obvious that plaintiff, being engaged as a dealer in air-conditioning units, would not have purchased the defective machines if it had known that they would not operate when properly installed in the premises of its vendees. The fact that the defects were confined to a specific part of the machinery and that the units could have been made to function properly by installing new motors or by rehabilitating the defective ones, does not furnish a valid basis for denying plaintiff the remedy of redhibition provided by Article 2520.

The second point raised by defendant, that plaintiff did not allow it to replace the defective parts as provided by its warranty, is inextricably connected with its other contention that the express warranty excluded the existence of an implied warranty because, unless the latter contention is well founded, plaintiff’s failure to comply with the conditions of the written warranty could not operate as a bar to the redhibitory suit under the implied warranty. At any rate, defendant’s position that plaintiff did not give it an opportunity to replace the defective parts is not supported by the facts which show that, when plaintiff learned that the units would not function, it immediately contacted defendant’s officer in St. Louis, who refused to make any commitment at that time. Forasmuch as time was of the essence, as plaintiff’s vendees, faced with the opening of their tourist court, justifiably refused to accept the defective machines, the offer by defendant to replace the machines, some two days after plaintiff’s telephone communication, came entirely too late.

Nor do we find any merit in defendant’s contention that its written warranty excluded the implied warranty of fitness provided by law. The express warranty guaranteed the machines against defective material and workmanship and obliged the manufacturer, during a period of one year from delivery, to supply new parts whenever it was shown to the manufacturer’s satisfaction that any particular part of the machine was unsound. But this warranty did not state that it was given in lieu of all other warranties implied by law or that, in case the machines failed to perform the function for which they were manufactured, the defendant would be relieved of all responsibility other than that expressly stated for replacement of parts by reason of defects in material and workmanship.

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Bluebook (online)
81 So. 2d 830, 228 La. 116, 1955 La. LEXIS 1348, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/radalec-incorporated-v-automatic-firing-corp-la-1955.